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America's For-Profit Secret Army

October 13, 2002
By LESLIE WAYNE






With the war on terror already a year old and the
possibility of war against Iraq growing by the day, a
modern version of an ancient practice - one as old as
warfare itself - is reasserting itself at the Pentagon.
Mercenaries, as they were once known, are thriving - only
this time they are called private military contractors, and
some are even subsidiaries of Fortune 500 companies.

The Pentagon cannot go to war without them.

Often run by
retired military officers, including three- and four-star
generals, private military contractors are the new business
face of war. Blurring the line between military and
civilian, they provide stand-ins for active soldiers in
everything from logistical support to battlefield training
and military advice at home and abroad.

Some are helping to conduct training exercises using live
ammunition for American troops in Kuwait, under the code
name Desert Spring. One has just been hired to guard
President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan, the target of a
recent assassination attempt. Another is helping to write
the book on airport security. Others have employees who don
their old uniforms to work under contract as military
recruiters and instructors in R.O.T.C. classes, selecting
and training the next generation of soldiers.

In the darker recesses of the world, private contractors go
where the Pentagon would prefer not to be seen, carrying
out military exercises for the American government, far
from Washington's view. In the last few years, they have
sent their employees to Bosnia, Nigeria, Macedonia,
Colombia and other global hot spots.

Motivated as much by profits as politics, these companies -
about 35 all told in the United States - need the
government's permission to be in business. A few are
somewhat familiar names, like Kellogg Brown & Root, a
subsidiary of the Halliburton Company that operates for the
government in Cuba and Central Asia. Others have more
cryptic names, like DynCorp; Vinnell, a subsidiary of TRW;
SAIC; ICI of Oregon; and Logicon, a unit of Northrop
Grumman. One of the best known, MPRI, boasts of having
"more generals per square foot than in the Pentagon."

During the Persian Gulf war in 1991, one of every 50 people
on the battlefield was an American civilian under contract;
by the time of the peacekeeping effort in Bosnia in 1996,
the figure was one in 10. No one knows for sure how big
this secretive industry is, but some military experts
estimate the global market at $100 billion. As for the
public companies that own private military contractors,
they say little if anything about them to shareholders.

"Contractors are indispensible," said John J. Hamre, deputy
secretary of defense in the Clinton administration. "Will
there be more in the future? Yes, and they are not just
running the soup kitchens."

That means even more business, and profits, for contractors
who perform tasks as mundane as maintaining barracks for
overseas troops, as sophisticated as operating weapon
systems or as secretive as intelligence-gathering in
Africa. Many function near, or even at, the front lines,
causing concern among military strategists about their
safety and commitment if bullets start to fly.

The use of military contractors raises other troubling
questions as well. In peace, they can act as a secret army
outside of public view. In war, while providing functions
crucial to the combat effort, they are not soldiers.
Private contractors are not obligated to take orders or to
follow military codes of conduct. Their legal obligation is
solely to an employment contract, not to their country.

Private military contractors are flushing out drug
traffickers in Colombia and turning the rag-tag militias of
African nations into fighting machines. When a United
Nations arms embargo restricted the American military in
the Balkans, private military contractors were sent instead
to train the local forces.

At times, the results have been disastrous.

In Bosnia,
employees of DynCorp were found to be operating a sex-slave
ring of young women who were held for prostitution after
their passports were confiscated. In Croatia, local forces,
trained by MPRI, used what they learned to conduct one of
the worst episodes of "ethnic cleansing," an event that
left more than 100,000 homeless and hundreds dead and
resulted in war-crimes indictments. No employee of either
firm has ever been charged in these incidents.

In Peru last year, a plane carrying an American missionary
and her infant was accidentally shot down when a private
military contractor misidentified it as on a drug smuggling
flight.

MPRI, formerly known as Military Professionals Resources
Inc., may provide the best example of how skilled retired
soldiers cash in on their military training. Its roster
includes Gen. Carl E. Vuono, the former Army chief of staff
who led the gulf war and the Panama invasion; Gen. Crosbie
E. Saint, the former commander of the United States Army in
Europe; and Gen. Ron Griffith, the former Army vice chief
of staff. There are also dozens of retired top-ranked
generals, an admiral and more than 10,000 former military
personnel, including elite special forces, on call and
ready for assignment.

"We can have 20 qualified people on the Serbian border
within 24 hours," said Lt. Gen. Harry E. Soyster, the
company's spokesman and a former director of the Defense
Intelligence Agency. "The Army can't do that. But
contractors can."

For that, MPRI is paid well. Its revenue exceeds $100
million a year, mainly from Pentagon and State Department
contracts. Retired military personnel working for MPRI
receive two to three times their Pentagon salaries, in
addition to their retirement benefits and corporate
benefits like stock options and 401(k) plans. MPRI's
founders became millionaires in July 2000, when they and
about 35 equity holders sold the company for $40 million in
cash to L-3 Communications, a military contractor traded on
the New York Stock Exchange.

Within the military, the use of contractors is Defense
Department policy for filling the gaps as the number of
troops falls. At the time of the gulf war, there were
780,000 Army troops; today there are 480,000. Over the same
period, overall military forces have fallen by 500,000.

Pentagon officials did not respond to many telephone calls
and e-mail messages requesting interviews, but they have
maintained that contractors are a cost-effective way of
extending the military's reach when Congress and the
American public are reluctant to pay for more soldiers.

"The main reason for using a contractor is that it saves
you from having to use troops, so troops can focus on war
fighting," said Col. Thomas W. Sweeney, a professor of
strategic logistics at the Army War College in Carlisle,
Pa. "It's cheaper because you only pay for contractors when
you use them."

But one person's cost-saving device can be another's "guns
for hire," as David Hackworth, a former Army colonel and
frequent critic of the military, called them.

"These new mercenaries work for the Defense and State
Department and Congress looks the other way," Colonel
Hackworth, a highly decorated Vietnam veteran, said. "It's
a very dangerous situation. It allows us to get into fights
where we would be reluctant to send the Defense Department
or the C.I.A. The American taxpayer is paying for our own
mercenary army, which violates what our founding fathers
said."

They are not mercenaries in the classic sense. Most, but
not all, private military contractors are unarmed, even
when they oversee others with guns. They have even formed a
trade group, the International Peace Operations
Association, to promote industry standards.

"We don't want to risk getting contracts by being called
mercenaries," said Doug Brooks, president of the
association. "But we can do things on short notice and keep
our mouths shut."

That, some critics say, is part of the problem. By using
for-profit soldiers, the government, especially the
executive branch, can evade Congressional limits on troop
strength. For instance, in Bosnia, where a cap of 20,000
troops was imposed by Congress, the addition of 2,000
contractors helped skirt that restriction.

Contractors also allow the administration to carry out
foreign policy goals in low-level skirmishes around the
globe - often fueled by ethnic hatreds and a surplus of
cold war weapons - without having to fear the media
attention that comes if American soldiers are sent home in
body bags.

At least five DynCorp employees have been killed in Latin
America, with no public outcry. Denial is easier for the
government when those working overseas do not wear uniforms
- they often wear fatigues or military-looking clothes but
not official uniforms.

"If you sent in troops, someone will know; if contractors,
they may not," said Deborah Avant, an associate professor
of political science at George Washington University and
author of many studies on the subject.

Only a few members of Congress have expressed concern about
the phenomenon.

"There are inherent difficulties with the increasing use of
contactors to carry out U.S. foreign policy," said Senator
Patrick J. Leahy, Democrat of Vermont and the chairman of
the foreign operations subcommittee. "This is especially
true when it involves `private' soldiers who are not as
accountable as U.S. military personnel. Accountability is a
serious issue when it comes to carrying guns or flying
helicopters in pursuit of U.S. foreign policy goals."

In the House, Representative Jan Schakowsky, an Illinois
Democrat, led the battle against a Bush administration
effort to remove the cap that limits the number of American
troops in Colombia to 500 and private contractors to 300.

"American taxpayers already pay $300 billion a year to fund
the world's most powerful military," Ms. Schakowsky said.
"Why should they have to pay a second time in order to
privatize our operations? Are we outsourcing in order to
avoid public scrutiny, controversy or embarrassment? Is it
to hide body bags from the media and thus shield them from
public opinion?"


SUCH concerns are hardly slowing the pace across the
Potomac, at MPRI in Alexandria, Va. The company may look
like hundreds of other white-collar concerns that fill
small office buildings in northern Virginia, but there are
telltale signs to the contrary: the sword that serves as
the corporate logo and conference rooms named the Infantry
Room, the Cavalry Room and the Artillery Room. Its art
consists of paintings of celebrated battles, largely from
the Civil War.

It's hard to tell where the United States military ends and
MPRI begins. For the last four years, MPRI has run R.O.T.C.
training programs at more than 200 universities, under a
contract that has allowed retired military to put their
uniforms back on. It recently lost the contract to a lower
bidder, but MPRI offset the loss with one to provide former
soldiers to run recruitment offices.

The company, which has 900 full-time employees, helps run
the United States Army Force Management School at Fort
Belvoir. It also provides instructors for advanced training
classes at Fort Leavenworth, teaches the Civil Air Patrol
and designs courses at Fort Sill, Fort Knox, Fort Lee and
other military centers.

The Pentagon has even hired MPRI to help it write military
doctrine - including the field manual called "Contractors
Support on the Battlefield" that sets rules for how the
Army should interact with private contractors, like itself.


Overseas, MPRI is, if anything, more active. Under a
program it calls "democracy transition," the company has
offered countries like Nigeria, Bosnia, Saudi Arabia,
Taiwan, Ukraine, Croatia and Macedonia training in
American-style warfare, including war games, military
instruction and weapons training.

In Croatia, MPRI was brought in to provide border monitors
in the early 1990's. Then, in 1994, as the United States
grew concerned about the poor quality of the Croatian
forces and their ability to maintain regional stability, it
turned to MPRI. A United Nations arms embargo in 1991,
approved by the United States, prohibited the sale of
weapons or the providing of training to any warring party
in the Balkans. But the Pentagon referred MPRI to Croatia's
defense minister, who hired the company to train its
forces.

In 1995, MPRI started doing so, teaching the fledgling army
military tactics that MPRI executives had developed while
on active duty commanding the gulf war invasion. Several
months later, armed with this new training, the Croatian
army began Operation Storm, one of the bloodiest episodes
of "ethnic cleansing" in the Balkans, an event that also
reshaped the military balance in the region.

The operation drove more than 100,000 Serbs from their
homes in a four-day assault. Investigators for the
international war crimes tribunal in the Hague found that
the Croatian army carried out summary executions and
indiscriminately shelled civilians. "In a widespread and
systematic matter, Croatian troops committed murder and
other inhumane acts," investigators said in their report.
Several Croatian generals in charge of the operation have
been indicted for war crimes and are being sought for
trial.

"No MPRI employee played a role in planning, monitoring or
assisting in Operation Storm," said Lieutenant General
Soyster, the MPRI spokesman. He did say that a few Croatian
graduates of MPRI's training course participated in the
operation.

Yet what happened in Croatia gave MPRI international brand
recognition and more business in that region. When Bosnian
Muslims balked in 1995 at signing the Dayton peace accords
out of fear that their army was ill-equipped to provide
sufficient protection, MPRI was called in.

"The Bosnians said they would not sign unless they had help
building their army," said Peter Singer, a foreign policy
fellow at the Brookings Institution who is writing a book
on contractors. "And they said they wanted the same guys
who helped the Croatians."

That is who they got. Under a plan worked out by American
negotiators, the Bosnian Muslims hired MPRI using money
that was provided by a group of Islamic nations, including
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Brunei, the United Arab Emirates and
Malaysia. These nations deposited money in the United
States Treasury, which MPRI drew against.

"It was a brilliant move in that the U.S. government got
someone else to pay for what we wanted from a policy
standpoint," Mr. Singer said.

At the moment, MPRI is advertising for special forces for
antiterrorist operations, is bulking up to train American
forces in Kuwait and is looking for people with special
skills like basic-training instruction and
counterintelligence. Recently, however, it lost a $4.3
million contract to provide training to the army in
Colombia when officials there complained about what they
called the poor quality of MPRI's services.

In Africa, MPRI has conducted training programs on security
issues for about 120 African leaders and more than 5,500
African troops. Most recently, it went toe to toe with the
State Department, and won, gaining permission to do
business in Equatorial Guinea, a country with a deplorable
human rights record where the United States does not have
an embassy.

After two years of lobbying at the State Department, and
after being turned down twice on human rights grounds, MPRI
was finally given approval last year to work with President
Teodoro Obiang Nguema, whom the State Department describes
as holding power through torture, fraud and a 98 percent
election mandate. MPRI advised President Obiang on building
a coast guard to protect the oil-rich waters being explored
by Exxon Mobil off the coast.

More recently, when MPRI and President Obiang proposed that
MPRI also help the country build its police and military
forces, the State Department objected and the project is
now dormant.

"We thought helping the coast guard would be pretty
innocuous in terms of human rights," Lieutenant General
Soyster of MPRI said. But Ms. Avant of George Washington
University disagreed, saying any alliance with United
States military contractors would strengthen President
Obiang's power.

MPRI is not the only company to have run into problems
overseas. DynCorp, a privately held company in Reston, Va.,
with nearly $2 billion in annual sales, has been tapped to
provide protection for Mr. Karzai in Afghanistan. DynCorp
also provides worldwide protective services for State
Department employees.

In late September, DynCorp settled charges - for an
undisclosed sum - brought by a whistle-blower the company
had fired after he complained of a sex ring run by DynCorp
employees in Bosnia. In August, a British court, meanwhile,
ruled in favor of another former DynCorp employee in a
separate whistle-blower case. DynCorp is appealing.

The two employees made similar accusations: that while
working in Bosnia, where DynCorp was providing military
equipment maintenance services, DynCorp employees kept
underaged women as sex slaves, even videotaping a rape.
Among the charges was that while the DynCorp employees
trafficked in women - including buying one for $1,000 - the
company turned a blind eye. Since the DynCorp employees
involved were not soldiers, their actions were not subject
to military discipline. Nor did they face local justice;
they were simply fired and sent home.

In both cases, after complaining, the two employees who
blew the whistle were fired. Ben Johnston, one of them,
said last April in Congressional testimony: "DynCorp
employees were living off post and owning these children
and these women and girls as slaves. Well, that makes all
Americans look bad. I believe DynCorp is the worst diplomat
our country could ever want overseas."

A DynCorp spokesman, Chuck Taylor, said the company "felt
horrible" and held its own internal investigation before
firing the employees who operated the ring.

DynCorp also handles aerial anti-narcotics efforts for the
United States government in the skies over Colombia and
nearby countries - where several employees have been
killed. Because of Congressional caps on the use of private
military contractors, DynCorp has hired local citizens; two
were recently killed.

Still, in its recruiting material, the company plays up the
excitement of this type of work: "Being the best is never
easy and when your office is the cockpit of a twin-engine
plane swooping low over the Colombian jungle, the
challenges can often be enormous."

Incidents like these - sex rings, deals with dictators,
misused military training and tragic accidents - raise
questions about the use of contractors. To whom are they
accountable: the United States government or their
contract? When such incidents occur, who bears the
responsibility?

Moreover, while the general mantra about military
privatization is that it saves money, there are few studies
to prove the case - and in fact, reports exist to the
contrary.

For instance, Kellogg Brown & Root, which was paid $2.2
billion to provide logistics support to American troops in
the Balkans, was the subject of a General Accounting Office
report entitled, "Army Should Do More to Control Contract
Costs in the Balkans." The office found that the Army was
not exercising enough oversight on Kellogg Brown & Root as
contract costs rose, to the benefit of the company. Still,
the company continues to pick up new business.

Questions about security and control are even more basic.
In the battlefield, a commander cannot give orders to a
contractor as he can a soldier. Contractors are not
compelled by an oath of office, as soldiers are, but
instead by an employment contract that provides little
flexibility. Nor are contractors subject to the Uniform
Code of Military Justice.

Contractors cannot arm themselves - they risk losing their
status as noncombatants if they do and, in the extreme,
could be declared mercenaries and subject to execution if
captured. Yet in the gulf war, contractors were in the
thick of battle, providing maintenance to tanks and
biological and chemical vehicles as well as flying air
support.

Should there be a war in Iraq, the line could be even
blurrier.

"There are no rear areas anymore," Colonel Sweeney of the
Army War College said. With chemical and biological
weapons, "no place is safe," he said.

"You can't draw a map and say `no contractors forward of
this line,' " he added. "The American concept of combat is
to take the battle to the rear areas and be as disruptive
as possible. The other guy is thinking the same thing."

One tenet of warfare is that soldiers handling support
functions can grab a gun and hit the front lines if needed.
While this is often dismissed as a quaint World War II
concept, it happened in Somalia in 1993 when Army rangers
were in trouble and military supply clerks came to their
rescue. When the support staff is filled with contractors,
would they do the same? Or would commanders in the field
become responsible for the safety of the growing number of
contractor employees at the expense of advancing the
battle?

The issue is just beginning to generate some attention in
military circles.

"We sort of blur the lines," Col. Steven J. Zamparelli of
the Air Force said in an interview. In an article in 1999
for the Air Force Journal of Logistics, Colonel Zamaparelli
said: "The Department of Defense is gambling future
military victory on contractors' performing operational
functions in the battlefield."

Others in the military are more blunt about the effect on
soldiers. "Are we ultimately trading their blood to save a
relatively insignificant amount in the national budget?"
said Lt. Col. Lourdes A. Castillo of the Air Force, a
logistics expert, in a 2000 article in Aerospace Power
Journal. "If this grand experiment undertaken by our
national leadership fails during wartime, the results will
be unthinkable."



http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/13/business/yourmoney/13MILI.html?ex=1035683822&ei=1&en=356eb9c247ed2822



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