Geopolitik Pejuang Integrasi versus Tentara Bayaran dimata PBB

Pada konflik bersenjata di Tim-Tim (1999), pejuang  pro-Integrasi 
berhadapanan dengan milisi pro-Kemerdekaan.
Saat ini, Eurico Guterres; menjalani hukuman 10 tahun penjara atas 
pelanggaran HAM berat.

Pelanggaran HAM berat hanya berlaku bagi milisia negara dunia ketiga, 
sedangkan mercenary army AS. "Blackwater", yang menembaki penduduk sipil, 
kebal hukum; tidak terjamah hukum perang militer dan juga bukan masuk 
juridiksi AS.


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Strategic Forecasting, Inc.
GEOPOLITICAL INTELLIGENCE REPORT
10.09.2007

The Geopolitical Foundations of Blackwater
By George Friedman

For the past three weeks, Blackwater, a private security firm under contract 
to the U.S. State Department, has been under intense scrutiny over its 
operations in Iraq. The Blackwater controversy has highlighted the use of 
civilians for what appears to be combat or near-combat missions in Iraq. 
Moreover, it has raised two important questions: Who controls these private 
forces and to whom are they accountable?

The issue is neither unique to Blackwater nor to matters of combat. There 
have long been questions about the role of Halliburton and its former 
subsidiary, KBR, in providing support services to the military. The Iraq war 
has been fought with fewer active-duty troops than might have been expected, 
and a larger number of contractors relative to the number of troops. But how 
was the decision made in the first place to use U.S. nongovernmental 
personnel in a war zone? More important, how has that decision been 
implemented?

The United States has a long tradition of using private contractors in times 
of war. For example, it augmented its naval power in the early 19th century 
by contracting with privateers -- nongovernmental ships -- to carry out 
missions at sea. During the battle for Wake Island in 1941, U.S. contractors 
building an airstrip there were trapped by the Japanese fleet, and many 
fought alongside Marines and naval personnel. During the Civil War, 
civilians who accompanied the Union and Confederate armies carried out many 
of the supply functions. So, on one level, there is absolutely nothing new 
here. This has always been how the United States fights war.

Nevertheless, since before the fall of the Soviet Union, a systematic shift 
has been taking place in the way the U.S. force structure is designed. This 
shift, which is rooted both in military policy and in the geopolitical 
perception that future wars will be fought on a number of levels, made 
private security contractors such as KBR and Blackwater inevitable. The 
current situation is the result of three unique processes: the introduction 
of the professional volunteer military, the change in force structure after 
the Cold War, and finally the rethinking and redefinition of the term 
"noncombatant" following the decision to include women in the military, but 
bar them from direct combat roles.

The introduction of the professional volunteer military caused a rethinking 
of the role of the soldier, sailor, airman or Marine in the armed forces. 
Volunteers were part of the military because they chose to be. Unlike 
draftees, they had other options. During World War II and the first half of 
the Cold War, the military was built around draftees who were going to serve 
their required hitch and return to civilian life. Although many were not 
highly trained, they were quite suited for support roles, from KP to 
policing the grounds. After all, they already were on the payroll, and new 
hires were always possible.

In a volunteer army, the troops are expected to remain in the military much 
longer. Their training is more expensive -- thus their value is higher. 
Taking trained specialists who are serving at their own pleasure and forcing 
them to do menial labor over an extended period of time makes little sense 
either from a utilization or morale point of view. The concept emerged that 
the military's maintenance work should shift to civilians, and that in many 
cases the work should be outsourced to contractors. This tendency was 
reinforced during the Reagan administration, which, given its ideology, 
supported privatization as a way to make the volunteer army work. The result 
was a growth in the number of contractors taking over many of the duties 
that had been performed by soldiers during the years of conscription.

The second impetus was the end of the Cold War and a review carried out by 
then-Secretary of Defense Les Aspin under then-President Bill Clinton. The 
core argument was that it was irrational to maintain a standing military as 
large as had existed during the Cold War. Aspin argued for a more intensely 
technological military, one that would be less dependent on ground troops. 
The Air Force was key to this, while the Navy was downsized. The main 
consideration, however, was the structure of the standing Army -- especially 
when large-scale, high-intensity, long-term warfare no longer seemed a 
likely scenario.

The U.S. Army's active-duty component, in particular, was reduced. It was 
assumed that in time of war, components of the Reserves and National Guard 
would be mobilized, not so much to augment the standing military, but to 
carry out a range of specialized roles. For example, Civil Affairs, which 
has proven to be a critical specialization in Iraq and Afghanistan, was made 
a primary responsibility of the Reserves and National Guard, as were many 
engineering, military-intelligence and other specializations.

This plan was built around certain geopolitical assumptions. The first was 
that the United States would not be fighting peer powers. The second was 
that it had learned from Vietnam not to get involved in open-ended 
counterinsurgency operations, but to focus, as it did in Kuwait, on missions 
that were clearly defined and executable with a main force. The last was 
that wars would be short, use relatively few troops and be carried out in 
conjunction with allies. From this it followed that regular forces, 
augmented by Reserve/National Guard specialists called up for short terms, 
could carry out national strategic requirements.

The third impetus was the struggle to define military combat and noncombat 
roles. Given the nature of the volunteer force, women were badly needed, yet 
they were included in the armed forces under the assumption that they could 
carry out any function apart from direct combat assignments. This caused a 
forced -- and strained -- redefinition of these two roles. Intelligence 
officers called to interrogate a prisoner on the battlefield were thought 
not to be in a combat position. The same bomb, mortar or rocket fire that 
killed a soldier might hit them too, but since they technically were not 
charged with shooting back, they were not combat arms. Ironically, in Iraq, 
one of the most dangerous tasks is traveling on the roads, though moving 
supplies is not considered a combat mission.

Under the privatization concept, civilians could be hired to carry out 
noncombat functions. Under the redefinition of noncombat, the area open to 
contractors covered a lot of territory. Moreover, under the redefinition of 
the military in the 1990s, the size and structure of the Army in particular 
was changed so dramatically that it could not carry out most of its 
functions without the Reserve/Guard component -- and even with that 
component, the Army was not large enough. Contractors were needed.

Let us now add a fourth push: the CIA. During Vietnam, and again in 
Afghanistan and Iraq, a good part of the war was prosecuted by CIA personnel 
not in uniform and not answerable to the military chain of command. There 
are arguments on both sides for this, but the fact is that U.S. wars --  
particularly highly politicized wars such as counterinsurgencies -- are 
fought with parallel armies, some reporting to the Defense Department, 
others to the CIA and other intelligence agencies. The battlefield is, if 
not flooded, at least full of civilians operating outside of the chain of 
command, and these civilian government employees are encouraged to hire 
Iraqi or other nationals, as well as to augment their own capabilities with 
private U.S. contractors.

Blackwater works for the State Department in a capacity defined as 
noncombat, protecting diplomats and other high-value personnel from 
assassination. The Army, bogged down in its own operations, lacks the 
manpower to perform this obviously valuable work. That means that Blackwater 
and other contract workers are charged with carrying weapons and moving 
around the battlefield, which is everywhere. They are heavily armed private 
soldiers carrying out missions that are combat in all but name -- and they 
are completely outside of the chain of command.

Moreover, in order to be effective, they have to engage in protective 
intelligence, looking for surveillance by enemy combatants and trying to 
foresee potential threats. We suspect the CIA could be helpful in this 
regard, but it would want information in return. In order to perform its 
job, then, Blackwater entered the economy of intelligence -- information as 
a commodity to be exchanged. It had to gather some intelligence in order to 
trade some. As a result, the distinction between combat and support 
completely broke down.

The important point is that the U.S. military went to war with the Army the 
country gave it. We recall no great objections to the downsizing of the 
military in the 1990s, and no criticisms of the concepts that lay behind the 
new force structure. The volunteer force, downsized because long-term 
conflicts were not going to occur, supported by the Reserve/Guard and 
backfilled by civilian contractors, was not a controversial issue. Only 
tiresome cranks made waves, challenging the idea that wars would be sparse 
and short. They objected to the redefinition of noncombat roles and said the 
downsized force would be insufficient for the 21st century.

Blackwater, KBR and all the rest are the direct result of the faulty 
geopolitical assumptions and the force structure decisions that followed. 
The primary responsibility rests with the American public, which made 
best-case assumptions in a worst-case world. Even without Iraq, civilian 
contractors would have proliferated on the battlefield. With Iraq, they 
became an enormous force. Perhaps the single greatest strategic error of the 
Bush administration was not fundamentally re-examining the assumptions about 
the U.S. Army on Sept. 12, 2001. Clearly Donald Rumsfeld was of the view 
that the Army was the problem, not the solution. He was not going to push 
for a larger force and, therefore, as the war expanded, for fewer civilian 
contractors.

The central problem regarding private security contractors on the 
battlefield is that their place in the chain of command is not defined. They 
report to the State Department, not to the Army and Marines that own the 
battlefield. But who do they take orders from and who defines their mission? 
Do they operate under the Uniform Code of Military Justice or under some 
other rule? They are warriors -- it is foolish to think otherwise -- but 
they do not wear the uniform. The problem with Blackwater stems from having 
multiple forces fighting for the same side on the same battlefield, with 
completely different chains of command. Indeed, it is not clear the extent 
to which the State Department has created a command structure for its 
contractors, whether it is capable of doing so, or whether the contractors 
have created their own chain of command.

Blackwater is the logical outcome of a set of erroneous geopolitical 
conclusions that predate these wars by more than a decade. The United States 
will be fighting multidivisional, open-ended wars in multiple theaters, and 
there will be counterinsurgencies. The force created in the 1990s is 
insufficient, and thus the definition of noncombat specialty has become 
meaningless. The Reserve/Guard component cannot fill the gap created by 
strategic errors. The hiring of contractors makes sense and has precedence. 
But the use of CIA personnel outside the military chain of command creates 
enough stress. To have private contractors reporting outside the chain of 
command to government entities not able to command them is the real problem.

A failure that is rooted in the national consensus of the 1990s was 
compounded by the Bush administration's failure to reshape the military for 
the realities of the wars it wished to fight. But the final failure was to 
follow the logic of the civilian contractors through to its end, but not 
include them in the unified chain of command. In war, the key question must 
be this: Who gives orders and who takes them? The battlefield is dangerous 
enough without that question left hanging. 

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