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Subject: Afghanistan Military Private Contractors Outnumber Troops 

 


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125089638739950599.html

.  U.S. NEWS 

.  AUGUST 24, 2009 


Afghanistan Contractors Outnumber Troops 


Despite Surge in U.S. Deployments, More Civilians Are Posted in War Zone;
Reliance Echoes the Controversy in Iraq


By
<http://online.wsj.com/search/search_center.html?KEYWORDS=AUGUST+COLE&ARTICL
ESEARCHQUERY_PARSER=bylineAND> AUGUST COLE 


Even as U.S. troops surge to new highs in Afghanistan they are outnumbered
by military contractors working alongside them, according to a Defense
Department census due to be distributed to Congress -- illustrating how hard
it is for the U.S. to wean itself from the large numbers of war-zone
contractors that proved controversial in Iraq.

 

The number of military contractors in Afghanistan rose to almost 74,000 by
June 30, far outnumbering the roughly 58,000 U.S. soldiers on the ground at
that point. As the military force in Afghanistan grows further, to a planned
68,000 by the end of the year, the Defense Department expects the ranks of
contractors to increase more.

View Full Image

 

Associated Press 

The ranks of military contractors in Afghanistan have been growing along
with the surge in troops. 

 

Image removed by sender. Afghanistan contracters

Above, contractor barracks at the Kandahar airfield.

 

The military requires contractors for essential functions ranging from
supplying food and laundry services to guarding convoys and even military
bases -- functions that were once performed by military personnel but have
been outsourced so a slimmed-down military can focus more on battle-related
tasks.

 

The Obama administration has sought to reduce its reliance on military
contractors, worried that the Pentagon was ceding too much power to outside
companies, failing to rein in costs and not achieving desired results.

 

President Obama has repeatedly called defense contractors to task since
taking office. "In Iraq, too much money has been paid out for services that
were never performed, buildings that were never completed, companies that
skimmed off the top," he said during a March speech.

 

In April, Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced plans to hire 30,000
civilian officials during to cut the percentage of contractors in the
Pentagon's own work force, and last month he told an audience of soldiers
that contractor use overseas needed better controls.

 

Image removed by sender. [Military Contractors]

Military contractors' personnel for a time outnumbered U.S. troops in Iraq.
The large contractor force was accompanied by issues ranging from
questionable costs billed to the government to shooting of civilians by
armed security guards. A September 2007 shooting incident involving
Blackwater Worldwide guards working for the U.S. State Department, in which
17 Iraqis were killed, forced the U.S. to aggressively rework oversight of
security firms.

 

Yet in Afghanistan as in Iraq, the Pentagon has found that the military has
shrunk so much since the Cold War ended that it isn't big enough to sustain
operations without using companies to directly support military operations.

 

"Because of the surge, we're trying to get ahead of the troops," said Gary
Motsek, Assistant Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Program Support, who
helps oversee the Pentagon's battlefield contractor efforts. "So we're
pushing contractors in place, doing it as fast as we can, and trying to be
responsible about it."

 

The heavy reliance on contractors in Afghanistan signals that a situation
that defense planners once considered temporary has become a standard
fixture of U.S. military operations.

 

"For a sustained fight like our current commitments, the U.S. military can't
go to war without contractors on the battlefield," said Steven Arnold, a
former Army general and retired executive at logistics specialists Ecolog
USA and KBR Inc. KBR was formerly owned by Halliburton Co. He added, "For
that matter, neither can NATO."

 

That poses a challenge for military planners who must keep tabs on tens of
thousands of people who are crucial to their operations yet are civilians
outside the chain of command.  In Congress, there's a particular concern
about security contractors who might upset diplomatic and military
relationships. "We've had incidents when force has been used, we believe,
improperly against citizens by contractors," said Sen. Carl Levin, the
Michigan Democrat who chairs the Senate Armed Services Committee. "This
creates huge problems, obviously, for those who have been injured or killed
and their families, but it also creates huge problems for us and our
policies in Afghanistan."

 

In Iraq, as of June 30 there were 119,706 military contractors, down 10%
from three months earlier and smaller than the number of U.S. troops, which
stood at approximately 132,000. But as the Pentagon has been drawing down
contractors in Iraq, their ranks have been growing in Afghanistan -- rising
by 9% over that same three-month period to 73,968. More than two-thirds of
those are local, which reflects the desire to employ Afghans as part of the
counterinsurgency there.

 

Many contractors in Afghanistan are likely to face combat-like conditions,
particularly those manning far-flung outposts, and are exposed to possible
militant attacks -- blurring the line between soldier and support staff.

 

The reliance on contractors has prompted a shift in the defense industry,
sending more money to logistics and construction companies that can perform
everything from basic functions to project engineering.

 

A recent contract is worth up to $15 billion to two firms, DynCorp
International Inc. and Fluor Corp., to build and support U.S. military bases
throughout Afghanistan.

Meanwhile, government auditors have repeatedly uncovered military
mismanagement of contractors. The Wartime Contracting Commission reported
finding during an April trip that the military had accepted a new
headquarters building in Kabul hobbled by shoddy construction. Officials in
Iraq and Afghanistan were unable to give the commission complete lists of
work being contracted out at the bases they visited.

 

Coordination of security contractors, one of the most charged issues in
Iraq, is being beefed up for Afghanistan, said Mr. Motsek, the Pentagon
official. A new umbrella contract planned for later this year is designed to
make awarding work speedier and to help oversight and vetting.

 

As well, he said more Defense Department civilians are being sent to oversee
all types of contracts, and they will stay longer overseas than their
predecessors did in Iraq.

 

Video conferencing and other remote management tools had fallen short as a
substitute. The Army is also adding hundreds of civilian contracting
personnel, among the measures being put in place.

 

Write to August Cole at  <mailto:[email protected]>
[email protected] 

Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A11 

 

 

 

 

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