A
very private war
There are 48,000 'security contractors' in Iraq, working for
private companies growing rich on the back of US policy. But
can it be a good thing to have so many mercenaries operating
without any democratic control?
Jeremy Scahill reports
08/01/07 "The
Guardian" -- -- It was described as a
"powder keg" moment. In late May, just across the Tigris
river from Baghdad's fortified Green Zone, a heavily armed
convoy of American forces was driving down a street near the
Iraqi Interior Ministry. They were transporting US officials
in what is known widely among the occupation forces as the
"red zone" - essentially, any area of Iraq that does not
fall inside the US-built "emerald city" in the capital. The
American guards were on the look-out for any threat lurking
on the roads. Not far from their convoy, an Iraqi driver was
pulling out of a petrol station. When the Americans
encountered the Iraqi driver, they determined him to be a
potential suicide car bomber. In Iraq it has become common
for such convoys to fire off rounds from a machine gun at
approaching Iraqi vehicles, much to the outrage of Iraqi
civilians and officials. The Americans say this particular
Iraqi vehicle was getting too close to their convoy and that
they tried to warn it to back off. They say they fired a
warning shot at the car's radiator before firing directly
into the windshield of the car, killing the driver. Some
Iraqi witnesses said the shooting was unprovoked.
In the ensuing chaos, the Americans reportedly refused to
give their names or details of the incident to Iraqi
officials, sparking a tense standoff between the Americans
and Iraqi forces, both of which were armed with assault
rifles. It could have become even more bloody before a US
military convoy arrived on the scene.
A senior US adviser to the
Iraqi Interior Ministry's intelligence division told the
Washington Post that the incident threatened to "undermine a
lot of the cordial relationships that have been built up
over the past four years. There's a lot of angry people up
here right now."
While there is ongoing
outrage between Iraqis and the military over such deadly
incidents, this one came with a different, but increasingly
common, twist: The Americans involved in the shooting were
neither US military nor civilians. They were operatives
working for a secretive mercenary firm based in the
wilderness of North Carolina. Its name is Blackwater USA.
It was hardly the company's
first taste of action in Iraq, where it has operated almost
since the first days of the occupation. Its convoys have
been ambushed, its helicopters brought down, its men burned
and dragged through the streets of Falluja, giving the Bush
administration a justification for laying siege to the city.
In all, the company has lost about 30 men in Iraq. It has
also engaged in firefights with the Shia Mahdi Army, and
succeeded by all means necessary in keeping alive every US
ambassador to serve in post-invasion Iraq, along with more
than 90 visiting US congressional delegations.
Just one day before the May
shooting, in almost the exact same neighbourhood, Blackwater
operatives found themselves in another gun battle, lasting
an hour, that drew in both US military and Iraqi forces, in
which at least four Iraqis are said to have died. The
shoot-out was reportedly spurred by a well-coordinated
ambush of Blackwater's convoy. US sources said the guards
"did their job", keeping the officials alive.
In another incident that has
caused major tensions between Baghdad and Washington, an
off-duty Blackwater operative is alleged to have shot and
killed an Iraqi bodyguard of the Shia vice-president Adil
Abdul-Mahdi last Christmas Eve inside the Green Zone.
Blackwater officials confirm that after the incident they
whisked the contractor safely out of Iraq, which they say
Washington ordered them to do. Iraqi officials labelled the
killing a "murder". The company says it fired the contractor
but he has yet to be publicly charged with any crime.
Iraqi officials have
consistently complained about the conduct of Blackwater and
other contractors - and the legal barriers to their attempts
to investigate or prosecute alleged wrongdoing. Four years
into the occupation, there is absolutely no effective system
of oversight or accountability governing contractors and
their operations. They have not been subjected to military
justice, and only two cases have ever reached US civilian
courts, under the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction
Act, which covers some contractors working abroad. (One man
was charged with stabbing a fellow contractor, in a case
that has yet to go to trial, while the other was sentenced
to three years for possession of child-pornography images on
his computer at Abu Ghraib prison.) No matter what their
acts in Iraq, contractors cannot be prosecuted in Iraqi
courts, thanks to US-imposed edicts dating back to Paul
Bremer's post-invasion Coalition Provisional Authority.
The internet is alive with
videos of contractors seemingly using Iraqi vehicles for
target practice, much to the embarrassment of the firms
involved. Yet, despite these incidents, and although 64 US
soldiers have been court-martialled on murder-related
charges, not a single armed contractor has been prosecuted
for any crime, let alone a crime against an Iraqi. US
contractors in Iraq reportedly have a motto: "What happens
here today, stays here today."
At home in America,
Blackwater is facing at least two wrongful-death lawsuits,
one stemming from the mob killings of four of its men in
Falluja in March 2004, the other for a Blackwater plane
crash in Afghanistan in November 2004, in which a number of
US soldiers were killed. In both cases, families of the
deceased charge that Blackwater's negligence led to the
deaths. (Blackwater has argued that it cannot be sued and
should enjoy the same immunity as the US military.) The
company is also facing a mounting Congressional
investigation into its activities. Despite all of this, US
State Department officials heap nothing but words of praise
on Blackwater for doing the job and doing it well.
There are now 630 companies
working in Iraq on contract for the US government, with
personnel from more than 100 countries offering services
ranging from cooking and driving to the protection of
high-ranking army officers. Their 180,000 employees now
outnumber America's 160,000 official troops. The precise
number of mercenaries is unclear, but last year, a US
government report identified 48,000 employees of private
military/security firms.
Blackwater is far from being
the biggest mercenary firm operating in Iraq, nor is it the
most profitable. But it has the closest proximity to the
throne in Washington and to radical rightwing causes,
leading some critics to label it a "Republican guard".
Blackwater offers the services of some of the most elite
forces in the world and is tasked with some of the
occupation's most "mission-critical" activities, namely
keeping alive the most hated men in Baghdad - a fact it has
deftly used as a marketing tool. Since the Iraq invasion
began four years ago, Blackwater has emerged out of its
compound near the Great Dismal Swamp of North Carolina as
the trendsetter of the mercenary industry, leading the way
toward a legitimisation of one of the world's dirtiest
professions. And it owes its meteoric rise to the policies
of the Bush administration.
Since the launch of the "war
on terror", the administration has funnelled billions of
dollars in public funds to US war corporations such as
Blackwater USA, DynCorp and Triple Canopy. These companies
have used the money to build up private armies that rival or
outgun many of the world's national militaries.
A decade ago, Blackwater
barely existed; and yet its "diplomatic security" contracts
since mid-2004, with the State Department alone, total more
than $750m (£370m). It protects the US ambassador and other
senior officials in Iraq as well as visiting Congressional
delegations; it trains Afghan security forces, and was
deployed in the oil-rich Caspian Sea region, setting up a
"command and control" centre just miles from the Iranian
border. The company was also hired to protect emergency
operations and facilities in New Orleans after Hurricane
Katrina, where it raked in $240,000 (£120,000) a day from
the American taxpayer, billing $950 (£470) a day per
Blackwater contractor.
Yet this is still just a
fraction of the company's business. It also runs an
impressive domestic law-enforcement and military training
system inside the US. While some of its competitors may have
more forces deployed in more countries around the globe,
none have organised their troops and facilities more like an
actual military.
At present, Blackwater has
forces deployed in nine countries and boasts a database of
21,000 additional troops at the ready, a fleet of more than
20 aircraft, including helicopter gun-ships, and the world's
largest private military facility - a 7,000-acre compound in
North Carolina. It recently opened a new facility in
Illinois (Blackwater North) and is fighting local opposition
to a third planned domestic facility near San Diego
(Blackwater West) by the Mexican border. It is also
manufacturing an armoured vehicle (nicknamed the Grizzly)
and surveillance blimps.
The man behind this empire
is 38-year-old Erik Prince, a secretive, conservative
Christian who once served with the US Navy's special forces
and has made major campaign contributions to President Bush
and his allies. Among Blackwater's senior executives are J
Cofer Black, former head of counterterrorism at the CIA;
Robert Richer, former deputy director of operations at the
CIA; Joseph Schmitz, former Pentagon inspector general; and
an impressive array of other retired military and
intelligence officials. Company executives recently
announced the creation of a new private intelligence
company, Total Intelligence, to be headed by Black and
Richer. Blackwater executives boast that some of their work
for the government is so sensitive that the company cannot
tell one federal agency what it is doing for another.
In many ways, Blackwater's
rapid ascent to prominence within the US war machine
symbolises what could be called Bush's mercenary revolution.
Much has been made of the administration's "failure" to
build international consensus for the invasion of Iraq, but
perhaps that was never the intention. Almost from the
beginning, the White House substituted international
diplomacy with lucrative war contracts. When US tanks rolled
into Iraq in March 2003, they brought with them the largest
army of "private contractors" ever deployed in a war.
While precise data on the
extent of American spending on mercenary services is nearly
impossible to obtain, Congressional sources say that the US
has spent at least $6bn (£3bn) in Iraq, while Britain has
spent some £200m. Like America, Britain has used private
security from firms like ArmorGroup to guard Foreign Office
and International Development officials in Iraq. Other
British firms are used to protect private companies and
media, but UK firms do their biggest business with
Washington. The single largest US contract for private
security in Iraq has for years been held by the British firm
Aegis, headed by Tim Spicer, the retired British
lieutenant-colonel who was implicated in the Arms to Africa
scandal of the late 1990s, when weapons were shipped to a
Sierra Leone militia leader during a weapons embargo.
Aegis's Iraq contract - essentially coordinating the private
military firms in Iraq - was valued at approximately $300m
(£1147m) and drew protests from US competitors and
lawmakers.
At present, a US or British
special forces veteran working for a private security
company in Iraq can make $650 (£320) a day, after the
company takes its cut. At times the rate has reached $1,000
(£490) a day - pay that dwarfs that of active-duty troops.
"We got [tens of thousands of] contractors over there, some
of them making more than the secretary of defense," John
Murtha, chairman of the House defense appropriations
subcommittee, recently said. "How in the hell do you justify
that?"
In part, these contractors
do mundane jobs that traditionally have been performed by
soldiers, from driving trucks to doing laundry. These
services are provided through companies such as Halliburton,
KBR and Fluor and through their vast labyrinth of
subcontractors. But increasingly, private personnel are
engaged in armed combat and "security" operations. They
interrogate prisoners, gather intelligence, operate
rendition flights, protect senior occupation officials -
including some commanding US generals - and in some cases
have taken command of US and international troops in battle.
In an admission that speaks volumes about the extent of the
privatisation, General David Petraeus, who is implementing
Bush's troop surge, said earlier this year that he has, at
times, not been guarded in Iraq by the US military but
"secured by contract security". At least three US commanding
generals are currently being guarded in Iraq by hired guns.
"To have half of your army
be contractors, I don't know that there's a precedent for
that," says Congressman Dennis Kucinich, a member of the
House oversight and government reform committee, which has
been investigating war contractors. "There's no democratic
control and there's no intention to have democratic control
here."
The implications, still
unacknowledged by many US lawmakers and world leaders four
years into this revolution, are devastating. "One of the key
tenets of managing international crises in the aftermath of
the cold war was established in the first Gulf war," says a
veteran US diplomat, Joe Wilson, who served as the last US
ambassador to Iraq before the 1991 Gulf war. "It was that
management of these crises would be a coalition of
like-minded nation states under the auspices of a United
Nations Security Council resolution which gave the exercise
the benefit of international law." This time, "there is no
underlying international legitimacy that sustains us
throughout this action that we've taken."
Moreover, this revolution
means the US no longer needs to rely on its own citizens and
those of its nation-state allies to staff its wars, nor does
it need to implement a draft, which would have made the Iraq
war politically untenable. Just as importantly, perhaps, it
reduces the figure of "official" casualties. In Iraq alone,
more than 900 US contractors have been killed, with another
13,000 wounded. The majority of these are not American
citizens and these numbers are not counted in the official
death toll at a time when Americans are increasingly
disturbed by their losses.
In Iraq, many contractors
are run by Americans or Britons and have elite forces
staffed by well-trained veterans of powerful militaries for
use in sensitive actions or operations. But lower down, the
ranks are filled by Iraqis and third-country nationals.
Hundreds of Chilean mercenaries, for example, have been
deployed by US companies such as Blackwater and Triple
Canopy, despite the fact that Chile opposed the invasion and
continues to oppose the occupation of Iraq. Some of the
Chileans are alleged to be seasoned veterans of the Pinochet
era.
Some 118,000 of the
estimated 180,000 contractors in Iraq are Iraqis. The
mercenary industry points to this as encouraging: we are
giving Iraqis jobs, albeit occupying their own country in
the service of a private corporation hired by a hostile
invading power. As Doug Brooks, the head of the
Orwellian-named mercenary trade group, the International
Peace Operations Association, argued early in the
occupation, "Museums do not need to be guarded by Abrams
tanks when an Iraqi security guard working for a contractor
can do the same job for less than one-50th of what it costs
to maintain an American soldier. Hiring local guards gives
Iraqis a stake in a successful future for their country.
They use their pay to support their families and stimulate
the economy. Perhaps most significantly, every guard means
one less potential guerrilla."
In many ways, however, it is
the exact model used by multinational corporations that
depend on poorly paid workers in developing countries to
staff their highly profitable operations. This keeps prices
down in the industrialised world and consumers numb to the
reality of how the product ends up in their shopping basket.
"We have now seen the
emergence of the hollow army," says Naomi Klein, whose
forthcoming book, The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster
Capitalism, explores these themes. "Much as with so-called
hollow corporations such as Nike, billions are spent on
military technology and design in rich countries while the
manual labour and sweat work of invasion and occupation is
increasingly outsourced to contractors who compete with each
other to fill the work order for the lowest price. Just as
this model breeds rampant abuse in the manufacturing sector
- with the big-name brands always able to plead ignorance
about the actions of their suppliers - so it does in the
military, though with stakes that are immeasurably higher."
In the case of Iraq, what is
particularly frightening is that the US and UK governments
could give the public the false impression that the
occupation was being scaled down, while in reality it was
simply being privatised. Indeed, shortly after Tony Blair
announced that he wanted to withdraw 1,600 soldiers from
Basra, reports emerged that the British government was
considering sending in private security companies to "fill
the gap left behind".
Outsourcing is increasingly
extending to extremely sensitive sectors, including
intelligence. The investigative blogger RJ Hillhouse, whose
site
TheSpyWhoBilledMe.com regularly breaks news on the
clandestine world of private contractors and US
intelligence, recently established that Washington spends
$42bn (£21bn) annually on private intelligence contractors,
up from $18bn in 2000. Currently, that spending represents
70% of the US intelligence budget.
But the mercenary forces are
also diversifying geographically: in Latin America, the
massive US firm DynCorp is operating in Colombia, Bolivia
and other countries as part of the "war on drugs" - US
defence contractors are receiving nearly half the $630m in
US military aid for Colombia; in Africa, mercenaries are
deploying in Somalia, Congo and Sudan and increasingly have
their sights set on tapping into the hefty UN peacekeeping
budget; inside the US, private security staff now outnumber
official law enforcement. Heavily armed mercenaries were
deployed in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, while there
are proposals to privatise the US border patrol. Brooks, the
private military industry lobbyist, says people should not
become "overly obsessed with Iraq", saying his association's
member companies "have more personnel working in UN and
African Union peace operations than all but a handful of
countries".
Most worryingly of all,
perhaps, powers that were once the exclusive realm of
national governments are now in the hands of private
companies whose prime loyalty is to their shareholders.
CIA-type services, special operations, covert actions and
small-scale military and paramilitary forces are now on the
world market in a way not seen in modern history.
While the private
military/security industry rejects the characterisation of
their forces as mercenaries, Blackwater executives have
turned the grey area in which they operate into a brand
asset. The company has been quietly marketing its services
to foreign governments and corporations through an off-shore
affiliate, Greystone Ltd, registered in Barbados.
In early 2005, Blackwater
held an extravagant, invitation-only Greystone
"inauguration" at the swanky Ritz-Carlton hotel in
Washington, DC. The guest list for the seven-hour event
included weapons manufacturers, oil companies and diplomats
from the likes of Uzbekistan, Yemen, the Philippines,
Romania, Indonesia, Tunisia, Algeria, Hungary, Poland,
Croatia, Kenya, Angola and Jordan. Several of those
countries' defence or military attaches attended. "It is
more difficult than ever for your country to successfully
protect its interests against diverse and complicated
threats in today's grey world," Greystone's promotional
pamphlet told attendees. "Greystone is an international
security services company that offers your country or
organisation a complete solution to your most pressing
security needs."
Greystone said its forces
were prepared for "ready deployment in support of national
security objectives as well as private interests". Among the
"services" offered were mobile security teams, which could
be employed for personal security operations, surveillance
and countersurveillance. Applicants for jobs with Greystone
were asked to check off their qualifications in weapons:
AK-47 rifle, Glock 19, M-16 series rifle, M-4 carbine rifle,
machine gun, mortar and shoulder-fired weapons. Among the
skills sought were: Sniper, Marksman, Door Gunner, Explosive
Ordnance, Counter Assault Team.
While Blackwater has become
one of the most powerful and influential private actors in
international conflict since the launch of the war on
terror, in many ways it is like a small, high-end boutique
surrounded by megastores such as DynCorp, ArmourGroup and
Erynis, operating in a $100bn industry. In fact, experts
say, there are now more private military companies operating
internationally than there are member nations at the UN.
"I think it's
extraordinarily dangerous when a nation begins to outsource
its monopoly on the use of force ... in support of its
foreign policy or national security objectives," says
Wilson. The billions of dollars being doled out to these
companies, he says, "makes of them a very powerful interest
group within the American body politic and an interest group
that is, in fact, armed. And the question will arise at some
time: to whom do they owe their loyalty?"
Congresswoman Jan
Schakowsky, a Democrat and a leading member of the House
select committee on intelligence, echoes those fears. "The
one thing the people think of as being in the purview of the
government is the use of military power. Suddenly you've got
a for-profit corporation going around the world that is more
powerful than states".
At war with the Pentagon
How Rumsfeld paved the way
for Blackwater
The world was a very
different place on September 10 2001, when Donald Rumsfeld
stepped on to the podium at the Pentagon to deliver one of
his first major addresses as defense secretary under
President George W Bush. For most Americans, there was no
such thing as al-Qaida, and Saddam Hussein was still the
president of Iraq. Rumsfeld had served in the post once
before - under President Gerald Ford, from 1975 to 1977 -
and he returned to the job in 2001 with ambitious visions.
That September day, in the first year of the Bush
administration, Rumsfeld addressed the Pentagon officials in
charge of overseeing the high-stakes business of defence
contracting - managing the Halliburtons, DynCorps and
Bechtels. The secretary stood before a gaggle of former
corporate executives from Enron, Northrop Grumman, General
Dynamics and Aerospace Corporation whom he had tapped as his
top deputies at the department of defense, and he issued a
declaration of war.
"The topic today is an
adversary that poses a threat, a serious threat, to the
security of the United States of America," Rumsfeld
thundered. "This adversary is one of the world's last
bastions of central planning. It governs by dictating
five-year plans. From a single capital, it attempts to
impose its demands across time zones, continents, oceans and
beyond. With brutal consistency, it stifles free thought and
crushes new ideas. It disrupts the defence of the United
States and places the lives of men and women in uniform at
risk."
Pausing briefly for dramatic
effect, Rumsfeld - himself a veteran cold warrior - told his
new staff, "Perhaps this adversary sounds like the former
Soviet Union, but that enemy is gone: our foes are more
subtle and implacable today. You may think I'm describing
one of the last decrepit dictators of the world. But their
day, too, is almost past, and they cannot match the strength
and size of this adversary. The adversary's much closer to
home. It's the Pentagon bureaucracy."
Rumsfeld called for a
wholesale shift in the running of the Pentagon, supplanting
the old department of defense bureaucracy with a new model,
one based on the private sector. The problem, Rumsfeld said,
was that unlike businesses, "governments can't die, so we
need to find other incentives for bureaucracy to adapt and
improve." The stakes, he declared, were dire - "a matter of
life and death, ultimately, every American's."
That day, Rumsfeld announced
a major initiative to streamline the use of the private
sector in the waging of America's wars and predicted his
initiative would meet fierce resistance. "Some might ask,
'How in the world could the secretary of defense attack the
Pentagon in front of its people?'" Rumsfeld told his
audience. "To them I reply, I have no desire to attack the
Pentagon; I want to liberate it. We need to save it from
itself."
The next morning, the
Pentagon would literally be attacked as American Airlines
Flight 77 - a Boeing 757 - smashed into its western wall.
Rumsfeld would famously assist rescue workers in pulling
bodies from the rubble. But it didn't take long for him to
seize the almost unthinkable opportunity presented by 9/11
to put his personal war on the fast track.
· An extract from
Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary
Army (published by Serpent's Tail, price £12.99). © 2007
Jeremy Scahill. To order a copy for £11.99 with free UK p&p
go to
guardian.co.uk/bookshop or call 0870 836 0875.