|
Military Industrial Complex 2.0
Cubicle Mercenaries,
Subcontracting Warriors, and Other Phenomena of a Privatizing
Pentagon
By Frida Berrigan
17/09/08 "MEOL" -- - Seven years into George W.
Bush's Global War on Terror, the Pentagon is embroiled in two
big wars, a potentially explosive war of words with Tehran, and
numerous smaller conflicts – and it is leaning ever more heavily
on private military contractors to get by.
Once upon a time, soldiers did
more than pick up a gun. They picked up trash. They cut hair and
delivered mail. They fixed airplanes and inflated truck tires.
Not anymore. All of those tasks
are now the responsibility of private military corporations. In
the service of the Pentagon, their employees also man computers,
write software code, create integrating systems, train
technicians, manufacture and service high-tech weapons, market
munitions, and interpret satellite images.
People in ties or heels, not
berets or fatigues, today translate documents, collect
intelligence, interpret for soldiers and interrogators, approve
contracts, draft reports to Congress, and provide oversight for
other private contractors. They also fill prescriptions, fit
prosthetics, and arrange for physical therapy and psychiatric
care. Top to bottom, the Pentagon's war machine is no longer
just driven by, but staffed by, corporations.
Consider the following: In
fiscal year 2005 (the last year for which full data is
available), the Pentagon spent more contracting for services
with private companies than on supplies and equipment --
including major weapons systems. This figure has been steadily
rising over the past 10 years. According to a recent Government
Accountability Office report, in the last decade the amount the
Pentagon has paid out to private companies for services has
increased by 78% in real terms. In fiscal year 2006, those
services contracts totaled more than $151 billion.
Ever more frequently, we hear
generals and politicians alike bemoan the state of the military.
Their conclusion: The wear and tear of the President's Global
War on Terror has pushed the military to the breaking point. But
private contractors are playing a different tune. Think of it
this way: While the military cannot stay properly supplied, its
suppliers are racking up contracts in the multi-billions. For
them, it's a matter of letting the good times roll.
What a Difference a War Makes
As we prepare to close the book
on the Bush presidency, it is worth exploring just how, in the
last seven-plus years, the long War on Terror has actually
helped build a new, privatized version of the Pentagon. Call it
Military Industrial Complex 2.0.
Consider fiscal year 2001, which
conveniently ended in September of that year. It serves as a
good, pre-War on Terror baseline for grasping just how the
Pentagon expanded ever since -- and how much more it is paying
out to private contractors today.
Back then, the Pentagon's top 10
suppliers shared $58.7 billion in Department of Defense (DoD)
contracts, out of a total of $144 billion that went to the top
100 Pentagon contractors. Number 100 on the list was The Carlyle
Group with $145 million in contracts. Keep in mind, of course,
that this was the price of "defense" for a nation with no
superpower rival.
Fast forward to 2007 and the top
10 companies on the Pentagon's list of private contractors were
sharing $125 billion in DoD contracts, out of a total of $239
billion being shared among the top 100 contractors. The smallest
contract among those 100 was awarded to ARINC and came in at
$495 million.
In those seven years, in other
words, contracts to the top 10 more than doubled, the size of
the total pay-out pie increased by two-thirds, and the lowest
contract among the top 100 went up almost four-fold.
Just as revealing, almost half
the companies on the Pentagon's Top 100 list in 2007 were not
even on it seven years earlier, including McKesson, which took
in a hefty $4.6 billion in contracts and MacAndrews and Forbes
which garnered $3.3 billion.
And here's a fact that makes
sense of all of the above: Given the spectrum of services
offered and the level of integration that has already taken
place between the Pentagon and these private companies, the
United States can no longer wage a war or even run payroll
without them.
These have been the good times
for defense contractors, if not for the military itself. Since
September 2001, many companies have made a quantum leap from
receiving either no Pentagon contracts or just contracts in the
low hundred millions to awards in the billion-dollar range. Here
are just a few portraits of companies that are booming, even as
the military goes bust.
URS Corporation: This
engineering, construction, and technical services firm based in
San Francisco employs more than 50,000 people in 34 countries. A
publicly-held firm, which recently acquired Washington Group
International, it had numerous reconstruction contracts in Iraq.
More than 40% of the company's revenue ($5.4 billion in 2007)
comes from the federal government. Between 2001 and 2007, its
Pentagon contracts increased more than a thousand fold (by
1,400%) from $169 million to $2.6 billion.
URS began the War on Terror at
number 91 on the Pentagon's Top 100 list. It is now number 15.
Electronic Data Systems
Corporation: Founded by political maverick Ross Perot, EDS is a
global technology services company headquartered in Plano,
Texas. In March, the Pentagon awarded it a $179 million contract
to provide information technology support services to the
Pentagon's Defense Manpower Data Center, its central archive of
all kinds of data on personnel, manpower and casualties, pay and
entitlements, as well as the whole gamut of financial
information. The company -- which employs 139,000 people in 65
countries -- boasted $22.1 billion in revenue in 2007. Computer
giant HP bought EDS in August 2008.
In 2001 the company occupied
slot 71 on the DoD's Top 100 list with $222 million in
contracts. By 2007, it had climbed to number 16 with $2.4
billion in contracts, an increase of almost 1,000%.
Harris Corporation: This
communications and information technology company is
headquartered in Melbourne, Florida, and employs 16,000 people.
Harris boasted $4.2 billion in revenue in 2007, with more than
one-quarter of that ($1.6 billion) coming from Pentagon
purchases of communications and electronics capabilities like
Falcon II high-frequency radio systems.
When the Global War on Terror
began, Harris had a modest $380 million in Pentagon contracts
(and was number 43 on that top 100 list); over the last seven
years, it has steadily risen in rank and now is number 30.
KBR: Gaming the System
The United States first heard
the phrase "military industrial complex" during President Dwight
David Eisenhower's January 17, 1961 Farewell Address. As he left
public office, our last general-turned-president warned that the
"conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large
arms industry is new in the American experience" and its
influence -- "economic, political, even spiritual -- is felt in
every city, every Statehouse, every office of the Federal
government…
"In the councils of government,
we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence,
whether sought or unsought, by the military industrial complex.
The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists
and will persist."
If, in many ways, Ike's comment
is still applicable, in the last 47 years the Military
Industrial Complex (MIC) he described has evolved in startling
ways -- and massively. Today, it does more than wield influence;
it has created unparalleled dependence and unrivaled profit.
What this means in practice can
be illustrated by KBR, a privately-held company that does not
publish quarterly reports. Nonetheless, its recent history
provides an object lesson in what the MIC 2.0 can do for the
profitability of a private contractor.
KBR has shadowed the US military
every step of the way through the invasion and occupation of
Iraq: first as Kellogg Brown and Root, a subsidiary of
Halliburton (for which Dick Cheney was once CEO), and then as
KBR, an independent company. It has, in fact, made its corporate
fortune on the Pentagon's now infamous "no-bid," "cost-plus
contracts." Since December 2001, KBR has been working for the
Pentagon under the Logistics Civil Augmentation Program (LOGCAP)
-- a multi-billion dollar agreement that guarantees the company
those cost-plus profits for fulfilling contracted tasks.
This huge and sweeping contract
was awarded without the rigors of the competitive marketplace.
Its "no-bid" nature was a sign that KBR was anything but a
run-of-the-mill Pentagon contractor. A second sign lay in the
Pentagon's acceptance of that cost-plus arrangement. A rarity in
the business world, "cost plus" means that the more a job costs,
the more profit the company pockets. Professor Steve Schooner, a
contract expert at George Washington University Law School,
commented, "Nobody in their right mind would enter into a
contract that basically says, 'come up with creative ways to
spend my money and the more you spend the happier I'll be.'"
Under this contract, the Pentagon has doled out $20 billion to
KBR to build and staff facilities for military personnel in Iraq
and provide food and other necessities to US troops there.
Ironically, the Pentagon isn't
even getting what it paid for… not by a long shot. KBR's
fraudulent activities have, according to the Government
Accountability Office, included the failure to adequately
account for more than a billion dollars in contracted funds; the
leasing of vehicles to be used by company personnel for up to
$125,000 a year (despite the fact that these vehicles could have
been purchased outright for $40,000 or less); the purchase of
unnecessary luxuries such as monogrammed towels for use in
company-run recreation facilities for military personnel; the
overcharging for fuel brought into Iraq from Kuwait for military
use; the charging to the Pentagon's tab three to four times as
many meals as were actually consumed by US military personnel;
and the provision of unclean water for US troops.
All of these abuses came to
light thanks to investigations by Representative Henry Waxman
(D-CA), the Pentagon's own Office of the Inspector General, and
others, but Halliburton and its former subsidiary got off with
little more than such wrist slaps as the revocation of the fuel
supply contract and of KBR'S exclusive LOGCAP contract for Iraq.
That was recently divided into three parts and put out to bid.
KBR was, however, allowed to join the bidding, and is now
sharing the contract with DynCorp and Fluor Corporation. Each
company has received a $5 billion contract that includes nine
one-year options for renewal that could be worth, in total, up
to $150 billion, according to Dana Hedgpeth of the Washington
Post.
The most recent of many black
marks against KBR came when members of Congress and
investigators charged that substandard electrical work by
company employees in showers at military bases in Iraq had
resulted in the electrocution deaths of 16 American soldiers.
To understand what privatization
means in action at the Pentagon, consider just one modest
example of the corruption that infects KBR and how it was
addressed. In 2004, the company submitted requests for
reimbursement on more than one billion dollars in charges that
Army auditors deemed "questionable," in part because they
weren't backed up by reliable records. Charles Smith, the Army
official managing Pentagon contracts, refused to approve the
payments and threatened to levy fines against the company if it
did not get a better handle on its spending. Later, he told
James Risen of the New York Times that KBR had "a gigantic
amount of costs they couldn't justify. Ultimately, the money
that was going to KBR was money being taken away from the
troops."
Despite his 31 years with the
Army, and without notice, Smith was transferred from his post,
while the requested payments were subsequently sent to KBR.
According to the New York Times, the Army argued that "blocking
the payments to KBR would have eroded basic services to the
troops. They said that KBR had warned that if it was not paid,
it would reduce payments to subcontractors, which in turn would
cut back on services."
In other words, the Pentagon --
in charge of hundreds of billions of dollars and more than a
million personnel in and out of uniform -- was essentially held
hostage by a company which threatened to withhold services that
(just to be clear) had been pretty shoddy to begin with.
Senator Robert Byrd (D-WV) saw
the problem: "We have found ourselves dependent on
profit-oriented companies for even the day-to-day basics of
feeding and housing our troops, [and] for carrying out a myriad
of other functions of the mission, including security. These
kinds of contracts opened the door for every manager to game the
system in order to maximize profits."
And game the system they do. For
example, the sort of corruption that seems endemic to KBR has
created a profitable new market for another kind of private
military corporation -- one specializing in oversight and
accountability.
After the Army replaced Smith,
it hired RCI Holding Corporation to review KBR's records. Smith
says the private company "came up with estimates, using very
weak data from KBR," while ignoring audit information gathered
within the Pentagon. While KBR was subsequently awarded high
performance bonuses and a portion of that new 10-year contract
with the Army, Serco (RCI Holding's parent company) also
received a new contract -- to continue to oversee KBR's
contracts.
And so dependency begets deeper
dependency, while corruption, incompetence, and callous
indifference become ever more ingrained in the military way of
life.
During his first presidential
campaign, George W. Bush identified Christ as his favorite
political philosopher. But as the first American President with
a Masters of Business Administration (and from Harvard, no
less), he has done a much better job of applying the
profit-first principles of Donald Trump and Jack Welch than
exemplifying the man from Galilee who promised the rich young
man "treasure in heaven" once he sold all he owned and gave it
to the poor. As president, Bush has brought a
corporations-can-do-no-wrong perspective to the Oval Office and
quickly sought to give the private sector an ever freer rein
over a smorgasbord of public works and services. Today, the
military sector leans remarkably heavily on private corporations
to perform what used to be their basic functions, from war to
disaster relief to washing the dishes. KBR is just one
multi-billion dollar example of the MBA presidency's legacy.
Beyond Blackwater: The
Pentagon's Cubicle Mercenaries
The new Complex 2.0 regularly
employs companies whose job it is to send armed mercenaries into
action beside US soldiers or to guard US diplomats and high
military officers. Fighting wars for hire has become an
essential part of the Pentagon's MO since 2001, and the
Blackwater employee gunning through Baghdad in a Kevlar vest, a
kafiyah, and wrap-around shades is the ultimate symbol of the
new moment.
But there's another dimension of
the Bush era's privatization surge at the Pentagon that has
gotten far less coverage: Private military firms are also doing
the paperwork of war. According to a March 2008 GAO report,
Additional Personal Conflict of Interest Safeguards Needed for
Certain DoD Contractor Employees, in offices throughout the
Department of Defense, cubicle mercenaries in startling numbers
are working shoulder-to-shoulder with uniformed military staff
and federal employees.
The Government Accountability
Office (GAO) looked at 21 different Pentagon offices and found
that private contractors outnumbered Department of Defense
employees in more than half of them. In the engineering
department of the Missile Defense Agency, for example, employees
from private contractors made up more than 80% of the work
force. The GAO found that contractors were responsible for
carrying out a wide range of tasks and were not subject to
federal laws and regulations designed to prevent conflicts of
interest -- including the rules that concern personnel who want
to take positions with companies they had awarded contracts to
as federal employees.
Another March 2008 GAO report
assessed the Army's Contracting Center of Excellence where
private contractors made up less than 20% of the workforce. The
average hourly cost of an employee from a private contractor,
however, was more than 26% higher than that of a government
employee. Similar disparities in pay can be seen even more
starkly in Iraq, where a soldier is paid little more than
minimum wage, while a private military contractor can earn well
above $100,000 a year tax-free.
For perhaps the ultimate
contrast in military privatization, consider this: Testifying at
a Congressional hearing in July, Blackwater CEO Erik Prince
offered a ballpark estimate for his annual salary -- "more than
a million." He assured Representative Peter Welch (D-VT) that he
would "get back" to him with a more exact figure. Welch noted at
the time that General David Petraeus -- then responsible for
more than 160,000 US military personnel in Iraq -- earned
$180,000 a year.
Privatization at the Bottom
Once private companies take on
military and war-making tasks, where does the buck stop? It is
not uncommon, for example, for a company hired to perform a
service for the Pentagon to subcontract part of the job to
another company, which may then subcontract part of its task to
a third. Who, then, is in charge? When something goes wrong, who
is culpable?
A recent investigation by Craig
and Marc Kielburger, Canadian co-founders of the NGO Free the
Children, and Toronto-based journalist Chris Mallinos found that
KBR has subcontracted to more than 200 different firms -- many
based in Kuwait -- to transport materials into Iraq.
One result of this: The United
States has ended up paying companies that are essentially
enslaving Filipinos, Sri Lankans, and other "third country
nationals" who drive supplies into Iraq. In a recent article in
Epoch Times, the trio recount a series of fact-finding trips to
Kuwait to meet with dozens of South Asian and Filipino men
"recruited to the Middle East with the promise of good jobs,
only to be hired by Kuwaiti transport companies driving into
Iraq." A Filipino described how Jassin Transport and Stevedoring
Company -- one of KBR's sub-subcontractors -- took his passport,
nullified the contract he had signed in the Philippines, and
issued him a new contract written in Arabic. Employees were
"given an ultimatum: sign or be abandoned." Then they were
handed the keys to unarmored tractor-trailer trucks and told to
drive fast along roads known to be dangerous. The authors
concluded that these companies "openly flout US labor laws by
using cheap imported labor, withholding employee passports and
housing workers in decrepit conditions."
Officially, nothing like this is
supposed to happen. The Philippines, Nepal, and other countries
bar their citizens from taking work in Iraq. In 2006, the
Defense Department actually issued stricter regulations
forbidding such labor trafficking, and KBR and other companies
pledged that they and their subcontractors would follow local
labor laws. But regulations or no, the truth is that the
Pentagon is no longer really in control of the process, and
sub-sub-subcontracting is how you make the big money in places
like Iraq.
Oh… and despite hearings,
investigations, and legislation, Congress isn't in control
either. In an attempt to address the privatization of the
military, for example, the Senate's Democratic Policy Committee
has held a total of seventeen hearings on waste, fraud, and
corruption in Iraq. Representative Henry Waxman's Oversight and
Government Reform Committee has made the role of congressional
gadfly respectable. Hearings in both the House and Senate have
offered riveting, sometimes shocking, inside-the-Beltway
theater, but subsequent legislation created to make decent
Pentagon reporting and oversight a reality, close gaping
loopholes in accountability, criminalize fraud, and curb some of
the worst abuses of private contractors has proven well-meaning
but hopelessly weak and ineffective in practice.
Is MIC 3.0 in our Future?
President Bush will leave office
boasting that the United States has the most powerful and
professional military machine in the world. We have paid dearly
for this machine in the past seven-plus years. The bill for all
that might and muscle comes to more than $3.8 trillion since
2001 -- plus another $900 billion plus for actually flexing it
in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere.
And if the US military machine
is now both oversized and staggeringly expensive, it is also
more prone to breakdown in a more dangerous and unstable world.
So think of George W. Bush's legacy to us as a Pentagon bloated
almost beyond recognition and crippled by its dependence on
private military corporations.
As for Bush's legacy to the
Lockheed Martins, the KBRs and the Pentagon's whole "Top 100"
crew, it's been money beyond measure, enough to leave them all
hard at work on Military Industrial Complex 3.0. They naturally
want to make sure that the money continues to pour into their
ever upgrading war machine, no matter who takes over the White
House in 2009.
Frida Berrigan is Senior
Program Associate with the
Arms and Security Initiative at the New America Foundation.
She is a columnist for Foreign
Policy in Focus and a contributing editor at
In These Times
magazine. She is the author of reports on the arms trade and
human rights, US nuclear weapons policy, and the domestic
politics of US missile defense and space weapons policies. She
can be reached at berrigan@newamerica.net.
Copyright 2008 Frida Berrigan
Click on
"comments" below to read or post comments
Comment
Guidelines
Be succinct, constructive and
relevant to the story.
We encourage engaging, diverse and meaningful commentary.
Do not include personal information such as names, addresses,
phone numbers and emails. Comments falling outside our
guidelines – those including personal attacks and profanity –
are not permitted.
See our complete
Comment
Policy and use this link
to notify us if you have concerns about a
comment. We’ll promptly
review and remove any inappropriate postings.
Send Page To a Friend
In
accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this
material is distributed without profit to those
who have expressed a prior interest in receiving
the included information for research and
educational purposes. Information Clearing House
has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator
of this article nor is Information ClearingHouse
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
|