A Democratic Sellout on Bush's Mercenaries
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Jeremy Scahill
by Tom Engelhardt and
Jeremy Scahill
DIGG THIS
Let's be clear
about what it is when it comes to "withdrawal" from Iraq
that the President will veto this Wednesday. Section 1904(b)
of the supplemental appropriations bill for the Pentagon, H.R.
1591, passed by the House and Senate, mandates that the Secretary
of Defense "commence the redeployment of the Armed Forces from Iraq
not later than October 1, 2007, with a goal of completing such redeployment
within 180 days." If you've been listening to network TV news shows
or reading your local newspaper with less than an eagle eye, you
might well be under the impression that just as the phrasing
above seems to indicate a Democratic-controlled Congress
has just passed a bill that mandates a full-scale American withdrawal
from Iraq. (Reporters and commentators regularly speak of the Democrats'
insistence that "American troops be withdrawn from Iraq.")
But that's only until you start reading the exceptions embedded
in the bill.
Here are the
main ones. According to H.R. 1591, the Secretary of Defense is allowed
to keep U.S. forces in Iraq for the following purposes:
1. "Protecting
American diplomatic facilities and American citizens, including
members of the United States Armed Forces": This doesn't sound
like much, but don't be fooled. As a start, of course, there would
have to be forces guarding the new American embassy in Baghdad (known
to Iraqis as "George
W's Palace"). When completed, it will be the largest embassy
in the known universe with untold thousands of employees; then there
would need to be forces to protect the heavily fortified citadel
of the Green Zone (aka "the International Zone") which protects
the embassy and other key U.S. facilities. Add to these troops to
guard the network of gigantic, multibillion-dollar U.S. bases in
Iraq like Balad
Air Base (with air traffic volume that rivals Chicago's O'Hare)
and whatever smaller outposts might be maintained. We're talking
about a sizable force here.
2. "Training
and equipping members of the Iraqi Security Forces": By later
this year, U.S. advisors and trainers for the Iraqi military, part
of a program the Pentagon is now ramping up, should reach the 10,00020,000
range (many of whom see above would undoubtedly need
"guarding").
3. "Engaging
in targeted special actions limited in duration and scope to killing
or capturing members of al-Qaeda and other terrorist organizations
with global reach": This is a loophole
of loopholes that could add up to almost anything as, in a pinch,
all sorts of Sunni oppositional forces could be labeled "al-Qaeda."
An Institute
for Policy Studies analysis suggests that the "protection forces"
and advisors alone could add up to 40,00060,000 troops. None
of this, of course, includes U.S. Navy or Air Force units stationed
outside Iraq but engaged in actions in, or support for actions in,
that country.
Another way
of thinking about the Democratic withdrawal proposals (to be vetoed
this week by the President) is that they represent a program to
remove only U.S. "combat
brigades," adding up to perhaps half of all U.S. forces, with
a giant al-Qaeda loophole for their return. None of this would deal
with the heavily armed and fortified U.S. permanent bases in Iraq
or the air
war that would almost certainly escalate if only part of the
American expeditionary forces were withdrawn (and the rest potentially
left more vulnerable).
No less strikingly,
in an era in which the "privatizing" of state functions is the rage,
the enormous mercenary forces of private "security" companies like
Blackwater USA, now fighting a shadow war alongside U.S. troops
in Iraq, would be untouched. On this striking point Jeremy Scahill
has much to say and he should know. He's the author of the
surprise national bestseller, Blackwater:
The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army, which
will shake you to your combat boots when it comes to the nature
of the mercenary age sorry, the age of "private security
contractors" that we've now entered. No personal library
that claims to make sense of our messy, bloody planet should be
without his book. Tom
Who
Will Stop the U.S. Shadow Army in Iraq?
Don't Look to the Congressional Democrats
By Jeremy
Scahill
The Democratic
leadership in Congress is once again gearing up for a great sell-out
on the Iraq war. While the wrangling over the $124 billion Iraq
supplemental spending bill is being headlined in the media as
a "show down" or "war" with the White House, it is hardly that.
In plain terms, despite the impassioned sentiments of the anti-war
electorate that brought the Democrats to power last November,
the Congressional leadership has made clear its intention to keep
funding the Iraq occupation, even though Sen. Harry Reid has declared
that "this war is lost."
For months,
the Democrats' "withdrawal" plan has come under fire from opponents
of the occupation who say it doesn't stop the war, doesn't defund
it, and insures that tens of thousands of U.S. troops will remain
in Iraq beyond President Bush's second term. Such concerns were
reinforced by Sen. Barack Obama's recent declaration that the
Democrats will not cut off funding for the war, regardless
of the President's policies. "Nobody," he said, "wants to play
chicken with our troops."
As the New
York Times reported, "Lawmakers said they expect that Congress
and Mr. Bush would eventually agree on a spending measure without
the specific timetable" for (partial) withdrawal, which the White
House has said would "guarantee defeat." In other words, the appearance
of a fierce debate this week, Presidential veto and all, has largely
been a show with a predictable outcome.
The Shadow
War in Iraq
While all
of this is troubling, there is another disturbing fact which speaks
volumes about the Democrats' lack of insight into the nature of
this unpopular war and most Americans will know next to
nothing about it. Even if the President didn't veto their legislation,
the Democrats' plan does almost nothing to address the second
largest force in Iraq and it's not the British military.
It's the estimated 126,000 private military "contractors" who
will stay put there as long as Congress continues funding the
war.
The 145,000
active duty U.S. forces are nearly matched by occupation personnel
that currently come from companies like Blackwater USA and the
former Halliburton subsidiary KBR, which enjoy close personal
and political ties with the Bush administration. Until Congress
reins in these massive corporate forces and the whopping federal
funding that goes into their coffers, partially withdrawing U.S.
troops may only set the stage for the increased use of private
military companies (and their rent-a-guns) which stand to profit
from any kind of privatized future "surge" in Iraq.
From the
beginning, these contractors have been a major hidden story of
the war, almost uncovered in the mainstream media and absolutely
central to maintaining the U.S. occupation of Iraq. While many
of them perform logistical support activities for American troops,
including the sort of laundry, fuel and mail delivery, and food-preparation
work that once was performed by soldiers, tens of thousands of
them are directly engaged in military and combat activities. According
to the Government Accountability Office, there are now some 48,000
employees of private military companies in Iraq. These not-quite
G.I. Joes, working for Blackwater and other major U.S. firms,
can clear in a month what some active-duty soldiers make in a
year. "We got 126,000 contractors over there, some of them making
more than the secretary of Defense," said House Defense Appropriations
Subcommittee Chairman John Murtha. "How in the hell do you justify
that?"
House Oversight
and Government Reform Committee Chairman Rep. Henry Waxman estimates
that $4 billion in taxpayer money has so far been spent in Iraq
on these armed "security" companies like Blackwater with
tens of billions more going to other war companies like KBR and
Fluor for "logistical" support. Rep. Jan Schakowsky of the House
Intelligence Committee believes that up to forty cents of every
dollar spent on the occupation has gone to war contractors.
With such
massive government payouts, there is little incentive for these
companies to minimize their footprint in the region and every
incentive to look for more opportunities to profit especially
if, sooner or later, the "official" U.S. presence shrinks, giving
the public a sense of withdrawal, of a winding down of the war.
Even if George W. Bush were to sign the legislation the Democrats
have passed, their plan "allows the President the leeway to escalate
the use of military security contractors directly on the battlefield,"
Erik Leaver of the Institute for Policy Studies points out. It
would "allow the President to continue the war using a mercenary
army."
The crucial
role of contractors in continuing the occupation was driven home
in January when David Petraeus, the general running the President's
"surge" plan in Baghdad, cited private forces as essential to
winning the war. In his confirmation hearings in the Senate, he
claimed that they fill a gap attributable to insufficient troop
levels available to an overstretched military. Along with Bush's
official troop surge, the "tens
of thousands of contract security forces," Petraeus told the
Senators, "give me the reason to believe that we can accomplish
the mission." Indeed, Gen. Petraeus admitted
that he has, at times, been guarded in Iraq not by the U.S. military,
but "secured by contract security."
Such widespread
use of contractors, especially in mission-critical operations,
should have raised red flags among lawmakers. After a trip to
Iraq last month, Retired Gen. Barry McCaffery observed
bluntly, "We are overly dependant on civilian contractors.
In extreme danger they will not fight." It is, however,
the political rather than military uses of these forces that should
be cause for the greatest concern.
Contractors
have provided the White House with political cover, allowing for
a back-door near doubling of U.S. forces in Iraq through the private
sector, while masking the full extent of the human costs of the
occupation. Although contractor deaths are not effectively tallied,
at least 770
contractors have been killed in Iraq and at least another
7,700 injured. These numbers are not included in any official
(or media) toll of the war. More significantly, there is absolutely
no effective system of oversight or accountability governing contractors
and their operations, nor is there any effective law military
or civilian being applied to their activities. They have
not been subjected to military courts martial (despite
a recent Congressional attempt to place them under the Uniform
Code of Military Justice), nor have they been prosecuted in U.S.
civilian courts – and, no matter what their acts in Iraq, they
cannot be prosecuted in Iraqi courts. Before Paul Bremer, Bush's
viceroy in Baghdad, left Iraq in 2004 he issued an edict, known
as Order
17. It immunized contractors from prosecution in Iraq which,
today, is like the wild West, full of roaming Iraqi death squads
and scores of unaccountable, heavily-armed mercenaries, ex-military
men from around the world, working for the occupation. For the
community of contractors in Iraq, immunity and impunity are welded
together.
Despite
the tens of thousands of contractors passing through Iraq and
several well-documented incidents involving alleged contractor
abuses, only two individuals have been ever indicted for crimes
there. One was charged with stabbing a fellow contractor, while
the other pled guilty to the possession of child-pornography images
on his computer at Abu Ghraib prison. While dozens of American
soldiers have been court-martialed 64 on murder-related
charges not a single armed contractor has been prosecuted
for a crime against an Iraqi. In some cases, where contractors
were alleged to have been involved in crimes or deadly incidents,
their companies whisked them out of Iraq to safety.
As one armed
contractor recently informed the Washington
Post, "We were always told, from the very beginning, if
for some reason something happened and the Iraqis were trying to
prosecute us, they would put you in the back of a car and sneak
you out of the country in the middle of the night." According to
another, U.S. contractors in Iraq had their own motto: "What happens
here today, stays here today."
Funding
the Mercenary War
"These private
contractors are really an arm of the administration and its policies,"
argues Rep. Dennis Kucinich, who has called for a withdrawal of
all U.S. contractors from Iraq. "They charge whatever they want
with impunity. There's no accountability as to how many people
they have, as to what their activities are."
Until now,
this situation has largely been the doing of a Republican-controlled
Congress and White House. No longer.
While some
Congressional Democrats have publicly expressed grave concerns
about the widespread use of these private forces and a handful
have called for their withdrawal, the party leadership has done
almost nothing to stop, or even curb, the use of mercenary corporations
in Iraq. As it stands, the Bush administration and the industry
have little to fear from Congress on this score, despite the unseating
of the Republican majority.
On two central
fronts, accountability and funding, the Democrats' approach has
been severely flawed, playing into the agendas of both the White
House and the war contractors. Some Democrats, for instance, are
pushing accountability legislation that would actually require
more U.S. personnel to deploy to Iraq as part of an FBI
Baghdad
"Theater Investigative Unit" that would supposedly monitor
and investigate contractor conduct. The idea is: FBI investigators
would run around Iraq, gather evidence, and interview witnesses,
leading to indictments and prosecutions in U.S. civilian courts.
This is
a plan almost certain to backfire, if ever instituted. It raises
a slew of questions: Who would protect the investigators? How
would Iraqi victims be interviewed? How would evidence be gathered
amid the chaos and dangers of Iraq? Given that the federal government
and the military seem unable or unwilling even to
count how many contractors are actually in the country, how could
their activities possibly be monitored? In light of the recent
Bush administration scandal over the eight fired US attorneys,
serious questions remain about the integrity of the Justice Department.
How could we have any faith that real crimes in Iraq, committed
by the employees of immensely well-connected crony corporations
like Blackwater and Halliburton, would be investigated adequately?
Apart from
the fact that it would be impossible to effectively monitor 126,000
or more private contractors under the best of conditions in the
world's most dangerous war zone, this legislation would give the
industry a tremendous PR victory. Once it was passed as the law
of the land, the companies could finally claim that a legally
accountable structure governed their operations. Yet they would
be well aware that such legislation would be nearly impossible
to enforce.
Not surprisingly,
then, the mercenary trade group with the Orwellian name of the
International Peace Operations Association (IPOA) has pushed for
just this Democratic-sponsored approach rather than the military
court martial system favored by conservative Republican Senator
Lindsey Graham. The IPOA called
the expansion of the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act
essentially the Democrats' oversight plan "the most
cogent approach to ensuring greater contractor accountability
in the battle space." That endorsement alone should be reason
enough to pause and reconsider.
Then there
is the issue of continued funding for the privatized shadow forces
in Iraq. As originally passed in the House, the Democrats' Iraq
plan would have cut only about 15%
or $815 million of the supplemental spending earmarked for day-to-day
military operations "to reflect savings attributable to efficiencies
and management improvements in the funding of contracts in the
military departments."
As it stood,
this was a stunningly insufficient plan, given ongoing events
in Iraq. But even that mild provision was dropped by the Democrats
in late April. Their excuse was the need to hold more hearings
on the contractor issue. Instead, they moved to withhold
not cut 15% of total day-to-day operational funding, but
only until Secretary of Defense Robert Gates submits a report
on the use of contractors and the scope of their deployment. Once
the report is submitted, the 15% would be unlocked. In essence,
this means that, under the Democrats plan, the mercenary forces
will simply be able to continue business-as-usual/profits-as-usual
in Iraq.
However
obfuscated by discussions of accountability, fiscal responsibility,
and oversight, the gorilla of a question in the Congressional
war room is: Should the administration be allowed to use mercenary
forces, whose livelihoods depend on war and conflict, to help
fight its battles in Iraq?
Rep. Murtha
says, "We're trying to bring accountability to an unaccountable
war." But it's not accountability that the war needs; it needs
an end.
By sanctioning
the administration's continuing use of mercenary corporations
instead of cutting off all funding to them the Democrats
leave the door open for a future escalation of the shadow war
in Iraq. This, in turn, could pave the way for an array of secretive,
politically well-connected firms that have profited tremendously
under the current administration to elevate their status and increase
their government paychecks.
Blackwater's
War
Consider
the case of Blackwater
USA.
A decade
ago, the company barely existed; and yet, its "diplomatic security"
contracts since mid-2004, with the State Department alone, total
more than $750
million. Today, Blackwater has become nothing short of the
Bush administration's well-paid Praetorian Guard. It protects
the U.S. 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" center just miles from the Iranian
border. The company was also hired to protect FEMA operations
and facilities in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, where it
raked in $240,000 a day from the American taxpayer, billing
$950 a day per Blackwater contractor.
Since September
11, 2001, the company has invested its lucrative government pay-outs
in building an impressive private army. At present, it 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 near the Great Dismal Swamp of 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 armored vehicle (nicknamed the "Grizzly") and surveillance
blimps.
The man
behind this empire is Erik Prince, a secretive, conservative Christian,
ex-Navy SEAL multimillionaire who bankrolls the President and
his allies with major campaign contributions. Among Blackwater's
senior executives are 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.
For years,
Blackwater's operations have been shrouded in secrecy. Emboldened
by the culture of impunity enjoyed by the private sector in the
Bush administration's wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Blackwater's
founder has talked of creating a "contractor brigade" to support
US military operations and fancies his forces the "FedEx" of the
"national security apparatus."
As
the country debates an Iraq withdrawal, Congress owes it to the
public to take down the curtain of secrecy surrounding these shadow
forces that undergird the U.S. public deployment in Iraq. The President
likes to say that defunding the war would undercut the troops. Here's
the truth of the matter: Continued funding of the Iraq war ensures
tremendous profits for politically-connected war contractors. If
Congress is serious about ending the occupation, it needs to rein
in the unaccountable companies that make it possible and only stand
to profit from its escalation.
May
1, 2007
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion. Jeremy Scahill is the author
of the New York Times bestseller Blackwater:
The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army. He
is currently a Puffin Foundation Writing Fellow at the Nation Institute.
Copyright
© 2007 Jeremy Scahill
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