Private military contractor
From Freepedia
Private military contractors or private military companies (PMCs) are companies that provide logistics, manpower, and other expenditures for a military force; when involved with logistics, companies may be described more generally as defense contractors. Contractors are civilians authorized to accompany a force in the field and, generally, cannot be the intentional object of military attack (1949 Geneva Conventions). Contractors cannot be engaged in direct support of military operations; otherwise, they may be targeted. Some critics consider private military contractors to be mercenaries legitimizing their trade behind the veil of a corporate entity.
There has been a recent exodus from many special forces across the globe towards these private military corporations. The United Kingdom Special Air Service, the United States Army Special Forces and the Canadian Army's Joint Task Force 2 have been hit particularly hard. Operators are lured by the fact that entry level positions with the various companies can pay up to $100,000 a year, which is 2-3 times more than what an average special forces operator is paid.
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United States
The United States State Department employs several companies to provide support in danger zones that would be impossible for conventional U.S. forces. The military employs many of them as guards to extremely high ranking U.S. government officials in hot spots all around the world. The term most often refers to the two dozen U.S. firms that provide services for The Pentagon and indirectly assist in overseas theaters of operation. Some contractors have served in advisory roles that help train local militaries to fight more effectively instead of intervening directly.
The Center for Public Integrity reported that since 1994, the Defense Department entered into 3,601 contracts worth $300 billion with 12 U.S. based PMCs. Some view this as an inevitable cost cutting measure and responsible privatization of critical aspects of a military. However, many feel this is a troubling trend, since these private companies are not directly accountable to a legislative body.
Companies
Among the companies in the United States mentioned as PMCs:
- Elite Security Corps
- Blackwater USA
- CACI - California Analysis Center, Incorporated
- Control Risks Group LLC (Website)
- DynCorp
- Military Professional Resources
- Northbridge Services
- SOS Temps, Inc founded by former navy seal Richard Marcinko
- Titan Corporation
- Triple Canopy, Inc. (Website)
Other international firms include:
- Executive Outcomes, South Africa
- Meteoric Tactical Solutions, South Africa
- Erinys (private military contractor), joint South Africa-Great Britain
- Sandline International - Great Britain
- Hart Security Limited - Great Britain
- Levdan - Israel
- Omega Group - Norway (their team was the first sent by Norway into Iraq, before the national military)
Criticism of the growing role of military contractors
Nicholas von Hoffmann, writing in the June 2004 issue of Harper's (p.79-80), gives a brief but strong statement of the case against the growing role of military contractors to provide personnel on or near the front lines:
In theory, private contracting creates competitive pressure to reduce costs, but in practice the bidding process can be so opaque and distorted by favoritism that it becomes an empty formality... The financial savings have turned out to be highly debatable. The costs and attendant risks are not. The government's monopoly of violence -- its role as the guarantor of civil peace and the rule of law -- has been diluted by the new arrangements.
Significant events
- In 1999, an episode with DynCorp in Bosnia was particularly embarrassing for the U.S. military. A Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) lawsuit was filed against DynCorp employees stationed in Bosnia, which found: "employees and supervisors from DynCorp were engaging in perverse, illegal and inhumane behavior and were purchasing illegal weapons, women, forged passports and participating in other immoral acts."
- Employees of private military contractor CACI were involved in the Iraq Abu Ghraib prison scandal in 2003, and 2004.
- On March 31, 2004, four American private contractors belonging to the company Blackwater USA were ambushed and killed by guerillas as they drove through Fallujah. They were dragged from their car in one of the most violent attacks on U.S. citizens in the conflict. Following the attack, an angry mob mutilated and burned the bodies, dragging them through the streets before they were hung on a bridge. (See also: Operation Vigilant Resolve)
- On March 28, 2005, 16 American contractors and three Iraqi aides from Zapata Engineering, under contract to the US Army Corps of Engineers to manage an ammunition storage depot, were detained following two incidents in which they allegedly fired upon U.S. Marine checkpoint. While later released, the civilian contractors have levied complaints of mistreatment against the Marines who detained them.
See also
Books
- Corporate Warriors: The Rise and Ramifications of the Privatized Military Industry, by Peter W. Singer, John M. Olin Post-doctoral Fellow, Foreign Policy Studies, Brookings Institution, Winter 2001-2002. ISBN 0801441145
External links
- Privateforces.com references and starting point for further studies on Private Military Companies.
- www.PrivateMilitary.org an independent, non-profit research initiative.
- PMC's Monitor Association An International Association who advocates for tighter rules to monitor PMCs
- "Making a Killing: The Business of War". Center for Public Integrity, October 2002.
- [1] extensive list of international PMC's
- "PMCs at the UN"
Iraq
- "PMCs in Iraq - 2004 Review"
- Sourcewatch on reconstruction of Iraq contractors.
- Private Warriors A June 2005 PBS Frontline documentary, that can be downloaded online.
- "Private Security Workers Living On Edge in Iraq: Downing of Helicopter Shows Heightened Risks" Washington Post, April 23, 2005 - on contractors failing to follow formal rules of engagement.
- "Fury at 'shoot for fun' memo: Outburst by US security firm in Iraq is attacked by human rights groups" Guardian Unlimited, April 3 2005 - on civilian casualties Blackwater is responsible for.
- "Intelligence, Inc.", Alternet, 7 March 2005 - on the role of private military contractors in Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse scandal
- San Francisco Chronicle article (Jan. 15 2005, part 2 of 2) by Sean Penn about his visit to Iraq a week before Saddam Hussein was captured. The article includes his personal encounter with DynCorp and some information about PMC's.
- New York Times ran an article in the Magazine section in the August 14, 2005 issue about the use of PMC's in Iraq (and mentions previous uses). The article does not seem to be freely available anymore.



