Posted by: zanshin, 2007-03-19 01:22

Story

Bush's Shadow Army

JEREMY SCAHILL, 2007-03-15 (Thursday), Nation
Jeremy Scahill reports on the Bush Administration's growing dependence on private security forces such as Blackwater USA and efforts in Congress to rein them in. This article is adapted from his new book, Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army (Nation Books).

On September 10, 2001, before most Americans had heard of Al Qaeda or imagined the possibility of a "war on terror," Donald Rumsfeld stepped to the podium at the Pentagon to deliver one of his first major addresses as Defense Secretary under President George W. Bush. Standing before the former corporate executives he had tapped as his top deputies overseeing the high-stakes business of military contracting--many of them from firms like Enron, General Dynamics and Aerospace Corporation--Rumsfeld 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. "It disrupts the defense of the United States and places the lives of men and women in uniform at risk." He told his new staff, "You may think I'm describing one of the last decrepit dictators of the world.... [But] the adversary's closer to home," he said. "It's the Pentagon bureaucracy." Rumsfeld called for a wholesale shift in the running of the Pentagon, supplanting the old DoD bureaucracy with a new model, one based on the private sector. Announcing this major overhaul, Rumsfeld told his audience, "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 be attacked, literally, as a Boeing 757--American Airlines Flight 77--smashed into its western wall. Rumsfeld would famously assist rescue workers in pulling bodies from the rubble. But it didn't take long for Rumsfeld to seize the almost unthinkable opportunity presented by 9/11 to put his personal war--laid out just a day before--on the fast track. The new Pentagon policy would emphasize covert actions, sophisticated weapons systems and greater reliance on private contractors. It became known as the Rumsfeld Doctrine. "We must promote a more entrepreneurial approach: one that encourages people to be proactive, not reactive, and to behave less like bureaucrats and more like venture capitalists," Rumsfeld wrote in the summer of 2002 in an article for Foreign Affairs titled "Transforming the Military."

Although Rumsfeld was later thrown overboard by the Administration in an attempt to placate critics of the Iraq War, his military revolution was here to stay. Bidding farewell to Rumsfeld in November 2006, Bush credited him with overseeing the "most sweeping transformation of America's global force posture since the end of World War II." Indeed, Rumsfeld's trademark "small footprint" approach ushered in one of the most significant developments in modern warfare--the widespread use of private contractors in every aspect of war, including in combat.

The often overlooked subplot of the wars of the post-9/11 period is their unprecedented scale of outsourcing and privatization. From the moment the US troop buildup began in advance of the invasion of Iraq, the Pentagon made private contractors an integral part of the operations. Even as the government gave the public appearance of attempting diplomacy, Halliburton was prepping for a massive operation. When US tanks rolled into Baghdad in March 2003, they brought with them the largest army of private contractors ever deployed in modern war. By the end of Rumsfeld's tenure in late 2006, there were an estimated 100,000 private contractors on the ground in Iraq--an almost one-to-one ratio with active-duty American soldiers.

To the great satisfaction of the war industry, before Rumsfeld resigned he took the extraordinary step of classifying private contractors as an official part of the US war machine. In the Pentagon's 2006 Quadrennial Review, Rumsfeld outlined what he called a "road map for change" at the DoD, which he said had begun to be implemented in 2001. It defined the "Department's Total Force" as "its active and reserve military components, its civil servants, and its contractors--constitut[ing] its warfighting capability and capacity. Members of the Total Force serve in thousands of locations around the world, performing a vast array of duties to accomplish critical missions." This formal designation represented a major triumph for war contractors--conferring on them a legitimacy they had never before enjoyed.

Contractors have provided the Bush Administration with political cover, allowing the government to deploy private forces in a war zone free of public scrutiny, with the deaths, injuries and crimes of those forces shrouded in secrecy. The Administration and the GOP-controlled Congress in turn have shielded the contractors from accountability, oversight and legal constraints. Despite the presence of more than 100,000 private contractors on the ground in Iraq, only one has been indicted for crimes or violations. "We have over 200,000 troops in Iraq and half of them aren't being counted, and the danger is that there's zero accountability," says Democrat Dennis Kucinich, one of the leading Congressional critics of war contracting.

While the past years of Republican monopoly on government have marked a golden era for the industry, those days appear to be ending. Just a month into the new Congressional term, leading Democrats were announcing investigations of runaway war contractors. Representative John Murtha, chair of the Appropriations Committee's Subcommittee on Defense, after returning from a trip to Iraq in late January, said, "We're going to have extensive hearings to find out exactly what's going on with contractors. They don't have a clear mission and they're falling all over each other." Two days later, during confirmation hearings for Gen. George Casey as Army chief of staff, Senator Jim Webb declared, "This is a rent-an-army out there." Webb asked Casey, "Wouldn't it be better for this country if those tasks, particularly the quasi-military gunfighting tasks, were being performed by active-duty military soldiers in terms of cost and accountability?" Casey defended the contracting system but said armed contractors "are the ones that we have to watch very carefully." Senator Joe Biden, chair of the Foreign Relations Committee, has also indicated he will hold hearings on contractors. Parallel to the ongoing investigations, there are several bills gaining steam in Congress aimed at contractor oversight.

Occupying the hot seat through these deliberations is the shadowy mercenary company Blackwater USA. Unbeknownst to many Americans and largely off the Congressional radar, Blackwater has secured a position of remarkable power and protection within the US war apparatus. This company's success represents the realization of the life's work of the conservative officials who formed the core of the Bush Administration's war team, for whom radical privatization has long been a cherished ideological mission. Blackwater has repeatedly cited Rumsfeld's statement that contractors are part of the "Total Force" as evidence that it is a legitimate part of the nation's "warfighting capability and capacity." Invoking Rumsfeld's designation, the company has in effect declared its forces above the law--entitled to the immunity from civilian lawsuits enjoyed by the military, but also not bound by the military's court martial system. While the initial inquiries into Blackwater have focused on the complex labyrinth of secretive subcontracts under which it operates in Iraq, a thorough investigation into the company reveals a frightening picture of a politically connected private army that has become the Bush Administration's Praetorian Guard.


Blackwater Rising

Blackwater was founded in 1996 by conservative Christian multimillionaire and ex-Navy SEAL Erik Prince--the scion of a wealthy Michigan family whose generous political donations helped fuel the rise of the religious right and the Republican revolution of 1994. At its founding, the company largely consisted of Prince's private fortune and a vast 5,000-acre plot of land located near the Great Dismal Swamp in Moyock, North Carolina. Its vision was "to fulfill the anticipated demand for government outsourcing of firearms and related security training." In the following years, Prince, his family and his political allies poured money into Republican campaign coffers, supporting the party's takeover of Congress and the ascension of George W. Bush to the presidency.

While Blackwater won government contracts during the Clinton era, which was friendly to privatization, it was not until the "war on terror" that the company's glory moment arrived. Almost overnight, following September 11, the company would become a central player in a global war. "I've been operating in the training business now for four years and was starting to get a little cynical on how seriously people took security," Prince told Fox News host Bill O'Reilly shortly after 9/11. "The phone is ringing off the hook now."

Among those calls was one from the CIA, which contracted Blackwater to work in Afghanistan in the early stages of US operations there. In the ensuing years the company has become one of the greatest beneficiaries of the "war on terror," winning nearly $1 billion in noncovert government contracts, many of them no-bid arrangements. In just a decade Prince has expanded the Moyock headquarters to 7,000 acres, making it the world's largest private military base. Blackwater currently has 2,300 personnel deployed in nine countries, with 20,000 other contractors at the ready. It has a fleet of more than twenty aircraft, including helicopter gunships and a private intelligence division, and it is manufacturing surveillance blimps and target systems.

In 2005 after Hurricane Katrina its forces deployed in New Orleans, where it billed the federal government $950 per man, per day--at one point raking in more than $240,000 a day. At its peak the company had about 600 contractors deployed from Texas to Mississippi. Since Katrina, it has aggressively pursued domestic contracting, opening a new domestic operations division. Blackwater is marketing its products and services to the Department of Homeland Security, and its representatives have met with California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. The company has applied for operating licenses in all US coastal states. Blackwater is also expanding its physical presence inside US borders, opening facilities in Illinois and California.

Its largest obtainable government contract is with the State Department, for providing security to US diplomats and facilities in Iraq. That contract began in 2003 with the company's $21 million no-bid deal to protect Iraq proconsul Paul Bremer. Blackwater has guarded the two subsequent US ambassadors, John Negroponte and Zalmay Khalilzad, as well as other diplomats and occupation offices. Its forces have protected more than ninety Congressional delegations in Iraq, including that of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. According to the latest government contract records, since June 2004 Blackwater has been awarded $750 million in State Department contracts alone. It is currently engaged in an intensive lobbying campaign to be sent into Darfur as a privatized peacekeeping force. Last October President Bush lifted some sanctions on Christian southern Sudan, paving the way for a potential Blackwater training mission there. In January the Washington, DC, representative for southern Sudan's regional government said he expected Blackwater to begin training the south's security forces soon.

Since 9/11 Blackwater has hired some well-connected officials close to the Bush Administration as senior executives. Among them are J. Cofer Black, former head of counterterrorism at the CIA and the man who led the hunt for Osama bin Laden after 9/11, and Joseph Schmitz, former Pentagon Inspector General, who was responsible for policing contractors like Blackwater during much of the "war on terror"--something he stood accused of not doing effectively. By the end of Schmitz's tenure, powerful Republican Senator Charles Grassley launched a Congressional probe into whether Schmitz had "quashed or redirected two ongoing criminal investigations" of senior Bush Administration officials. Under bipartisan fire, Schmitz resigned and signed up with Blackwater.

Despite its central role, Blackwater had largely operated in the shadows until March 31, 2004, when four of its private soldiers in Iraq were ambushed and killed in Falluja. A mob then burned the bodies and dragged them through the streets, stringing up two from a bridge over the Euphrates. In many ways it was the moment the Iraq War turned. US forces laid siege to Falluja days later, killing hundreds of people and displacing thousands, inflaming the fierce Iraqi resistance that haunts occupation forces to this day. For most Americans, it was the first they had heard of private soldiers. "People began to figure out this is quite a phenomenon," says Representative David Price, a North Carolina Democrat, who said he began monitoring the use of private contractors after Falluja. "I'm probably like most Congress members in kind of coming to this awareness and developing an interest in it" after the incident.

What is not so well-known is that in Washington after Falluja, Blackwater executives kicked into high gear, capitalizing on the company's newfound recognition. The day after the ambush, it hired the Alexander Strategy Group, a K Street lobbying firm run by former senior staffers of then-majority leader Tom DeLay before the firm's meltdown in the wake of the Jack Abramoff scandal. A week to the day after the ambush, Erik Prince was sitting down with at least four senior members of the Senate Armed Services Committee, including its chair, John Warner. Senator Rick Santorum arranged the meeting, which included Warner and two other key Republican senators--Appropriations Committee chair Ted Stevens of Alaska and George Allen of Virginia. This meeting followed an earlier series of face-to-faces Prince had had with powerful House Republicans who oversaw military contracts. Among them: DeLay; Porter Goss, chair of the House Intelligence Committee (and future CIA director); Duncan Hunter, chair of the House Armed Services Committee; and Representative Bill Young, chair of the House Appropriations Committee. What was discussed at these meetings remains a secret. But Blackwater was clearly positioning itself to make the most of its new fame. Indeed, two months later, Blackwater was handed one of the government's most valuable international security contracts, worth more than $300 million.

The firm was also eager to stake out a role in crafting the rules that would govern mercenaries under US contract. "Because of the public events of March 31, [Blackwater's] visibility and need to communicate a consistent message has elevated here in Washington," said Blackwater's new lobbyist Chris Bertelli. "There are now several federal regulations that apply to their activities, but they are generally broad in nature. One thing that's lacking is an industry standard. That's something we definitely want to be engaged in." By May Blackwater was leading a lobbying effort by the private military industry to try to block Congressional or Pentagon efforts to place their forces under the military court martial system.

But while Blackwater enjoyed its new status as a hero in the "war on terror" within the Administration and the GOP-controlled Congress, the families of the four men killed at Falluja say they were being stonewalled by Blackwater as they attempted to understand the circumstances of how their loved ones were killed. After what they allege was months of effort to get straight answers from the company, the families filed a ground-breaking wrongful death lawsuit against Blackwater in January 2005, accusing the company of not providing the men with what they say were contractually guaranteed safeguards. Among the allegations: The company sent them on the Falluja mission that day short two men, with less powerful weapons than they should have had and in Pajero jeeps instead of armored vehicles. This case could have far-reaching reverberations and is being monitored closely by the war-contractor industry--former Halliburton subsidiary KBR has even filed an amicus brief supporting Blackwater. If the lawsuit is successful, it could pave the way for a tobacco litigation-type scenario, where war contractors find themselves besieged by legal claims of workers killed or injured in war zones.

As the case has made its way through the court system, Blackwater has enlisted powerhouse Republican lawyers to defend it, among them Fred Fielding, who was recently named by Bush as White House counsel, replacing Harriet Miers; and Kenneth Starr, former Whitewater prosecutor investigating President Clinton, and the company's current counsel of record. Blackwater has not formally debated the specific allegations in the suit, but what has emerged in its court filings is a series of legal arguments intended to bolster Blackwater's contention that it is essentially above the law. Blackwater claims that if US courts allow the company to be sued for wrongful death, that could threaten the nation's war-fighting capacity: "Nothing could be more destructive of the all-volunteer, Total Force concept underlying U.S. military manpower doctrine than to expose the private components to the tort liability systems of fifty states, transported overseas to foreign battlefields," the company argued in legal papers. In February Blackwater suffered a major defeat when the Supreme Court declined its appeal to hear the Falluja case, paving the way for the state trial--where there would be no cap on damages a jury could award--to proceed.

Congress is beginning to take an interest in this potentially groundbreaking case. On February 7 Representative Henry Waxman chaired hearings of the Oversight and Government Reform Committee. While the hearings were billed as looking at US reliance on military contractors, they largely focused on Blackwater and the Falluja incident. For the first time, Blackwater was forced to share a venue with the families of the men killed at Falluja. "Private contractors like Blackwater work outside the scope of the military's chain of command and can literally do whatever they please without any liability or accountability from the US government," Katy Helvenston, whose son Scott was one of the Blackwater contractors killed, told the committee. "Therefore, Blackwater can continue accepting hundreds of millions of dollars in taxpayer money from the government without having to answer a single question about its security operators."

Citing the pending litigation, Blackwater's general counsel, Andrew Howell, declined to respond to many of the charges levied against his company by the families and asked several times for the committee to go into closed session. "The men who went on the mission on March 31, each had their weapons and they had sufficient ammunition," Howell told the committee, adding that the men were in "appropriate" vehicles. That was sharply disputed by the men's families, who allege that in order to save $1.5 million Blackwater did not provide the four with armored vehicles. "Once the men signed on with Blackwater and were flown to the Middle East, Blackwater treated them as fungible commodities," Helvenston told lawmakers in her emotional testimony, delivered on behalf of all four families.

The issue that put this case on Waxman's radar was the labyrinth of subcontracts underpinning the Falluja mission. Since November 2004 Waxman has been trying to pin down who the Blackwater men were ultimately working for the day of the ambush. "For over eighteen months, the Defense Department wouldn't even respond to my inquiry," says Waxman. "When it finally replied last July, it didn't even supply the breakdown I requested. In fact, it denied that private security contractors did any work at all under the [Pentagon's contracting program]. We now know that isn't true." Waxman's struggle to follow the money on this one contract involving powerful war contractors like KBR provides a graphic illustration of the secretive nature of the whole war contracting industry.

What is not in dispute regarding the Falluja incident is that Blackwater was working with a Kuwaiti business called Regency under a contract with the world's largest food services company, Eurest Support Services. ESS is a subcontractor for KBR and another giant war contractor, Fluor, in Iraq under the Pentagon's LOGCAP contracting program. One contract covering Blackwater's Falluja mission indicated the mission was ultimately a subcontract with KBR. Last summer KBR denied this. Then ESS wrote Waxman to say the mission was conducted under Fluor's contract with ESS. Fluor denied that, and the Pentagon told Waxman it didn't know which company the mission was ultimately linked to. Waxman alleged that Blackwater and the other subcontractors were "adding significant markups" to their subcontracts for the same security services that Waxman believes were then charged to US taxpayers. "It's remarkable that the world of contractors and subcontractors is so murky that we can't even get to the bottom of this, let alone calculate how many millions of dollars taxpayers lose in each step of the subcontracting process," says Waxman.

While it appeared for much of the February 7 hearing that the contract's provenance would remain obscure, that changed when, at the end of the hearing, the Pentagon revealed that the original contractor was, in fact, KBR. In violation of military policy against LOGCAP contractors' using private forces for security instead of US troops, KBR had entered into a subcontract with ESS that was protected by Blackwater; those costs were allegedly passed on to US taxpayers to the tune of $19.6 million. Blackwater said it billed ESS $2.3 million for its services, meaning a markup of more than $17 million was ultimately passed on to the government. Three weeks after the hearing, KBR told shareholders it may be forced to repay up to $400 million to the government as a result of an ongoing Army investigation.

It took more than two years for Waxman to get an answer to a simple question: Whom were US taxpayers paying for services? But, as the Falluja lawsuit shows, it is not just money at issue. It is human life.


A Killing on Christmas Eve

While much of the publicity Blackwater has received stems from Falluja, another, more recent incident is attracting new scrutiny. On Christmas Eve inside Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, an American Blackwater contractor allegedly shot and killed an Iraqi bodyguard protecting a senior Iraqi official. For weeks after the shooting, unconfirmed reports circulated around the Internet that alcohol may have been involved and that the Iraqi was shot ten times in the chest. The story then went that the contractor was spirited out of Iraq before he could be prosecuted. Media inquiries got nowhere--the US Embassy refused to confirm that it was a Blackwater contractor, and the company refused to comment.

Then the incident came up at the February 7 Congressional hearing. As the session was drawing to a close, Representative Kucinich raced back into the room with what he said was a final question. He entered a news report on the incident into the record and asked Blackwater counsel Howell if Blackwater had flown the contractor out of Iraq after the alleged shooting. "That gentleman, on the day the incident occurred, he was off duty," Howell said, in what was the first official confirmation of the incident from Blackwater. "Blackwater did bring him back to the United States."

"Is he going to be extradited back to Iraq for murder, and if not, why not?" Kucinich asked.

"Sir, I am not law enforcement. All I can say is that there's currently an investigation," Howell replied. "We are fully cooperating and supporting that investigation."

Kucinich then said, "I just want to point out that there's a question that could actually make [Blackwater's] corporate officers accessories here in helping to create a flight from justice for someone who's committed a murder."


The War on the Hill

Several bills are now making their way through Congress aimed at oversight and transparency of the private forces that have emerged as major players in the wars of the post-9/11 period. In mid-February Senators Byron Dorgan, Patrick Leahy and John Kerry introduced legislation aimed at cracking down on no-bid contracts and cronyism, providing for penalties of up to twenty years in prison and fines of up to $1 million for what they called "war profiteering." It is part of what Democrats describe as a multi-pronged approach. "I think there's a critical mass of us now who are working on it," says Congressman Price, who represents Blackwater's home state. In January Price introduced legislation that would expand the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act of 2000 (MEJA) to include all contractors in a war zone, not just those working for or alongside the armed forces. Most of Blackwater's work in Iraq, for instance, is contracted by the State Department. Price indicated that the alleged Christmas Eve shooting could be a test case of sorts under his legislation. "I will be following this and I'll be calling for a full investigation," he said.

But there's at least one reason to be wary of this approach: Price's office consulted with the private military lobby as it crafted the legislation, which has the industry's strong endorsement. Perhaps that's because MEJA has been for the most part unenforced. "Even in situations when US civilian law could potentially have been applied to contractor crimes, it wasn't," observed P.W. Singer, a leading scholar on contractors. American prosecutors are already strapped for resources in their home districts--how could they be expected to conduct complex investigations in Iraq? Who will protect the investigators and prosecutors? How will they interview Iraqi victims? How could they effectively oversee 100,000 individuals spread across a dangerous war zone? "It's a good question," concedes Price. "I'm not saying that it would be a simple matter." He argues his legislation is an attempt to "put the whole contracting enterprise on a new accountable footing."

This past fall, taking a different tack--much to the dismay of the industry--Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, an Air Force reserve lawyer and former reserve judge, quietly inserted language into the 2007 Defense Authorization, which Bush signed into law, that places contractors under the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), commonly known as the court martial system. Graham implemented the change with no public debate and with almost no awareness among the broader Congress, but war contractors immediately questioned its constitutionality. Indeed, this could be a rare moment when mercenaries and civil libertarians are on the same side. Many contractors are not armed combatants; they work in food, laundry and other support services. While the argument could be made that armed contractors like those working for Blackwater should be placed under the UCMJ, Graham's change could result in a dishwasher from Nepal working for KBR being prosecuted like a US soldier. On top of all this, the military has enough trouble policing its own massive force and could scarcely be expected to monitor an additional 100,000 private personnel. Besides, many contractors in Iraq are there under the auspices of the State Department and other civilian agencies, not the military.

In an attempt to clarify these matters, Senator Barack Obama introduced comprehensive new legislation in February. It requires clear rules of engagement for armed contractors, expands MEJA and provides for the DoD to "arrest and detain" contractors suspected of crimes and then turn them over to civilian authorities for prosecution. It also requires the Justice Department to submit a comprehensive report on current investigations of contractor abuses, the number of complaints received about contractors and criminal cases opened. In a statement to The Nation, Obama said contractors are "operating with unclear lines of authority, out-of-control costs and virtually no oversight by Congress. This black hole of accountability increases the danger to our troops and American civilians serving as contractors." He said his legislation would "re-establish control over these companies," while "bringing contractors under the rule of law."

Democratic Representative Jan Schakowsky, a member of the House intelligence committee, has been a leading critic of the war contracting system. Her Iraq and Afghanistan Contractor Sunshine Act, introduced in February, which bolsters Obama's, boils down to what Schakowsky sees as a long overdue fact-finding mission through the secretive contracting bureaucracy. Among other provisions, it requires the government to determine and make public the number of contractors and subcontractors (at any tier) that are employed in Iraq and Afghanistan; any host country's, international or US laws that have been broken by contractors; disciplinary actions taken against contractors; and the total number of dead and wounded contractors. Schakowsky says she has tried repeatedly over the past several years to get this information and has been stonewalled or ignored. "We're talking about billions and billions of dollars--some have estimated forty cents of every dollar [spent on the occupation] goes to these contractors, and we couldn't get any information on casualties, on deaths," says Schakowsky. "It has been virtually impossible to shine the light on this aspect of the war and so when we discuss the war, its scope, its costs, its risks, they have not been part of this whatsoever. This whole shadow force that's been operating in Iraq, we know almost nothing about. I think it keeps at arm's length from the American people what this war is all about."

While not by any means a comprehensive total of the number of contractor casualties, 770 contractor deaths and 7,761 injured in Iraq as of December 31, 2006, were confirmed by the Labor Department. But that only counts those contractors whose families applied for benefits under the government's Defense Base Act insurance. Independent analysts say the number is likely much higher. Blackwater alone has lost at least twenty-seven men in Iraq. And then there's the financial cost: Almost $4 billion in taxpayer funds have been paid for private security forces in Iraq, according to Waxman. Yet even with all these additional forces, the military is struggling to meet the demands of a White House bent on military adventurism.

A week after Donald Rumsfeld's rule at the Pentagon ended, US forces had been stretched so thin by the "war on terror" that former Secretary of State Colin Powell declared "the active Army is about broken." Rather than rethinking its foreign policies, the Administration forged ahead with plans for a troop "surge" in Iraq, and Bush floated a plan to supplement the military with a Civilian Reserve Corps in his January State of the Union address. "Such a corps would function much like our military Reserve. It would ease the burden on the armed forces by allowing us to hire civilians with critical skills to serve on missions abroad when America needs them," Bush said. The President, it seemed, was just giving a fancy new title to something the Administration has already done with its "revolution" in military affairs and unprecedented reliance on contractors. Yet while Bush's proposed surge has sparked a fierce debate in Congress and among the public, the Administration's increasing reliance on private military contractors has gone largely undebated and underreported.

"The increasing use of contractors, private forces or as some would say 'mercenaries' makes wars easier to begin and to fight--it just takes money and not the citizenry," says Michael Ratner, president of the Center for Constitutional Rights, which has sued contractors for alleged abuses in Iraq. "To the extent a population is called upon to go to war, there is resistance, a necessary resistance to prevent wars of self-aggrandizement, foolish wars and in the case of the United States, hegemonic imperialist wars. Private forces are almost a necessity for a United States bent on retaining its declining empire."

With talk of a Civilian Reserve Corps and Blackwater promoting the idea of a privatized "contractor brigade" to work with the military, war critics in Congress are homing in on what they see as a sustained, undeclared escalation through the use of private forces. "'Surge' implies a bump that has a beginning and an end," says Schakowsky. "Having a third or a quarter of [the forces] present on the ground not even part of the debate is a very dangerous thing in our democracy, because war is the most critical thing that we do."

Indeed, contractor deaths are not counted in the total US death count, and their crimes and violations go undocumented and unpunished, further masking the true costs of the war. "When you're bringing in contractors whom the law doesn't apply to, the Geneva Conventions, common notions of morality, everything's thrown out the window," says Kucinich. "And what it means is that these private contractors are really an arm of the Administration and its policies."

Kucinich says he plans to investigate the potential involvement of private forces in so-called "black bag," "false flag" or covert operations in Iraq. "What's the difference between covert activities and so-called overt activities which you have no information about? There's no difference," he says. Kucinich also says the problems with contractors are not simply limited to oversight and transparency. "It's the privatization of war," he says. The Administration is "linking private war contractor profits with warmaking. So we're giving incentives for the contractors to lobby the Administration and the Congress to create more opportunities for profits, and those opportunities are more war. And that's why the role of private contractors should be sharply limited by Congress."

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2009-05-13NBC News' Meet The Press: Dick Cheney
2008-12-18Transcript: Cheney Defends Hard Line Tactics
2009-01-16The Joint Operating Environment (JOE)
2007-05-30The great escape
2007-05-22Statements made by Democratic leaders about Saddam Hussein's acquisition or possession of WMD
2007-05-11Waning Chances for Stability -- Least Bad Options in a Failed, War-Torn State
2007-06-13John Perkins on "The Secret History of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals, and the Truth about Global Corruption"
2007-06-13Press Conference by the President
2007-06-17Gen. Wesley Clark Weighs Presidential Bid: "I Think About It Everyday
2007-06-22Al Qaeda Strikes Back
2007-06-22Symposium: Strategies of Death
2007-07-27Hooyah!!
2007-08-06The Global Drug Meta-Group: Drugs, Managed Violence, and the Russian 9/11
2007-09-08Knowing the Enemy
2006-10-27The Fault Lies In Ourselves
2006-09-09How Common Ground of 9/11 Gave Way to Partisan Split
2006-09-12The Nation That Fell to Earth
2007-03-24Is the American Empire on the Brink of Collapse?
2007-04-30Blueprint for Dictatorship -- Recent legislation sets us up for tyranny
2007-05-01Attack on Iran is the next step in divide and conquer of Middle East
2007-02-10Neocon 101 - Some basic questions answered
2007-02-10Q&A: Neocon power examined
2007-03-04The Leadership of George W. Bush: Con & Pro
2007-03-17Outsourcing the War
2007-10-03The Bush administration's ties to Blackwater
2007-12-12Al Qaeda's Best Publicist
2007-11-20Whose War?
2007-12-02The Smart Way to Beat Tyrants Like Chavez
2007-11-13The Deadly Embrace
2008-03-16Bush is an idiot, but he was right about Saddam
2008-03-24Chalmers Johnson: “Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic”
2008-05-04Rush Interviews Andrew McCarthy
2008-01-09Why I Believe Bush Must Go -- Nixon Was Bad. These Guys Are Worse
2008-01-11After Iraq
2008-01-19A Political-Risk Outlook for 2008
2008-11-11The Case for Restraint -- Foreign policy after George W. Bush
2008-12-06Obama's War Cabinet
2008-07-05America under surveillance
2008-09-12A Grim Anniversary
2008-08-28Vice President's Remarks on the 90th National Convention of the American Legion
2008-08-09Chasing a Mirage
2008-08-21The Breaking Point -- A New Age of Torture
2008-12-13Getting Away with Torture?
2009-02-12Obama’s Prime-Time Press Briefing -- Transcript
2009-08-10Crisis As A Way To A Global Totalitarian State
2007-03-03Scapegoating Pakistan
2007-03-03The Iraq insurgency for beginners
2007-02-27Operation Falcon and the Looming Police State
2007-02-28RUSSIA AND THE NEW COLD WAR -- When cowboys don't shoot straight
2007-02-19Hating America
2007-02-20Transformational Diplomacy
2007-02-26Which Will It Be America, Empire or Democracy?
2007-01-25Make War Your Friend, Part I
2007-01-27My Worst Moment As a Lawyer
2007-01-14Natural Resources are Fuelling a New Cold War
2007-01-23The Committee for the Liberation of Iraq: PR Spinning the Bush Doctrine
2007-01-09Despite their shoddy track record on Iraq analysis, O'Reilly trusts only "my military analysts
2007-04-25Gravy Train: Feeding The Pentagon By Feeding Somalia
2007-04-25Economic Hit Men -- An interview with John Perkins
2007-04-27President Presents Medal of Freedom
2007-04-06It Doesn't Stay in Vegas
2007-04-10Six Crises in Search of an Author
2007-04-10Rollback
2006-09-23A Guided Tour of Class in America -- A Tomdispatch Interview with Barbara Ehrenreich
2006-09-09Clinton's Artless Equivocation on 'The Path to 9/11'
2006-09-02Could the Midterm Elections Spell an End to Military Follies?
2006-09-03Transcript - President Bush's Speech
2006-10-27What Went Wrong in Iraq
2006-12-07Transcript - The Iraq Study Group News Conference
2006-12-03The Next War
2006-11-26Islam, Terror and the Second Nuclear Age
2007-09-09It's the Demography, Stupid
2007-09-17Why We're Losing the War on Terror
2007-08-12How the ‘Good War’ in Afghanistan Went Bad
2007-08-22Bush ties Iraq to Vietnam, South Korea, Japan
2007-07-04Rising to a New Generation of Global Challenges
2007-07-08U.S. Aborted Raid on Qaeda Chiefs in Pakistan in ’05
2007-07-17Al-Qaida may use Iraqi network to attack U.S.
2007-06-17General Tommy Franks -- An exclusive interview with America's top general in the war on terrorism
2007-06-13Resource Wars - Can We Survive Them?
2007-06-12A Review of “The Assault on Reason”
2007-06-05President Bush Visits Prague, Czech Republic, Discusses Freedom
2007-06-08Rice Leads Counterattack
2007-05-10Six Nightmares: Real Threats in a Dangerous World and How America Can Meet Them
2007-05-10Hezbollah, Illegal Immigration, and the Next 9/11
2007-05-30The Arabian candidate
2008-08-11Rethinking the National Interest -- American Realism for a New World
2008-08-06Douglas Feith's War and Decision: Life in a Neocon's Parallel Universe
2008-08-07Brzezinski’s bunker
2008-08-27'What Happened' by Scott McClellan -- BOOK REVIEW
2008-09-27Domestic Spying, Inc.
2008-09-18US Genocide in Iraq
2008-07-02The Story Behind George Bush's Lies -- What Scott McClellan (and Jay Rockefeller) Didn't Tell Us
2008-07-02The Impeachment of George W. Bush
2008-07-05Symposium: Israel's Test
2008-07-10Why We Went to War in Iraq
2008-07-20The Green Light
2008-07-25How to Get Away With Torture
2008-12-03Right at the Edge
2008-11-22You're Scaring Me, Obama: Let the Bush Years Die
2008-11-11The Case for Restraint -- Francis Fukuyama responds
2008-11-10The US's geopolitical nightmare
2008-11-07Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: Europe and Eurasia Overview
2008-11-01The End Of Arrogance -- America Loses Its Dominant Economic Role
2008-01-09Will Justice Go After Cheney?
2008-01-02How to Defuse Iran
2008-01-06Press Conference by the President
2008-01-07Azzam the American -- The making of an Al Qaeda homegrown
2008-05-03Pentagon Considers Adding Forces in Afghanistan
2008-04-24Revamping American Grand Strategy
2008-04-24A Dissenter’s Guide to Foreign Policy
2008-04-28Latin America: the attack on democracy
2008-05-17Planned US Israeli Attack on Iran: Will there be a War against Iran?
2008-03-24It Wasn't On Oprah or Fox News -- How Could Hillary Have Known?
2007-11-11The Next Act -- Is a damaged Administration less likely to attack Iran, or more?
2007-11-08Making a Killing: A Blackwater Timeline
2007-12-20Press Conference by the President
2007-10-30Michael Ledeen discusses the Iranian Time Bomb
2007-10-21In Pakistan Quandary, U.S. Reviews Stance
2009-03-05Defense Secretary Nominee Robert Gates Tied to Iran-Contra Scandal and the Secret Arming of Saddam Hussein
2009-06-01Obama's Cairo Speech
2009-06-10How the Chicago Boys Wrecked the Economy -- An Interview with Michael Hudson
2009-06-13Tribal Politics: Principles, Liberty and Peace Need Not Apply
2009-06-13Remarks By The President On A New Beginning
2009-06-20The Waning Power of Truth
2007-05-29Vice President's Remarks at the United States Military Academy Commencement West Point, New York
2007-05-29The Mother Ship Lands in Iraq
2007-05-26The Power Elite's Use Of War And Debt
2007-05-25Win or withdraw? The Democrats' false dilemma
2007-05-26The Case for the Strong Executive
2007-05-14Republican senator slams Iraqi government
2007-05-17Rehabilitating US Imperialism
2007-05-16Petraeus Confirmation Hearings; Securing Baghdad; Bush to Deliver State Of The Union Tonight - transcript
2007-06-08Interview with Condoleezza Rice conducted by Wolf Blitzer, CNN Late Edition, 8 September 2002
2007-06-08Political Islam
2007-06-07The Global Weapons of Mass Destruction Threat: A Counter- Argument to the Western Interdisciplinary Viewpoint
2007-06-07How Permanent Are Those Bases?
2007-06-08Secret Prisons in 2 Countries Held Qaeda Suspects, Report Says
2007-06-06Nato’s Islamists
2007-06-12Singing CAIR’s Tune, On Your Dime
2007-06-12Globalizing Weakness: Is Global Poverty a Threat to the Interests of States?
2007-06-11Sudan is secret partner of U.S
2007-06-17More Smoke on the Horizon in the Middle East War Theater
2007-06-17The Pentagon v. Peak Oil -- How Wars of the Future May Be Fought Just to Run the Machines That Fight Them
2007-06-19Pace fired to clear way for “national emergency,” Iran nuclear strike?
2007-07-17Pushed for a pull-out
2007-07-17Exit Strategies
2007-07-16The Lose-Lose War
2007-07-13Press Conference by the President
2007-07-13The New York Times Surrenders -- A monument to defeatism on the editorial page
2007-07-12House Armed Services Committee Global Security Assessment Statement For The Record
2007-07-04Grand Strategy for a Divided America
2007-07-05'The Secret Way to War': An Exchange
2007-06-28Outsourcing Torture -- The secret history of America’s “extraordinary rendition” program
2007-07-01Democratic Realism -- An American Foreign Policy for a Unipolar World
2007-08-01From Planning to Warfare to Occupation, How Iraq Went Wrong
2007-08-07Transcript: Bush news conference
2007-07-26President Bush Discusses War on Terror in South Carolina
2007-07-27Back to the Future? -- The Mideast landscape
2007-08-26Tomgram: Juan Cole, The Republic Militant at War, Then and Now
2007-08-29Bush Defends Iraq War Effort
2007-08-15President Delivers State of the Union Address
2007-08-19A prelude to war: What's really behind Bush's Iran move
2007-08-20A False Choice in Pakistan
2007-09-16Gates Rows Back From 100,000 Target For Us Troops In Iraq
2007-09-08Mugged by reality -- How it all went wrong in Iraq
2007-09-11Political Fault Line Emphasized by Timing of Hearings
2007-09-11OFF THE RECORD WITH DON RUMSFELD
2007-09-02STRIKING FIRST
2006-11-21"War of the Worlds" or "Clash of Civilisations"?
2006-12-03The Way Out of War - A blueprint for leaving Iraq now
2006-12-02Oceans apart
2006-12-08WHAT'S IN A NAME - World War IV - Let's call this conflict what it is
2006-10-28The Failed Presidency of George W. Bush
2006-10-25US: world empire of chaos
2006-10-13Interview Vali Nasr
2006-09-02Profile - Family Security Matters
2006-09-05Afghan Symbol for Change Becomes a Symbol of Failure
2006-09-03In Latest Push, Bush Cites Risk in Quitting Iraq
2006-09-08Laying Blame and Passing the Buck, Dramatized
2006-09-08Lawyers and G.O.P. Chiefs Resist Proposal on Tribunal
2006-09-25Richard Clarke 9/11 prepared testimony
2006-10-01New Book Fuels Election Year Debate Over Bush, Rumsfeld
2006-09-11Bush's great fear: Three little words
2006-08-21Ask the expert: Bush’s foreign policy
2006-08-24Some in G.O.P. Say Iran Threat Is Played Down
2006-08-24The United States of America will cease to exist on February 5th, 2006
2006-08-27Bush Lets U.S. Spy on Callers Without Courts
2006-05-01Intelligence, Policy,and the War in Iraq
2006-05-01The Cost of War
2007-04-04LaRouche Demands Cheney's Resignation
2007-03-21Andrew Cockburn’s Rumsfeld Revelations
2007-05-03Timeline: Al-Qaeda
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 1 -- Strategic Assessment
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: Africa Overview
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: East Asia and Pacific Overview
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: Europe and Eurasia Overview
2007-04-15If Elected ... McCain Sees ‘No Plan B’ for Iraq War
2007-01-11Transcript of President Bush’s Address to Nation on U.S. Policy in Iraq
2007-01-11A Sketchy Blueprint for Iraq
2007-01-06Why Did Donald Rumsfeld Fail?
2007-01-23Al Jazeera's Global Gamble- A PEJ Interview - Al Jazeera Timeline
2007-01-18Annotate This: Escalation in Iraq
2007-01-23Crusading in the Arc of Instability - George Bush's Crusading Scorecard (2001-2007)
2007-01-27Interview with Stephen Grey
2007-01-29None (but Me) Dare Call It Treason
2007-02-26Christian Fascism: The Jesus Gestapo of St. Orwell
2007-02-22Washington's $8 Billion Shadow
2007-02-18After Neoconservatism
2007-02-28The Better Part of Valor -- Why the Murtha plan to get us out of Iraq won't
2007-03-01American Enterprise Institute takes lead in agitating against Iran
2007-03-01President Bush Discusses Progress in Afghanistan, Global War on Terror
2007-03-03Rules of Engagement
2007-03-15The Condensed Bob Woodward -- Slate reads Plan of Attack so you don't have to
2007-03-04America on its Knees Before Tyranny
2007-03-05Timeline: al-Qaida
2007-03-05Inside story of the hunt for Bin Laden
2007-03-05PILGER: THIS WAR IS A FRAUD
2007-10-20The War on Afghanistan Was Wrong, Too
2007-10-14Additional Information About Blackwater Usa -- Memorandum
2007-11-02Vice President's Remarks to the Heritage Foundation
2007-10-04Open Fire
2007-09-18The Shock Doctrine: Naomi Klein on the Rise of Disaster Capitalism
2007-09-24Betrayed -- The Iraqis who trusted America the most
2007-12-10Timeline: the al-Qaida tapes
2007-12-10Hill Briefed on Waterboarding in 2002
2007-12-10Moment of Reckoning
2007-12-16Afghan Mission Is Reviewed as Concerns Rise
2007-11-12Stabbed in the back! The past and future of a right-wing myth
2007-11-16The Crisis Of Pakistan: A Dangerously Weak State
2007-11-26Norwegian Jihad -- Transcript
2007-11-20PJB: Bush’s Failure in Pakistan – And the World
2007-11-20Breaking Away -- Francis Fukuyama and the neoconservatives
2007-11-20The Neoconservative Moment
2007-11-22The United States’ new backyard
2008-03-24Globalization And The Development Of Underdevelopment Of The Third World
2008-03-05The radical dawa in transition -- The rise of Islamic neoradicalism in the Netherlands
2008-02-22Conversations in International Relations: Interview with John J. Mearsheimer (Part II)
2008-02-26Fitzgerald: Islam for Infidels, Part Two
2008-05-17The Million Year War
2008-05-14Resisting the Empire
2008-05-15The Enduring Trap in Iraq
2008-05-27Laptop Jihadi
2008-04-22A Warning to Africa: The New U.S. Imperial Grand Strategy
2008-04-15Education Toward War
2008-04-04Interview: Lee Kuan Yew -- Part 1
2008-01-04Why Iraq? Oil and U.S. Foreign Policy
2008-10-29Sarkozy, France, and Nato -- Will Sarkozy’s Rapprochement To Nato Be Sustainable?
2008-11-05No Time for Laurels; Now the Hard Part
2008-11-05Are You a 'Violent Extremist'? FBI's Analytical Lexicon Lowers the Bar
2008-11-04New Beltway Debate: What to Do About Iran
2008-11-04The More Things “Change” The More They Stay The Same
2008-11-08For Eyes of President-Elect Obama Only
2008-11-10Secret Order Lets U.S. Raid Al Qaeda in Many Countries
2008-11-11The Case for Restraint -- Niall Ferguson responds
2008-11-14The US gas garrison -- Energy self-sufficiency not military escorts for oil
2008-11-14After the Imperial Presidency
2008-11-13No Breathing Space in Washington -- Don't Let Barack Obama Break Your Heart
2008-11-17Meanwhile, somewhere out in the Empire...
2008-12-03Symposium: Iran: The Countdown
2008-07-24The U.S. Economy Is Socialism for the Rich
2008-07-25Crimes and Misdemeanors -- Complete List
2008-07-27Obama on the Brink
2008-07-20Nine Reasons to Investigate War Crimes Now
2008-07-02Ode to Impeachment: Kucinich, McClellan, and the Propaganda Model
2008-07-07Wrestling for influence
2008-06-11The History of the House of Rothschild
2008-06-29Indictment and Trial of Bush and Cheney
2008-06-30Preparing the Battlefield
2008-09-20How We Misunderstand Terrorism
2008-09-26James Galbraith on our current American economic problems
2008-09-12The Return of U. S. Death Squads
2008-09-12The Worsening Debt Crisis: Who Got Us into This Mess and What are the Real Political Options?
2008-10-09U.S. Study Is Said to Warn of Crisis in Afghanistan
2008-10-11America and Political Islam: Clash of Cultures or Clash of Interests?
2008-10-11Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam
2008-10-13Restoring The Rule Of Law -- Testimony
2008-08-24Are You Ready for Nuclear War? -- The Mindlessness is Total
2008-08-25Securitarism, reproduction of disorder and erosion of democratic rule of law
2008-09-07Terrorized by 'War on Terror'
2008-08-08'Nobody is talking'
2008-08-12The Myth of Grass-Roots Terrorism -- Why Osama bin Laden Still Matters
2008-08-19Double Standards in the Global War on Terror
2009-06-22The panopticon economy
2009-06-16CNN WOLF BLITZER REPORTS -- Special Edition from Qatar
2009-06-12Obama calls for new beginning between US, Muslims
2009-07-05The Base Court: Another Fortress Rising in America's Ring of Iron
2009-07-16Why we must win in Afghanistan
2009-07-20"Watch What We Do, Not What We Say"
2009-05-22The Revenge of Geography
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 -- Chapter 2. Country Reports: Europe and Eurasia Overview
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 --
2009-02-11Renewing American Leadership
2008-12-16The Return of Realpolitik in Arabia
2009-01-19This war on terrorism is bogus
2007-03-09Gitmo's Guerrilla Lawyers
2007-03-09Assembly, Opening Debate On Question Of Palestine, Hears Call For Enhanced UN Involvement In Current Middle East Situation
2007-03-13Cheney Assails Those Favoring Iraq Drawdown
2007-03-14The Geopolitics of Energy: Speech given at the IP Week, 2007
2007-03-02Australia: the new 51st state
2007-02-19Chomsky on Iran, Iraq, and the Rest of the World
2007-02-20Misplaying North Korea and Losing Friends and Influence in Northeast Asia
2007-02-20Russia's hudna with the Muslim world
2007-02-21The Propaganda Machine’s Lies About Saddam Live On
2007-02-10Al-Qaeda Suspects Color White House Debate Over Iran
2007-02-10The Build-a-War Workshop
2007-02-08Pentagon Criticized for Prewar Data Analysis
2007-02-12How the Baby Boomers Almost Saved the World ...and why they failed
2007-01-23Stop the Next War `- Before it starts. Support H. J. Resolution 14
2006-05-01‘The Enemy at Home’ - First Chapter
2007-01-24President Bush’s State of the Union Address
2007-01-14Bush's New Iraq Strategy - "The Most Dangerous Foreign Policy Blunder Since Vietnam"
2007-01-06New Face--Same Choices
2007-01-10Airstrike Rekindles Somalis’ Anger at the U.S.
2007-01-03U.S. Not Winning War in Iraq, Bush Says for 1st Time
2006-12-31"They Take The Mind, and What Emerges is Just Tapioca Pudding"
2007-04-15Remarks at the Southern Baptist Convention Annual Meeting
2007-04-12Cheney Fights for Detainee Policy -- As Pressure Mounts to Limit Handling Of Terror Suspects, He Holds Hard Line
2007-04-16Iraq One Year Later
2007-04-16The Imminent War
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: South and Central Asia Overview
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: Western Hemisphere Overview
2007-05-01Bush Vetoes Bill Tying Iraq Funds to Exit
2007-05-02President Bush Rejects Artificial Deadline, Vetoes Iraq War Supplemental
2007-04-27Ex-C.I.A. Chief, in Book, Assails Cheney on Iraq
2007-04-25Torture, Moral Values, and Leadership of the Free World -- Kafka era studies, no. 3
2007-03-21Chris Hedges: The Christian Right’s War on America
2007-03-19Made in USA
2007-03-20'I've Got Nothing to Lose'
2007-03-29Congress to keep heat on Bush for Iraq withdrawal
2007-04-04Our Patience on Iraq Should Be Exhausted
2007-04-09Where Plan A left Ahmad Chalabi
2007-03-31The Second Lebanon War -- It probably won't be the last
2006-05-01The Iraq Syndrome
2006-05-01Tyranny and Terror
2006-08-23The Party of Davos
2006-05-01When Democracy Looks Like Civil War