Wednesday, July 18, 2007

RE: Silent Surge in Contractor "Armies"

----------------- Bulletin Message -----------------
From: The Man Common
Date: Jul 18, 2007 3:00 PM


Silent Surge in Contractor "Armies"

By Brad Knickerbocker
The Christian Science Monitor

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A key support for US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, civilians have little oversight and, back home, little help.

There are two coalition armies in Iraq: the official one, which fights the war, and the private one, which supports it.

This latter group of civilians drives dangerous truck convoys, cooks soldiers' meals, and guards facilities and important officials. They rival in size the US military force there, and thousands have become casualties of the conflict. If this experience is any indication, they may change the makeup of US military forces in future wars.

Having civilians working in war zones is as old as war itself. But starting with US military action in the Balkans and Colombia in the mid-1990s and accelerating rapidly in Afghanistan and Iraq, the number and activity of contractors has greatly increased. Coming from dozens of countries, hired by hundreds of companies, contractors have seen their numbers rise faster than the Pentagon's ability to track them.

Now, the challenges of this privatization strategy are becoming clear.

Everything from who controls their activities to who cares for them when wounded remains unresolved, say experts in and out of the military. This has led to protests from families in the United States as well as concerns in military ranks about how contractors fit into the chain of command.

"This is a very murky legal space, and simply put we haven't dealt with the fundamental issues," says Peter Singer, a foreign policy specialist at the Brookings Institution in Washington. "What is their specific role, what is their specific status, and what is the system of accountability? We've sort of dodged these questions."

As the inevitable drawdown of US military forces in Iraq occurs, the importance of civilian workers there is likely to grow.

"In my view, the role of contractors is just going to continue to escalate, probably at an ever-increasing rate," says Deborah Avant, a political scientist at the University of California, Irvine, whose research has focused on civil-military relations.

For example, the new US Embassy now being completed in Baghdad - 21 buildings on 104 acres, an area six times larger than the United Nations complex in New York - is likely to be a permanent fixture needing hundreds if not thousands of civilian contractors to maintain it and provide services.

In Iraq, Up to 180,000 Contractors

Estimates of the number of private security personnel and other civilian contractors in Iraq today range from 126,000 to 180,000 - nearly as many, if not more than, the number of Americans in uniform there. Most are not Americans. They come from Fiji, Brazil, Scotland, Croatia, Hungary, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa, Australia, and other countries.

"A very large part of the total force is not in uniform," Scott Horton, who teaches the law of armed conflict at Columbia University School of Law, said in congressional testimony last month. In World War II and the Korean War, contractors amounted to 3 to 5 percent of the total force deployed. Through the Vietnam War and the first Gulf War, the percentage grew to roughly 10 percent, he notes. "But in the current conflict, the number appears to be climbing steadily closer to parity" with military personnel. "This represents an extremely radical transformation in the force configuration," he says.

Until recently, there has been little oversight of civilian contractors operating in Iraq. The Defense Department is not adequately keeping track of contractors - where they are or even how many there are, the Government Accountability Office concluded in a report last December. This is especially true as military units rotate in and out of the war zone (as do contractors) and institutional memory is lost.

This lack of accountability has begun to change with a Democrat-controlled Congress. As part of the 2007 National Defense Authorization Act passed last year, Congress now requires that civilian contractors who break the law - hurt or kill civilians, for example - come under the legal authority of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. So far, however, the Pentagon has not issued guidance to field commanders on how to do this.

Proposed bills in the House and Senate would require "transparency and accountability in military and security contracting." For example, companies would be required to provide information on the hiring and training of civilian workers, and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff would have to issue rules of engagement regarding the circumstances under which contractors could use force.

Senior commanders acknowledge the value of contractors, especially those that are armed and ready to fight if attacked.

At his Senate confirmation hearing in January, Army Gen. David Petraeus, commander of the multinational force in Iraq, said that the "surge" by US forces in Iraq might not include enough American troops. "However, there are tens of thousands of contract security forces and [Iraqi] ministerial security forces that do, in fact, guard facilities and secure institutions," he added. "That does give me the reason to believe that we can accomplish the mission in Baghdad."

Still, many senior military officers worry about the impact that relying on so many civilian contractors - especially armed private security forces - will have on the conduct of future conflicts. This past Christmas Eve, for example, a Blackwater USA contractor shot and killed an Iraqi security guard. The contractor was fired and returned to the US. The FBI and Justice Department are investigating.

The US military needs to take "a real hard look at security contractors on future battlefields and figure out a way to get a handle on them so that they can be better integrated - if we're going to allow them to be used in the first place," Col. Peter Mansoor, a deputy to General Petraeus, recently told Jane's Defence Weekly.

"I meet with a lot of O-5s and O-6s [lieutenant colonels and colonels] at the war colleges, and you hear a lot of that discomfort with how far it's gone," says Mr. Singer of Brookings.

Opinions differ over whether the trend in using more contractors is here to stay.

"Every war is unique, but the heavy use of private contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan is likely to persist in future conflicts," says military analyst Loren Thompson of the Lexington Institute in Arlington, Va. "Relying on market sources is intrinsically more flexible than using government workers, and nobody seriously believes that the market will fail to respond to multibillion dollar opportunities even when danger is involved."

"In addition," says Dr. Thompson, "modern military technology often requires support that only the original makers can provide."

A New Military-Industrial Complex?

Other observers also foresee an increase in military contractors - for darker r

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Tuesday, May 15, 2007

RE: Dramatic video of KBR convoy ambush! Homies don't play!

----------------- Bulletin Message -----------------From: Pan ManDate: May 15, 2007 2:04 AM
He who lives by the sword dies by the sword but the voice of the driver you will here exactly reflects the kind of "recruit" that KBR is looking for...good old dumb country boys who are told they will get rich quick as truck drivers etc only to discover that war really is Hell! Imagine a convoy of Russian troop supplies rolling through the streets of SouCentral or Bed-Stuy and what would happen to them....well, the homies in Takrit, Fallujah and Baghdad don't play that shit either. Watch the viddy below but it's the real deal...intense!
KBR stands for Kelly, Brown and Root which is a subsidiary of our old friend Haliburton, the leading "defense contractor" as a result of having their ex-CEO, Richard Cheney as the warmongering and profiteering "Vice" President. Here are the "hot job" descriptions that KBR is recruiting to replace the southern country boy in the video below:
Req# Job Title Location Category #412441 Associate HSE Coordinator Iraq HSE General #412296 Mechanic Iraq Maintenance #412274 Labor Foreman Iraq General Craft #411876 Logistics Coordinator Kuwait Logistics Support #411771 Heavy Truck Driver Iraq Transportation #411738 Administrative Specialist Iraq Administrative Services #411734 Warehouse Foreman Iraq Procurement #411721 Administrative Associate Iraq Administrative Services #411552 IT Desktop Analyst Iraq IT Desktop Support #411532 Food Service Worker Djibouti Food Services #411504 Document Control Specialist Afghanistan Document Management #411499 MWR Coordinator Iraq MWR #410579 Food Service Lead Iraq Food Services #408389 Laborer Afghanistan General Craft #407780 Fork Lift Operator Iraq Equipment Operations #394815 Process Engineer - Principal Level TX-Houston, United States Engineering/Technical #392303 Operations Director Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates (UAE)
Just a side note...KBR is also the company that is building and refitting thousands of human "white box cars" for the mass delivery of "dissident detainees" in Amerika to the 800 plus domestic concentration camps operated by Haliburton, KBR and other shill "security companies" like Blackwater for another of our old friends, Michael Chertoff's FEMA/Homeland Security. Another little billion dollar project KBR is involved in is the construction of DUMB's (Deep Underground Military Bases and COG (Continuity of Government) underground command center cities in case of nuclear war or even Nibiru's expected return in 2012. (see below).
Most Americans will refuse to believe there are hundreds of deep underground military bases just waiting to be filled in the future with millions of American prisoners.
Unfortunately, sticking your head in the sand doesn’t make the reality of these deep underground military bases (and New World Order railroad cars for your transport to these bases) go away.
ILLEGAL DEEP UNDERGROUND MILITARY BASES IN AMERICAMany of these deep underground military bases are over 2 miles underground and have diameters ranging from 10 miles up to 30 miles across. Nuclear powered laser drilling machines that can drill a tunnel seven miles long in one day have been used in the construction process.
Where are these deep underground military bases?
One of the largest deep underground military bases in America is underneath the Denver Airport! Constructed in 1995, the government and politicians were hell bent on building this airport in spite of it ending up vastly over-budget. Charges of corruption, constant construction company changes, and mass firings of teams once they had built a section of their work was reported so that no "one" group had any idea what the blueprint of the airport was.
Not only did locals not want this airport built, nor was it needed, but everything was done to make sure it was built despite that.
Underneath the airport is an 88 square mile facility with eight levels. There are reports of electronic/magnetic vibrations which make some people sick and cause headaches in others. Areas going on for acres and acres are fenced in with barbed-wire at the top facing in, as if to keep something, or someone inside. There are small concrete stacks that look like mini cooling towers, apparently to vent the deep underground military base. These stacks rise up over the "acres of nowhere" adjacent to the airport.

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