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Updated: November 17, 2008 See asterisked item(s) below for latest updates |
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'What If Our Mercenaries Turn on Us?'
By Chris Hedges
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Sunday 03 June 2007
Armed units from the private security firm Blackwater USA opened fire in Baghdad streets twice in
two days last week. It triggered a standoff between the security contractors and Iraqi forces, a reminder
that the war in Iraq may be remembered mostly in our history books for empowering and building America's
first modern mercenary army.
There are an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 armed security contractors working in Iraq, although there are
no official figures and some estimates run much higher. Security contractors are not counted as part of the
coalition forces. When the number of private mercenary fighters is added to other civilian military "contractors"
who carry out logistical support activities such as food preparation, the number rises to about 126,000.
"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 (D., Pa.). "How in the hell do you justify that?"
The privatization of war hands an incentive to American corporations, many with tremendous political clout, to keep
us mired down in Iraq. But even more disturbing is the steady rise of this modern Praetorian Guard. The Praetorian Guard
in ancient Rome was a paramilitary force that defied legal constraints, made violence part of the political discourse,
and eventually plunged the Roman Republic into tyranny and despotism. Despotic movements need paramilitary forces that
operate outside the law, forces that sow fear among potential opponents, and are capable of physically silencing those
branded by their leaders as traitors. And in the wrong hands, a Blackwater could well become that force.
American taxpayers have so far handed a staggering $4 billion to "armed security" companies in Iraq such as Blackwater,
according to House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Rep. Henry Waxman (D., Calif.). Tens of billions more
have been paid to companies that provide logistical support. Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D., Ill.) of the House Intelligence
Committee estimates that 40 cents of every dollar spent on the occupation has gone to war contractors. It is unlikely
that any of these corporations will push for an early withdrawal. The profits are too lucrative.
Mercenary forces like Blackwater operate beyond civilian and military law. They are covered by a 2004 edict passed by
American occupation authorities in Iraq that immunizes all civilian contractors in Iraq from prosecution.
Blackwater, barely a decade old, has migrated from Iraq to set up operations in the United States and nine other
countries. It trains Afghan security forces and has established a base a few miles from the Iranian border. The huge
contracts from the war - including $750 million from the State Department since 2004 - have allowed Blackwater to amass
a fleet of more than 20 aircraft, including helicopter gunships. Jeremy Scahill, the author of Blackwater: The Rise of
the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army, points out that Blackwater has also constructed "the world's largest private
military facility - a 7,000-acre compound near the Great Dismal Swamp of North Carolina." Blackwater also recently opened
a facility in Illinois ("Blackwater North") and, despite local opposition, is moving ahead with plans to build another
huge training base near San Diego. The company recently announced it was creating a private intelligence branch called
"Total Intelligence."
Erik Prince, who founded and runs Blackwater, is a man who appears to have little time for the niceties of
democracy. He has close ties with the radical Christian Right and the Bush White House. He champions his company
as a patriotic extension of the U.S. military. His employees, in an act as cynical as it is dishonest, take an oath
of loyalty to the Constitution. But what he and his allies have built is a mercenary army, paid for with government
money, which operates outside the law and without constitutional constraint.
Mercenary units are a vital instrument in the hands of despotic movements. Communist and fascist movements
during the last century each built rogue paramilitary forces. And the appearance of Blackwater fighters, heavily
armed and wearing their trademark black uniforms, patrolling the streets of New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina, may be a grim taste of the future. In New Orleans Blackwater charged the government $240,000 a day.
" 'It cannot happen here' is always wrong," the philosopher Karl Popper wrote. "A dictatorship can happen anywhere."
The word contractor helps launder the fear and threat out of a more accurate term: "paramilitary force." We're not
supposed to have such forces in the United States, but we now do. And if we have them, we have a potential threat to
democracy. On U.S. soil, Blackwater so far has shown few signs of being an out-and-out rogue retainer army, though they
looked the part in New Orleans. But were this country to become even a little less stable, outfits like Blackwater might
see a heyday. If the United States falls into a period of instability caused by another catastrophic terrorist attack,
an economic meltdown that triggers social unrest, or a series of environmental disasters, such paramilitary forces,
protected and assisted by fellow ideologues in the police and military, could ruthlessly abolish what is left of our
eroding democracy. War, with the huge profits it hands to corporations, and to right-wing interests such as the Christian
Right, could become a permanent condition. And the thugs with automatic weapons, black uniforms and wraparound sunglasses
who appeared on the streets in New Orleans could appear on our streets.
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Chris Hedges (hedgesscoop@aol.com) is author, mostly recently, of American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War
on America. Hedges is a graduate of Harvard Divinity School and won a Pulitzer Prize as a foreign correspondent for the
New York Times.
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