Pubdate: Thu, 07 Jun 2001 Source: Guardian Weekly, The (UK) Copyright: Guardian Publications 2001 Contact: http://www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/GWeekly/front/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/633 Page: 6 Author: Julian Borger, Washington diary PRIVATE FIRMS SEEK PROFIT IN DRUGS WAR The trend towards reducing the size of government by farming out its operations is now almost universal in the industrialised democracies. It is supposed to save money and impose some market discipline on bureaucracy's natural tendency to swell. The problem is that by "downsizing" government and "outsourcing" its work, the profit motive begins to take the place of public policy. When the issue is delivering the post or cleaning the streets, the government can set standards and monitor the work of its private contractors. But what happens when an administration starts "outsourcing" its conduct of foreign and defence policy, and the contractors deal not in stamps, postcards, brushes and brooms but lethal force? Those are the questions now being asked in the United States Congress after the shooting down of a small plane carrying American missionaries in Peru. The plane was strafed by a Peruvian air force jet on April 20 in the belief that it carried drug smugglers. A young American, Veronica Bowers, and her seven-month-old daughter were killed. The incident initially appeared to be the over-zealous act of a Peruvian pilot, but the missionaries' plane had first been spotted and wrongly identified by a US surveillance aircraft, which carried Americans working for the CIA and a Peruvian liaison officer. Moreover the Americans were not CIA staff, but employees of a private firm with a CIA contract. As one congressional official put it: "There were just businessmen in that plane." A state department inquiry into the incident is under way, and the sequence of events is unclear. US government officials have suggested that the private contractors cautioned the Peruvians against opening fire, but no one is denying that the US plane initially spotted the missionaries' plane and labelled it suspect. The incident has cast light on the creeping privatisation of the drug war. Of the $1.3bn set aside by congress last year for Plan Colombia - the programme of military and development aid by which Washington hopes to stem the supply of narcotics to the US at their source - a great deal is going to commercial ventures. The biggest of the companies involved is DynCorp, a huge conglomerate based in northern Virginia near the CIA's Langley headquarters. DynCorp's five-year $200m contract with the state department requires it to fly crop-dusters over the Colombian jungle dropping pesticide on coca plantations. When crop-dusters come under fire, it is up to DynCorp helicopter pilots to provide support. In February a DynCorp chopper flew into the middle of a firefight with the rebel Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) to rescue some Colombian policemen. DynCorp employees also ferry US-trained Colombian troops into battle. Other US companies have different slices of the Plan Colombia pie. AirScan conducts aerial surveillance, and Military Professional Resources Inc (MPRI) until recently provided training for Colombian officers. The rise of private contractors was made inevitable by the counter-narcotics policies of both Bill Clinton and George Bush. They depend on a largely military solution to a complex problem in a decade in which manpower in the US armed forces has been cut by more than a third. Ed Soyster, a retired general and former head of the Defence Intelligence Agency who works for MPRI, pointed out that pulling eight full colonels out of the already streamlined US forces for a Plan Colombia assignment would seriously affect combat readiness. "That's why they come to the contractors," he said. All this is not entirely new. Air America used to fly for the CIA in southeast Asia during the Vietnam war. But that was under the direct control of Langley. The new mercenaries are independent firms with their own bottom line. Soyster says the government can exert tighter control on private contractors than it can on its own employees because the guidelines and limits for actions are precisely laid out in the contracts. That may be true of the MPRI contract, which dealt solely with classes for officers, but it is not necessarily the case for the companies operating in the Colombian jungle. The DynCorp contract is a study in vagueness. The section dealing with search and rescue says: "This operation deals with downed aircraft or hostile action by narcotics producers or traffickers." It gives no further details. Information about mercenaries was once draped with a thick blanket of secrecy labelled "national security". Nowadays the blanket has a new brand name: "corporate confidentiality". Thus, members of Congress have not even been officially told which company was flying the surveillance plane on April 20 over Peru. Their own researchers traced the charter to a mysterious company called Aviation Development Corporation (ADC), operating out of Alabama. But no one at ADC has been willing to talk. Neither has the CIA, the state department or the White House. Janice Schakowsky, a Democratic congresswoman from Illinois, has been amazed at the secrecy surrounding companies that receive hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayers' money. "We are hiring a secret army," she said. "We are engaging in a secret war, and the American people need to be told why." The danger inherent in the obsessive confidentiality is the implied lack of control. If Congress is not even being told the names of the companies involved, it cannot determine whether US funds are being used to aid rightwing paramilitaries or being drawn into the conflict with Farc. There is no dividing line between the guerrilla war and the counter-narcotics war, because many guerrilla leaders are also drug lords. Meanwhile the companies and their employees have a vested interest in prolonging and deepening US involvement in Colombia. They are taking risks, but making good money. No one has thought through what happens when a group of private contractors are killed or taken hostage. What would their status be, and would the US intervene on their behalf? As Soyster put it: "That's something that has got to be figured out." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom