Pubdate: Mon, 14 Oct 2002 Source: International Herald-Tribune (France) Copyright: International Herald Tribune 2002 Contact: http://www.iht.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/212 Author: Leslie Wayne, The New York Times PRIVATE CONTRACTORS STEP IN FOR PENTAGON NEW YORK With the war on terror already a year old and the possibility of war against Iraq growing by the day, a modern version of an ancient practice - one as old as warfare itself - is reasserting itself at the Pentagon. Mercenaries, as they were once known, are thriving - only this time they are called private military contractors, and some are even subsidiaries of Fortune 500 companies. The Pentagon cannot go to war without them. Often run by retired military officers, including three- and four-star generals, private military contractors are the new business face of war. Blurring the line between military and civilian, they provide everything from logistic support to battlefield training and military advice at home and abroad. Some are helping to conduct training exercises using live ammunition for American troops in Kuwait, under the code name Desert Spring. One has just been hired to guard President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan, the target of a recent assassination attempt. Another is helping to write the book on airport security. In the darker recesses of the world, private contractors go where the Pentagon would prefer not to be seen, carrying out military exercises for the American government, far from Washington's view. In the past few years, they have sent their employees to Bosnia, Nigeria, Macedonia, Colombia and other global hot spots. Motivated as much by profits as politics, these companies - about 35 all told in the United States - need the government's permission to be in business. A few are somewhat familiar names, like Kellogg Brown Root, a subsidiary of Halliburton Co. that operates for the government in Cuba and Central Asia. Others have less-known names, like DynCorp Inc.; Vinnell, a subsidiary of TRW Inc.; SAIC; ICI of Oregon; and Logicon Inc., a unit of Northrop Grumman Corp. One of the best known, MPRI, boasts of having "more generals per square foot than in the Pentagon." During the Gulf War in 1991, one of every 50 people on the battlefield was an American civilian under contract; by the time of the peacekeeping effort in Bosnia in 1996, the figure was one in 10. No one knows for sure how big this secretive industry is, but some military experts estimate the global market at $100 billion. As for the public companies that own private military contractors, they say little if anything about them to shareholders. "Contractors are indispensable," said John Hamre, deputy secretary of defense in the Clinton administration. "Will there be more in the future? Yes.." That means even more business, and profits, for contractors who perform tasks as mundane as maintaining barracks for overseas troops, as sophisticated as operating weapon systems or as secretive as intelligence-gathering in Africa. Many function near, or even at, the front lines, causing concern among military strategists about their safety and commitment if bullets start to fly. The use of military contractors raises other troubling questions as well. In peace, they can act as a secret army outside of public view. In war, while providing functions crucial to the combat effort, they are not soldiers. Private contractors are not obligated to take orders or to follow military codes of conduct. Their legal obligation is solely to an employment contract, not to their country. Private military contractors are flushing out drug traffickers in Colombia and turning the ragtag militias of African countries into fighting machines. When a UN arms embargo restricted the U.S. military in the Balkans, private military contractors were sent instead to train the local forces. They are not mercenaries in the classic sense. Most, but not all, private military contractors are unarmed, even when they oversee others with guns. They have even formed a trade group, the International Peace Operations Association, to promote industry standards. "We don't want to risk getting contracts by being called mercenaries," said Doug Brooks, president of the association. "But we can do things on short notice and keep our mouths shut." MPRI, formerly Military Professionals Resources Inc., may provide the best example of how skilled retired soldiers cash in on their military training. Its roster includes General Carl Vuono, the former U.S. Army chief of staff who led the Gulf War and the Panama invasion; General Crosbie Saint, the former commander of the U.S. Army in Europe; and General Ron Griffith, the former U.S. Army vice chief of staff. There are also dozens of retired top-ranked generals, an admiral and more than 10,000 former military personnel, including elite special forces, on call and ready for assignment. "We can have 20 qualified people on the Serbian border within 24 hours," said Lieutenant General Harry Soyster, a spokesman for the company and a former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency. "The army can't do that. But contractors can." For that, MPRI is paid well. Its revenue exceeds $100 million a year, mainly from Pentagon and State Department contracts. Retired military personnel working for MPRI receive two to three times their Pentagon salaries, in addition to their retirement benefits and corporate benefits like stock options and 401(k) plans. MPRI's founders became millionaires in 2000, when they and about 35 equity holders sold the company for $40 million in cash to L-3 Communications Holdings Inc., a publicly traded military contractor. "The main reason for using a contractor is that it saves you from having to use troops, so troops can focus on war fighting," said Colonel Thomas Sweeney, a professor of strategic logistics at the Army War College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. "It's cheaper because you only pay for contractors when you use them." But David Hackworth, a former army colonel and frequent critic of the military, said: "These new mercenaries work for the Defense and State Department, and Congress looks the other way." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart