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WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
altmuslim this week - january 5, 2009 - This week, a new year brings new tragedy for the people of Gaza. What parts do tribalism, US political realities, and the media landscape have to play in the ongoing crisis?
ASIDES
editor's blog
Who is a civilian? Who is a terrorist? - When Israel says that "anything affiliated with Hamas is a legitimate target," there is not much difference from the rationale that any Israeli adult is fair game for attack based on their past "affiliation" with the Israeli army. (January 6, 2009)

The preacher and the pop star - What happens when you put together a Muslim convention, an evangelical preacher, and a (lesbian) Grammy-award winning rock star? The answer is an extraordinary and historic day. (December 27, 2008)

CONTRIBUTORS
PODCASTS
altmuslim review 030 - Free speech - is it something Muslims can live with? In this episode, we talk about how Muslims cope with (and benefit from) free speech in Western societies. Also, an extended interview with Jewel of Medina author Sherry Jones discussing her controversial book. (October 10, 2008)

altmuslim review 029 - A vibrant Muslim media could have an opportunity to restore balance to the Muslim public image - if it can get on its feet. In this episode, we explore the state of the Muslim media. Also, an interview with the creator of "Muslim Cafe", Navid Akhtar. (July 5, 2008)

ELSEWHERE
Shahed will be speaking about Muslims in the political process at the 8th annual Texas Dawah Convention in Houston, Texas (December 27, 2008)

Skyscraping ambition for Mecca, Ali Eteraz, The Guardian (UK), Comment is Free (December 18, 2008)

Zahed will be leading a technology workshop for European Muslim professionals at the Salzburg Global Seminar, Salzburg, Austria (November 16-20, 2008)

Zahed will be a keynote speaker at the inaugural meeting of the Network of European Muslim Technology Entrepreneurs, in Madrid, Spain (November 14, 2008)

Shahed will be a featured panelist at Red Faith/Blue Faith: Religion in the 2008 Election and Beyond at the Center for American Progress in Washington, DC (November 7, 2008)

Let the Global Islamic Conspiracy Begin, Ali Eteraz, Jewcy, (November 5, 2008)

Zahed will be a guest on Press TV's Islam & Life, hosted by Tariq Ramadan, speaking on French and American Muslim experiences (November 3, 2008)

Zahed will be a guest on Irish broadcaster RTE's Spectrum radio show, speaking about Barack Obama and the Muslim factor in the US presidential election (November 1, 2008)

Shahed will be a guest on the nationally syndicated radio show Interfaith Voices, speaking about the "otherization" of American Muslims (October 23, 2008)

Powell's remarks rebut the idea of Muslims as political kryptonite - Wajahat Ali, The Guardian (UK), Comment is Free (October 22, 2008)

Today's Boo Radley: Muslim Americans - Wajahat Ali, The Washington Post (October 20, 2008)

The Republican red scare, Wajahat Ali, The Guardian (UK), Comment is Free (October 11, 2008)

Heritage was mixed a long time ago - Irfan Yusuf, Sydney Morning Herald (September 30, 2008)

Shahed will be a guest on BBC Radio 4's "Sunday" programme speaking about the Jewel of Medina controversy (September 28, 2008)

Dangerous liaisons, Wajahat Ali, The Guardian (UK), Comment is Free (September 27, 2008)

Another attack - in the name of whose Islam? - Irfan Yusuf, The Age (Australia) (September 22, 2008)

Violence against women won't stop until men speak out - Irfan Yusuf, New Zealand Herald (September 12, 2008)

Shahed will be participating in a panel discussion, Sourcing Islam, at the Religion Newswriters Association conference in Washington, DC (September 20, 2008)

Muslims have nothing to fear from this book - Shahed Amanullah, The Guardian (UK), Comment is Free (September 9, 2008)

Rushdie is no believer in free speech - Irfan Yusuf, The Age (Australia) (August 8, 2008)

IN THE NEWS
Domestic crusader - An associate editor of the publication AltMuslim.com—“it’s neither too apologetic nor too antagonistic”—Wajahat exhorts wealthier American Muslims to invest in their own future by creating think tanks and scholarships in art and media instead of collecting luxury cars. “We have to break out of our culturally isolated bubble,” he says. (October 11, 2008)

National publisher kills Spokane journalist’s book - [Amanullah] sent e-mails to about 200 graduate students in Islamic studies, telling them of Spellberg's "frantic" call and asking if they had heard about the novel. "What I got back was a collective shrug of the shoulders," says Amanullah. "The thing that is surreal for me is that here you had a non-Muslim write a book, and you had a non-Muslim complain about it, and a non-Muslim publisher pull the book." (August 20, 2008)

Self censoring Muslims - "But Amanullah says he never wanted the book pulled. 'I'm upset the book wasn't published,' he said, 'not because I agree or disagree with the book.' For him, 'I don't want to be in the position where we are stifling speech. Preemptive censorship is not in our interest. That's worse than even censorship. We're not going to silence our way out of problems.'" (August 12, 2008)

You still can’t write about Muhammad - "But Ms. Spellberg wasn't a fan of Ms. Jones's book. On April 30, Shahed Amanullah, a guest lecturer in Ms. Spellberg's classes and the editor of a popular Muslim Web site, got a frantic call from her. "She was upset," Mr. Amanullah recalls. He says Ms. Spellberg told him the novel "made fun of Muslims and their history," and asked him to warn Muslims." (August 5, 2008)

Why the silence? - "Both reactionary religion and militant secularism are on the rise, with both displaying a rigid certainty and a desire for power that will do nothing to benefit society. In this context, it is vital that people with open-minded faith speak up and demonstrate alternatives. [altmuslim.com has] set many good examples in this regard." (January 8, 2008)

CONTENT PARTNERS
Islamica Magazine

Common Ground News Service

Beliefnet

European Media Islamic Network

Q-News

Illume Media

The American Muslim


Analyst PW Singer
Privatizing terror, outsourcing diplomacy
Wajahat Ali interviews Peter Warren Singer of the Brookings Institute on the turmoil caused by Blackwater and other private military contractors functioning in Iraq

The international outcry over the recent Blackwater shootings forced the world to closely examine and appreciate the complex reality of the United States government’s overdependence on private military contractors operating in Iraq. The foremost expert and most cited authority on the subject is Peter Warren Singer, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institute, co-founder of "The U.S. Policy towards the Islamic World" program and author of the seminal work on private military contractors, "Corporate Warriors." In this interview, his most recent, Singer examines the most current repercussions caused by the Blackwater scandal and private military firms within an overall context of the Iraq War, U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East, and America's public relations with the Muslim world.

Ok, the first question is an easy one - a fastball right down the middle regarding Blackwater [the American private military firm contracted by the U.S. government to provide security in Iraq]. On September 16, Blackwater was involved in a catastrophic shooting incident in Iraq’s Nisoor Square leaving nearly 20 Iraqi civilians dead. Are you at all shocked or surprised by this?

No. Short answer, no. Long answer is that – look, I've been researching and writing on private military firms for over a decade now. My book, Corporate Warriors, dealt with this issue even before the Iraq War. Since the war started the outsourcing of military functions has been put on steroids not only in terms of the growth of it, but also in terms of the negative aspects coming out of that growth. The incident in question regarding Blackwater needs to be put in a proper context. It's just one company out of 181 other private military companies operating in that space in Iraq. The incidents involving abuses of private military contractors go back to the starting of the war. This includes the incidents at Abu Ghraib and the private contractor Aegis Trophy’s infamous video of 2005 (a video posted online by Aegis employees showing them shooting at Iraqi civilians). You also had the Triple Canopy shootings lawsuit in ’06. Blackwater is just one of the companies in the game.

Within Blackwater itself there have been multiple incidents well before this most recent one. An example is The Christmas Eve shooting where a Blackwater contractor allegedly got drunk, got into an argument inside the Green Zone with one of the Iraqi Vice President's security guards, and then shot him and killed him. It's been over 10 months since that happened. Weeks before the Nisoor Square shooting, there were multiple incidents involving the Iraqi Interior Ministry. There was one such incident where an Interior Ministry employee was killed, one where there was an armed standoff between Blackwater contractors and the Iraqi police in which the U.S. military actually had to intervene. One of the U.S. government officials, embedded in the Iraqi Interior Ministry, described this as a "powder keg of anger." That powder keg exploded several weeks later (Nisoor Square). To answer your question, no, I wasn’t surprised. Absolutely not.

The Iraqi government had some harsh words recently for Blackwater, publicly saying, "Blackwater uses employees who disrespect the rights of Iraqi citizens even though they are guests in the country." Could this statement also describe the conduct of the U.S. forces and other American private firms operating in Iraq?

The Iraqi government understands that Blackwater is only one player within a much larger industry – the Iraqis understand that also. [Blackwater] has become some sort of a symbol. If you ask most contractors, I am dubious that they would see themselves as "guests of the Iraqi government." Most see themselves carrying out a contract, and the client in that contract is not the Iraqi government. It usually is the United States government or United States subcontractors. They view Iraqi governments with a great deal of suspicion. Remember, we are talking about an Iraqi Interior Ministry that just couple of weeks ago an investigation board found to be completely corrupt. The Ministry acted basically as a cover for a number of sectarian militias operating in Iraq, and the recommendation of the investigation board was that the best thing one can do for Iraq was to shut the Ministry down and start over again. So there are a lot of fingers that can be pointed in lot of directions.

At the end of the day, Iraq is starting to act like sovereign state. Sovereign states want to control the forces within their borders – that's what makes them sovereign. That holds equally true for sectarian militia as it does for private military firms operating out there. They are outside the control of the government, or at least what should be the control of government. The point is if Iraq is to be a sovereign state, it needs to be resting control over this, and to be honest, this is how you get the U.S. out of there – you let Iraq have institutions that are able to carry out their jobs as a government.

Has the global microscope on the Blackwater scandal caused an overall strain between the Iraqi and US governments? If so, what are the repercussions in the "Muslim world" and also on the ground when dealing with the Iraqi insurgency?

The United States government aspect of it is - that the unfortunate truth is while contractors are carrying out a number of critical and important missions, the overall effect of their use has actually been undermining rather than assisting U.S. operations and goals. It extends all the way to tactical levels on the field to the grand strategic world.

To the question of the relationship between the Iraqi and U.S. government, it's very interesting. Remember, you need to put this into context. One week before the shootings in Nisoor Square, General Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker (the U.S. envoy to Iraq) testified to Congress about the "surge strategy." Now, there was huge debate whether the military aspects of the surge strategy were being met or not. They really went back and forth on that. Now, one thing they did talk about was the 43 Iraqi citizens who were shot in Baghdad alone by private contractors that same week. When we talk about what President Bush refers to as a "return to normalcy" in Iraq – this doesn't feel all that normal, does it? There was no debate at all about the political aspects. Everyone on both sides of the aisle (in Congress) universally agreed that in the year ahead we would have to press the Iraqi government to finally take some action on the political benchmarks. The key to the "surge strategy" success was dependant on this.

Now, let's move forward just one week – within the span of that 20 minute Blackwater gun fight (Nisoor Square) – that whole strategy falls by the wayside. A couple hours later, Secretary Condoleeza Rice calls up Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki - which is extraordinary because she normally doesn't call him. When she calls to speak with him personally, she doesn't press him on the really important issues, such as, "We need you to pass the oil law," or "We need you to deal with the amnesty issues" – both critical political benchmarks. Instead, she calls to express her sympathies and to apologize for this Blackwater incident. Over the next week, she and Ambassador Crocker have to keep going back to the Iraqis, and they are almost actually begging them to let Blackwater get back into business [resuming their routine operations in Iraq], because if Blackwater can't operate, then the United States embassy is effectively shut down. This is the complete vulnerability that the United States has created for our operations there in Iraq by depending on private contractors.

One week later, Bush meets with Prime Minister Maliki face to face. They were already scheduled to have this meeting, but now the whole point of the meeting changes. Top of the agenda is no longer, "Prime Minister Maliki, we really need you to get serious about these sectarian killings, because if they don't end, we don't end this war, and I don't get my troops home." Instead, top of the agenda is Blackwater. So, basically this a manner in which private contractor action completely skews the relationship between two governments and undermines the overall strategy.

Now, the second question asks what does this do to the broader, as some people like to say "war of ideas," or however you want to phrase it, regarding the broader Muslim world. And here, too, this is a complete hammer to our image; a hammer to our public diplomacy. Some U.S. military officers on the scene described this as "bad as Abu Ghraib." I personally disagree with that, but it points to the level of negativity. While private contractors are seen as convenient, temporary manpower shift, it's a way of dis-involving your public (American citizens), and it doesn't play that way "outside" [Iraq]. When incidents happen, the Iraqis don't just focus on the private companies, instead they blame the U.S. government.

The Blackwater Nisoor Square shooting incident resonated negatively not only inside Iraq but throughout the Muslim world. A variety of major media out there in the Middle East, like Al Jazeera, reported on the Blackwater contractors as "an army that seeks fame, fortune and thrills away from all considerations and ethics of military honor. The employees are known for their roughness, they are known for shooting indiscriminately at vehicles or pedestrians." Even the Daily Star, the regional English language newspaper which is probably one of the most moderate voices in the region, compared the uses of the company to the Mahdi army (the militant Shiite insurgency in Iraq) and put the Mahdi army in a positive light saying "at least they can plausibly claim to be defending their community. No foreign mercenary can plead similar motivations. So, all of them should go."

These are all really major quotes, but the timing of it happens at the very same moment that Secretary Rice is in the region trying to save her historic legacy by jump starting the Arab-Israel peace process. Most people would agree the Arab-Israel situation is the real key in sucking the poison out of Muslim-U.S. relations. And instead of her efforts being positive for any kind of U.S. public diplomacy, every commentator [in Iraq] called the conference she was attending "The Blackwater-Black Heart Conference." It is just a hammer blow to our public diplomacy. The second thing which is fascinating to me is the reaction by Blackwater. While the Arab press is roiling, and it’s being covered in other parts of the Muslim world like Indonesia and Pakistan negatively, how did the company react?

That’s a great lead in to a question I have regarding Erick Prince, the chairman and owner of Blackwater, who recently testified on Capitol Hill and predictably defended his company’s actions.

I was there for all 5 hours of it.

Were you just steaming in the back, fuming the whole time?

Yes (Laughs). To be completely honest.

If you were on the panel, what questions would you have asked? Some key questions you thought were on point and went unasked by the panel?

Well the event played out two ways. One side was craven and the other side was clueless. One side kept going, "Mr. Prince tell us how great you are, tell us how wonderful you are, tell us how special you are." The other side asked questions that were scatterbrained, all over the place, and didn't deal with the issue at hand. So, I have here a couple of questions that would have been interesting if answered. I would have asked him bout the series of incidents involving his company that date back to 2004. They range from sending out men on a mission to Fallujah without proper equipment, vehicles, training, or even good directions that led to their death, as well helping the Iraqi insurgency.

A simple yes or no question would have been, "Has your firm, based on these patterns of incidents, faced any legal or disciplinary actions from the U.S. government? Have they (the guilty contractors) ever been prosecuted, or lost a contract, or been fined for anything based on this?" Because it seems, as far as the record shows, that the only people to take action, to create consequences when there has been negative effect, has not been the folks paying these contractors (the U.S. Government). It's been three groups only: the four mothers of the Blackwater employees killed in Fallujah, the parents of the men who were killed in the Blackwater plane crash that resulted from their firm’s actions in Afghanistan, and the Iraqi government that just got fed up waiting for our government to do something.

Here's another question I would’ve asked: "We understand that you fired the person that got into a drunken argument on Christmas Eve and killed the Iraqi Vice President's security guard. Our question is who flew him out of the country? Which entity made the decision to get that individual out of the country 36 hours after they potentially committed a murder, which in effect assured prosecution would be difficult and impede the investigation? Was Blackwater operating under its own discretion? Or, were they ordered to do so by its clients and the State Department? Who was it?"

Another one is "why do your helicopters in Iraq not carry any identifying insignia, such as the numbers painted on U.S. Army vehicles? Is there something that sets the company aside from standard U.S. tactics?" It would have been very interesting to ask him, "Isn’t it interesting that the same government individual, who has been reported by one investigative committee to have made the initial decision for Blackwater to get its first contract, is the brother of the current State Department Inspector General, who was found, by the same committee, to have intervened in preventing an investigation into Blackwater’s illegal activity?"

These are some examples of the actual questions we could've asked. Instead, one side wanted to talk about everything from Moveon.org to diabetes medication. And the other side oddly kept asking Eric Prince why he didn't prosecute his employees, but conceded ultimately that he couldn't because he was just a C.E.O. of a company. However, what's good is that no one can claim they don't know about this anymore. Now, when there are negative consequences, [the U.S.] has to deal with them. But they couldn't claim that before. For example, in 2006 in a public setting right across the street from me, President Bush was asked about the legal status and accountability of private military contractors in Iraq. One student questioned him, and Bush answered with a giggle - you can see this on the web, just Google it - Bush ultimately said, "I'm gonna ask Rumsfeld about it when I get back." If that question had been answered a year ago, we wouldn’t be in this problem today, but, it wasn't.

Your research has borne many egregious example of private contractors' reckless conduct in Iraq – including the Blackwater shootings, CACI and Titan firms responsible for the notorious Abu Ghraib interrogations, and Aegis Company's "trophy video" in which they posted a video of them shooting at civilians to an Elvis song on the net. What I and others want to know is what legal repercussions do they face, if any, under international law and U.S. law?

What could happen, or what will happen? I mean there are multiple laws that could be applied. Iraqis are claiming that since Blackwater didn’t have a license to operate in Iraq, they didn't fall under the immunity laws protecting other private military contractors (initiated under Paul Bremer in 2003 as head of the CPA). They also say they want Blackwater to pay over $100 million dollars to the families of the shooting victims. So, instead of sounding like they were trying to ensure rule of law, it actually sounded like an extortion attempt. They undermined their stance.

Now, there's also application of U.S. civilian law. There is a law in the books called Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act (MEJA). Basically, it says if you are working for the U.S. government abroad in a military setting, and you commit a felony, then we can potentially prosecute you back home. It has only been utilized twice in Iraq. One time when a contractor came back and was found with child porn on his computer, and another time when there was an attempted rape of a U.S. reservist by a contractor. The challenge of this law is that it gets difficult when you add a non-U.S. victim and a "battlefield environment" like we have in Iraq. So, it'll be hard to ask a civilian jury sitting in the U.S. that we want you, the jury, to not only decide whether a law was broken, but whether the "rules of engagement" in a "battlefield environment" were broken as well. It is very difficult.

Another method is the Uniform Code of Military Justice - the court martial system. In October 2006, the law was changed to allow private contractors to fall under it, and it is probably the most apt one in finding these Blackwater contractors involved in the Nisoor Square shooting liable. They were involved in a combat zone, an operational setting, and the question is did they violate the rules of engagement or not? The problem of that is that the law was passed in October, but the Pentagon never issued a procedure to its JAG officers on how to actually use it.

So, is there some semblance of hope that there could be legal accountability?

Could be, but again, it's political will that matters most. With Blackwater, it's like one of those things when projecting the stock market, do you look at past behavior and past facts? Or, do you try and project forward? Using past facts, you shouldn't expect anything to happen. Projecting forward? There’s enough attention around this now that you might seem some action along the side - but not major action. We’ve woken up to the fact that the emperor has no clothes, but right now all we're willing to do is to ask him to please put a scarf on.

In your article "America, Islam, and the 9-11 War" you state, "The erosion of American credibility in Muslim world not only reinforces recruiting efforts of its foes, but denies Americans ideas and policies a fair hearing." How does this play out in Iraq?

The U.S. was in a strong position during the Cold War with being internationally viewed as a "beacon on the hill." It both had power, but also more importantly, popularity and respect. It wasn't that we had the atom bomb, but it was also that we had McDonalds and Coca Cola. We had universities people wanted to come to. We had blue jeans. Now, we have power, but now it's not as easy to apply it in the current conflict. Instead of being seen as that "beacon", America, "the land of blue jeans", has become internationally viewed as the "land of armed jumped suits." And that is not a positive when you're dealing with the problem at hand.

It is not that the U.S. is locked in some battle with the broader Muslim World. That is simply false. But you do have a really weird international change, where for the first time a state and a religion are looking at each other through a different lens – a lens of misperceptions. It is a lens of ignorance, but also a lens of anger. And it's getting worse, and we have to recognize that. It’s actually fulfilling Bin Laden's wishes, he wanted this kind of conflict, and it is creating it. It's both on how we conduct ourselves, but also how we speak to the world.

Peter, you're the co-founding Director of the Project on U.S. Policy Towards the Islamic World at the Saban Center at Brookings. In your experience and opinion, how do we convince the Muslim world that our actions, whether they are rooted in "regime change", or "humanitarian" or "reform" efforts, are not mere tools of American imperialism?

Basically there was an era where the U.S. had it right, and Louis Armstrong sang about it during his jazz tours when he went around the world on behalf of the United States. Louis Armstrong wasn't a stooge, but he spoke the truth and that compared very positively to what they, the people, were seeing from the Soviet Union. But the line that encapsulates what we need to do today is to "accentuate the positive and eliminate the negative."

There are clearly things that are dragging us down and are not all that useful. Accentuate the positive. There are lot of things that the U.S. does like help local NGOs on the ground, and investment in education. We have an amazing spirit as a nation, in terms of not just with the government does, but what the broad base of American society does. We do that but we can do a lot more. For our generation, this is the equivalent of our cold war. This is our calling - to bridge this growing divide between the U.S. and the Muslim world. It's incumbent on us whether we are in government or outside government. Whether we are a corporation or an NGO. Whether it's faith based or not, it's incumbent on us to bridge this divide.

The same thing goes for the clear negatives that are dragging us down. Those are easy to pick off, you know, most people universally recognize that while the Arab-Israeli peace will not be easy in any shape, way, or form, at least showing action on it is something we can do, instead of ignoring the problem. Same thing goes for Gitmo (Guantanamo Bay). We painted ourselves in a corner with that, and we need to find a way out.

Iraq. It's very clear that not only now is it a half trillion dollar investment gone bad, but in terms of U.S. funds, that money could have been spent on lot more effective things. Like I've said, it has been hammer to our public diplomacy.

And finally, the problem with our relationship via authoritarian leaders in the Middle East region. It is clear we have struck a deal with the devils and we are not getting much out of that deal - and that is true. We can pick off the regimes where that is happening and not only does that not help our battles with the extremist groups, but it also undermines our broader effort to speak on behalf of democracy every time we cozy up to a dictator. Clearly, we have to start to disentangle ourselves and start to pressure them on some of the things they can do. An example, I'd say to a current ally, "Buddy, we love what you're doing in giving us intelligence, although it's sorta funny you only give us intelligence a day before one of our senior official visits. But, we don’t really like what you did to crack down on free media or that you jailed democracy activists. We are not going to turn aside from that anymore." We have a record of doing that – that type of dialogue - and it worked in the transformation within South Korea during the Cold War, the transformation that happened within Philippines is another example. We can have a similar attitude towards our very ostensible authoritarian allies.

What of "Islamofascism"? [Is it] an accurate assessment of our enemy or a politically convenient and sexy, new term of choice by certain ideological pundits?

It's not new, and no one likes it. It was a stupid, stupid phrase to use in the first place. It was completely politicized, and they very quickly realized that. Now, the flip side is there are certain people running with it these days to make it appear that the broader U.S. really does believe this term.

Can there honestly be a lasting peace between the United States and the Muslim world in our lifetime, or this just whimsical naiveté?

I think there can be, but it’s not going to come in a matter of years. It’s going to be generational and maybe even multigenerational if we are going to be honest about it. But the fact is there are all sorts of amazing transformation and changes that are going on in the world. This is only one part of it. In part, it's because the world is changing so fast, but I think there are things that can happen. The problem for us on the U.S. side is that we’ve really wasted the first couple of years of this [post 9-11]. We could've done things more positively, and we did a lot negatively that we are going to be dealing with the consequences for at least a generation. But that doesn't meant all is lost.

Look at the French and the Germans. They spent literally almost a millennium fighting each other. If you would've said in 1945, "The French and German would later be part of this grand consortium. They would have a fairly closely aligned foreign policy and domestic policy. They would be sharing laws, sharing economics, basically they are not going to be considering each other as enemies, but considering themselves as friends they can’t live without." If you would’ve said that in 1945, someone would’ve sent you to the loony bin. So, we can take hope from those examples. There we are today.

Wajahat Ali is a playwright, essayist, humorist, and J.D. whose work, "The Domestic Crusaders," (http://www.domesticcrusaders.com) is the first major play about Muslim Americans living in a post 9-11 America. He can be reached at .

Islamic Relief: A 4-Star Charity

5 COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE



The use of mercernaries to fight wars is an old practice. A practice used frequently by Muslim armies through the ages. As much of 20% of the American force was private even at the very beginning of the war. This is just another example of the American public ignoring the glaring reality of their governments crude actions. "Bring back our boys alive" takes on a whole new meaning when they have private security guards fighting their battles for them.


Odd that the fact that most contractors in Iraq are Iraqi - including security contractors - is left out of the entire analysis. Reality has a way of challenging theory.

In fact, what is played down and often ignored, is that there are only about 2,000 Americans doing security work in Iraq - the rest being predominately Iraqis, followed by Third Country Nationals and then other Westerners.

Accountability for individual contractors is key (although generally ignored by academics, companies are held accountable all the time contractually, financially and legally). UCMJ - which PW Singer supports - involves military courts for civilians, and the major human rights organizations strongly oppose the idea (as does the Supreme Court, but the current version has yet to be tested).

Contractors provide too much skill, cost effectiveness and value to ignore or dismiss - nor should we ignore that upwards of 70% of the contracting force is made up of locals (aka capacity building in NGO terms). The real question is how we can best improve our use of contractors and improve accountability. IPOA has been working on this issue and interested thinkers should visit www dot IPOAonline dot ORG.

Best regards,

doug

(Full disclosure: I am President of the International Peace Operations Assocition - IPOA. I am also a Democrat who used to work for the Democratic Party, and I receive no royalties from any publication related to the industry.)


>> most contractors in Iraq are Iraqi

>> there are only about 2,000 Americans doing security

Firstly its cynical to claim that if "contractors"/"private security" (otherwise known as MERCERNARIES) are Iraqi, then that somehow legitimises their use?! Its a symptom of a poor American mindset. Iraqis are following money because they have none. In a country with 2 hours of electricity a day and fuel shortages, the favourable portion of your GDP that should've went into schools and healthcare now going onto American Balance Sheets, you go where the wealth is cos you and your family have to eat. Private contractors and Iraqi police now have to face th brunt of the social fallout that so neatly happened everywhere else western governments and businesses (and peaceful NGO's) have stuck their economic and political fangs.


>> http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/12/04/AR2006120401311.html
>> http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/warriors/view/
>> http://www.opensecrets.org/news/rebuilding_iraq/index.asp
>> http://www.opensecrets.org/news/rebuilding_iraq/index.asp
>> http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5iDcTMPwEWvQzIhTYTWFwHzFDyZ1A
2nd.. As many as twenty thousand of the militaries initial forces were made of mercernaries (fighting frontline battles and happily being hung from bridges while the military denied all casualties.. remember that?) ranging from as far a field as South Africa and Yugoslavia. Even before the fighting began, the American government budgeted for reconstruction in the country. Reconstruction Budgets should be read as Post-Destruction Budgets. The word "budget" giving the illusion that the impact of war is something that can be caclulated and written off over a period of time like some fancy accounting practice.

>> I am President of the International Peace Operations Assocition

So what .. George Bush is leader of the "FREE WORLD". If you don't know how to speak Arabic yet and aren't in consultation with Iraqi civil society, then you're the PR face of an occupation and no better than an internal audit control measure. That you're blatantly lying through distorting the facts and ignoring some truths speaks to the callousness of what can really only be called a screwed-up American attitude. If you don't know this yet .. "COMPANY" is a description for PEOPLE doing business in the name of their business and not in their own names. Feed your lies through the normal channels.


High time the civil war being contained in Iraq is let loose; and some decision will come of it. Then every one can either go home or stay and fight. It may give the muslims a raison d'etre, and they can neatly split into two groups - Shia and Sunni - and kill each other in Iraq and Iran and Saudi Arabia. Oil prices will spike and provide a boost to alternate fuel technologies and hasten the demise of dependency on Oil by a few decades! Like they say in Stupid Corporate American parlance - win-win situation! :-)

[Edited by moderator]


Are not all soldiers mercenaries of one form or another? Most of these criminals in Iraq are foreigners, not Iraqi as claimed by a poster. The Iraqis are fully justified in dispatching them. The Jewish fanatic Weissenkoph needs to be banned as he is openly supporting genocide and terrorism, barely able to contain his excitement at the carnage.


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