fact sheet on private military firms

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 Fact Sheet on Private Militar y Firms (Compiled by noprivatea rmies.org/Clea rwater Pr oject 2/16/200 8) 1. Private Military F irms (PMF s) are private businesses who recruit and train individuals, known as private milit ary securi ty contract ors, in the tech niques of arms a nd armaments, both for foreign wars an d domestic po licing. Such a company trains its contractors to use a wide range of weapons from pi stols to rocket launch ers. They also teach techniqu es of att ack, capture, and interrogat ion. These com panies maintain databases o f contractors that can be a ssembled at a moment's notice, like a small army. For example Blackwater Worldwide boasts t heir database is 21,000.co ntractors. These contractors are then d eployed on ass ignments f or go vernments and for corporations. 2. Between 1994 and 2002 US-b ased Priv ate Military Secur ity Compa nies rec eived more than 3,000 co ntracts worth ov er $ 300 billion from the U.S. Department of Defense. 3. Curr ently ov er 800,000 contractors have secu r ity clearan c es at 11,00 0 government facilities. 4. Blackw ater's Federal Contracts from 200 1 through 2006 totaled over $1 bi llion. 5. Blackwater ch arges the U.S. government $1,2 22 per day for servic es of a privat e mil itary contractor. This is eq uivale nt to $445 ,000 p er year, over six times more than the cost of an equivalent U.S. soldier. 6. 84% of t he shooting inc idents involving Bl ackwater pers onnel wer e occasions when the Blackwater contractors were the first to shoot. Blackwater engaged in more shooting incidents than Dyncorp and Triple Canopy combined. Yet at t he time of this writing no t a single pr ivate contractor has b een convicted nor ch arged for any of these sho otin gs. 7. The creation of an indu stry of pri vatized military firms all ows states, institutions, org anizations, corporations, and even individuals to quickly lease military capabilities of the highest level off the global market. 8. There are sever al hundre d private mi litary secur ity companies all ar ound the world empl oying thousands accord ing to the UN Worki ng Group on Mercenaries estab lished by the U N High Commissioner on Human Ri g hts in 2005. The UN group on mercenaries reports that there are approximately 50,000 private military contractors working in Iraq. One of the largest and most powerful is Blackwater Worldwide which operates a training camp in Jo Daviess County Illinois. 9. Private military companies an d their contract ors operate in a legal gray zone that leaves the door for abuses wide open. A Government Accounta bilit y Of fice report relea sed in December 2006 told of how the U.S. military had no eff ective syst em of oversig ht and that “of ficials were unable to determine how many contract ors we re deployed to ba ses in Iraq.” 10. There are over 180,000 p rivate cont ractors in Iraq under U.S. contracts accordin g to State and Defense department figures. 11. Blackwater Worldwide claims to be training only law enforcement and military personnel at the Jo Da viess County Illi nois site however a July 2 007 Chicago Tribune artic le report s that they are also training private individuals who do not have connections to law enforcement nor the military. 12. The training courses o ff ered at the Illinois t raining site by Blackwater are not certifie d by the State of Illinois. 13. On the Jo Davie ss site there is possib ly the largest st ockpile of weapons and ammunition in private hands in the state of Illinois. 14. The privatized military i ndustry is a realit y in the 21st century. This opens a serie s of troublin g questions for democracy, for stat es, for ethics, f or man ageme nt, f or law, for human right s, and for national and international security. 15. Private Military Firms compr ise the on e remaining indust ry whose behavior is dictated not by t he rule of law, but by simple economics. 16. Private Military Sec urity Firms transform t he role of the state in such a way that it loses its monopoly over the use of force.

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Fact Sheet on Private Military Firms

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  • Fact Sheet on Private Military Firms (Compiled by noprivatearmies.org/Clearwater Project 2/16/2008)

    1. Private Military Firms (PMFs) are private businesses who recruit and train individuals, known as

    private military security contractors, in the techniques of arms and armaments, both for foreign wars and domestic policing. Such a company trains its contractors to use a wide range of weapons from pistols to rocket launchers. They also teach techniques of attack, capture, and interrogation. These companies maintain databases of contractors that can be assembled at a moment's notice, like a small army. For example Blackwater Worldwide boasts their database is 21,000.contractors. These contractors are then deployed on assignments for governments and for corporations.

    2. Between 1994 and 2002 US-based Private Military Security Companies received more than 3,000 contracts worth over $300 billion from the U.S. Department of Defense.

    3. Currently over 800,000 contractors have security clearances at 11,000 government facilities. 4. Blackwater's Federal Contracts from 2001 through 2006 totaled over $1 billion. 5. Blackwater charges the U.S. government $1,222 per day for services of a private military

    contractor. This is equivalent to $445,000 per year, over six times more than the cost of an equivalent U.S. soldier.

    6. 84% of the shooting incidents involving Blackwater personnel were occasions when the Blackwater contractors were the first to shoot. Blackwater engaged in more shooting incidents than Dyncorp and Triple Canopy combined. Yet at the time of this writing not a single private contractor has been convicted nor charged for any of these shootings.

    7. The creation of an industry of privatized military firms allows states, institutions, organizations, corporations, and even individuals to quickly lease military capabilities of the highest level off the global market.

    8. There are several hundred private military security companies all around the world employing thousands according to the UN Working Group on Mercenaries established by the UN High Commissioner on Human Rights in 2005. The UN group on mercenaries reports that there are approximately 50,000 private military contractors working in Iraq. One of the largest and most powerful is Blackwater Worldwide which operates a training camp in Jo Daviess County Illinois.

    9. Private military companies and their contractors operate in a legal gray zone that leaves the door for abuses wide open. A Government Accountability Office report released in December 2006 told of how the U.S. military had no effective system of oversight and that officials were unable to determine how many contractors were deployed to bases in Iraq.

    10. There are over 180,000 private contractors in Iraq under U.S. contracts according to State and Defense department figures.

    11. Blackwater Worldwide claims to be training only law enforcement and military personnel at the Jo Daviess County Illinois site however a July 2007 Chicago Tribune article reports that they are also training private individuals who do not have connections to law enforcement nor the military.

    12. The training courses offered at the Illinois training site by Blackwater are not certified by the State of Illinois.

    13. On the Jo Daviess site there is possibly the largest stockpile of weapons and ammunition in private hands in the state of Illinois.

    14. The privatized military industry is a reality in the 21st century. This opens a series of troubling questions for democracy, for states, for ethics, for management, for law, for human rights, and for national and international security.

    15. Private Military Firms comprise the one remaining industry whose behavior is dictated not by the rule of law, but by simple economics.

    16. Private Military Security Firms transform the role of the state in such a way that it loses its monopoly over the use of force.

  • 17. Private Military Security firms turn security into a good that is unequally distributed so that security then becomes something enjoyed by only those who can afford it.

    18. Privatization and outsourcing make it easier for political leaders to take their states to war. Also private military security companies only care about their profitability creating an incentive for conflict rather than peace.

    19. Privatization of military services can harm the reliable delivery of essential services in conflict and war.

    20. The use of private military companies and their contractors to perform functions that are normally performed by government officials is a danger to the Republic and to its states.

    1 Jeremy Scahill. Blackwater: The Rise of the Worlds Most Powerful Mercenary Army Nation Books, New York 2007 p.xviii. 2 International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, The Business of War: Privatizing Combat, the New World Order (Washington DC: The Center for Public Integritiy, 2002), p.2. As cited in The Market of Force: The Consequences of Privatizing Security by Deborah D. Avant Cambridge University Press 2005 p.8. 3 Defense Security Service cited in Outsourcing Sovereignty: Why Privatization of Government Functions Threatens Democracy and What We Can Do About It Paul R. Verkuil Cambridge University Press 2007. 4 Memorandum dated October 1, 2007 from the Committee On Oversight and Government Reform Re: Additional Information about Blackwater USA (Now known as Blackwater Worldwide) 5 Ibid.p3 6 Ibid. p7 7 P.W. Singer Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry Cornell University Press Ithaca New York 2003 p.18. 8 Jeremy Scahill Blackwater p. xxi 9 Ibid. p.xxii. 10 T. Christian Miller Private Contractors Outnumber US Troops in Iraq Los Angeles Times July 4, 2007. 11 P.W. Singer Banned In Baghdad: Reactions to the Blackwater License Being Pulled Brookings Institute Article September 17, 2007. 12 P.W. Singer War, Profits and Vacuums of Law: Privatized Military Firms and International Law Colombia Journal of Transnational Law Spring 2004 42:52 pgs.522-549. 13 Fred Schreier and Marina Caparini Privatizing Security: Law, Practice and Governance of Private Military and Security Companies Geneva Centre for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces (DCAF) Occasional Paper No. 6 Geneva March 2005. 14 Ibid. p.i. 15 Ibid p.i. 16 Ibid p.i. Also as detailed by Diana Rasor and Robert Bauman Betraying Our Troops: The Destructive Results of Privatizing War. Palgrave MacMillan New York 2007. 17 Paul R. Verkuil Outsourcing Sovereignty: Why Privatization of Government Functions Threatens Democracy and What We Can Do About It Cambridge University Press 2007 p.196.