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April 19, 2004
Security Companies: Shadow Soldiers in Iraq
By DAVID BARSTOW
This article was
reported by David Barstow, James Glanz, Richard A. Oppel Jr. and Kate
Zernike and was written by Mr. Barstow.
They have come from all corners of the world. Former Navy
Seal commandos from North Carolina. Gurkas from Nepal. Soldiers from
South Africa's old apartheid government. They have come by the
thousands, drawn to the dozens of private security companies that have
set up shop in Baghdad. The most prized were plucked from the world's
elite special forces units. Others may have been recruited from the
local SWAT team.
But they are there, racing about Iraq in armored cars, many outfitted
with the latest in high-end combat weapons. Some security companies
have formed their own "Quick Reaction Forces," and their own
intelligence units that produce daily intelligence briefs with grid
maps of "hot zones." One company has its own helicopters, and several
have even forged diplomatic alliances with local clans.
Far more than in any other conflict in United States history, the
Pentagon is relying on private security companies to perform crucial
jobs once entrusted to the military. In addition to guarding
innumerable reconstruction projects, private companies are being asked
to provide security for the chief of the Coalition Provisional
Authority, L. Paul Bremer III, and other senior officials; to escort
supply convoys through hostile territory; and to defend key locations,
including 15 regional authority headquarters and even the Green Zone in
downtown Baghdad, the center of American power in Iraq.
With every week of insurgency in a war zone with no front, these
companies are becoming more deeply enmeshed in combat, in some cases
all but obliterating distinctions between professional troops and
private commandos. Company executives see a clear boundary between
their defensive roles as protectors and the offensive operations of the
military. But more and more, they give the appearance of private,
for-profit militias by several estimates, a force of roughly 20,000 on
top of an American military presence of 130,000.
"I refer to them as our silent partner in this struggle," Senator John
W. Warner, the Virginia Republican and Armed Services Committee
chairman, said in an interview.
The price of this partnership is soaring. By some recent government
estimates, security costs could claim up to 25 percent of the $18
billion budgeted for reconstruction, a huge and mostly unanticipated
expense that could delay or force the cancellation of billions of
dollars worth of projects to rebuild schools, water treatment plants,
electric lines and oil refineries.
In Washington, defense experts and some leading Democrats are raising
alarms over security companies' growing role in Iraq.
"Security in a hostile fire area is a classic military mission,"
Senator Jack Reed of Rhode Island, a member of the Armed Service
committee, wrote last week in a letter to Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld signed by 12 other Democratic senators. "Delegating this
mission to private contractors raises serious questions."
The extent and strategic importance of the alliance between the
Pentagon and the private security industry has been all the more
visible with each surge of violence. In recent weeks, commandos from
private security companies fought to defend coalition authority
employees and buildings from major assaults in Kut and Najaf, two
cities south of Baghdad. To the north, in Mosul, a third security
company repelled a direct assault on its headquarters. In the most
publicized attack, four private security contractors were killed in an
ambush of a supply convoy in Fallujah.
The Bush administration's growing dependence on private security
companies is partly by design. Determined to transform the military
into a leaner but more lethal fighting force, Mr. Rumsfeld has pushed
aggressively to outsource tasks not deemed essential to war-making. But
many Pentagon and authority officials now concede that the companies'
expanding role is also a result of the administration's misplaced
optimism about how Iraqis would greet American reconstruction efforts.
The authority initially estimated that security costs would eat up
about 10 percent of the $18 billion in reconstruction money approved by
Congress, said Capt. Bruce A. Cole, of the Navy, a spokesman for the
authority's program management office.
But after months of sabotage and insurgency, some officials now say a
much higher percentage will go to security companies that unblushingly
charge $500 to $1,500 a day for their most skilled operators.
"I believe that it was expected that coalition forces would provide
adequate internal security and thus obviate the need for contractors to
hire their own security," said Stuart W. Bowen Jr., the new inspector
general of the authority. "But the current threat situation now
requires that an unexpected, substantial percentage of contractor
dollars be allocated to private security."
"The numbers I've heard range up to 25 percent," Mr. Bowen said in a
telephone interview from Baghdad. Mark J. Lumer, the Pentagon official
responsible for overseeing Army procurement contracts in Iraq, said he
had seen similar estimates.
But Captain Cole said that the costs were unlikely to reach that level
and that the progress of reconstruction would eventually alleviate the
current security problems.
Still, in many ways the accelerating partnership between the military
and private security companies has already outrun the planning for it.
There is no central oversight of the companies, no uniform rules of
engagement, no consistent standards for vetting or training new hires.
Some security guards complain bitterly of being thrust into combat
without adequate firepower, training or equipment. There are stories of
inadequate communication links with military commanders and of security
guards stranded and under attack without reinforcements.
Only now are authority officials working to draft rules for private
security companies. The rules would require all the companies to
register and be vetted by Iraq's Ministry of Interior. They would also
give them the right to detain civilians and to use deadly force in
defense of themselves or their clients. "Fire only aimed shots," reads
one proposed rule, according to a draft obtained by The New York Times.
Several security companies have themselves been pressing for the rules,
warning that an influx of inexperienced and small companies has
contributed to a chaotic atmosphere. One company has even enlisted a
former West Point philosopher to help it devise rules of conduct.
"What you don't need is Dodge City out there any more than you've
already got it," said Jerry Hoffman, chief executive of Armor Group, a
large security company working in Iraq. "You ought to have policies
that are fair and equal and enforceable."
Company executives argue that their services have freed up thousands of
troops for offensive combat operations.
But some military leaders are openly grumbling that the lure of $500 to
$1,500 a day is siphoning away some of their most experienced Special
Operations people at the very time their services are most in demand.
Pentagon and coalition authority officials said they had no precise
tally of how many private security guards are being paid with
government funds, much less how many have been killed or wounded. Yet
some Democrats and others suggest that the Bush administration is
relying on these companies to both mask the cost of the war and augment
an overstretched uniformed force.
Mr. Rumsfeld has praised the work of security companies and disputed
the idea that they were being pressed into action to make up for
inadequate troop levels.
Still, the government recently advertised for a big new contract up to
$100 million to guard the Green Zone in Baghdad.
"The current and projected threat and recent history of attacks
directed against coalition forces, and thinly stretched military force,
requires a commercial security force that is dedicated to provide Force
Protection security," the solicitation states.
Danger Zones: Rising Casualties and Deal Making
The words did not match the images from Iraq.
At a Philadelphia conference last week, a government official pitched
the promise of Iraq to dozens of business owners interested in winning
reconstruction contracts.
William H. Lash III, a senior Commerce Department official, said
Baghdad was flowering, that restaurants and hotels were reopening. He
told of driving around Baghdad and feeling out of place wearing body
armor among ordinary Iraqis. In any case, he joked, the armor "clashed
with my suit," so he took it off.
But the view from Iraq is considerably less optimistic, with
contracting companies and allied personnel alike hunkering down in
walled-off compounds. "We're really in an unprecedented situation
here," said Michael Battles, co-founder of the security company Custer
Battles. "Civilian contractors are working in and amongst the most
hostile parts of a conflict or post-conflict scenario."
One measure of the growing danger comes from the federal Department of
Labor, which handles worker's compensation claims for deaths and
injuries among among contract employees working for the military in war
zones.
Since the start of 2003, contractors have filed claims for 94 deaths
and 1,164 injuries. For all of 2001 and 2002, by contrast, contractors
reported 10 deaths and 843 injuries. No precise nation-by-nation
breakdown is yet available, but Labor Department officials said an
overwhelming majority of the cases since 2003 were from Iraq.
With mounting casualties has come the exponential growth of the
little-known industry of private security companies that work in the
world's hot spots. In Iraq, almost all of them are on the United States
payroll, either directly through contracts with government agencies or
indirectly through subcontracts with companies hired to rebuild Iraq.
Global Risk Strategies, one of the earliest security companies to enter
Iraq, now has about 1,500 private guards in Iraq, up from 90 at the
start of the war. The Steele Foundation has grown to 500 from 50.
Erinys, a company barely known in the security industry before the war,
now employs about 14,000 Iraqis.
In many cases companies are adapting to the dangers of Iraq by
replicating the tactics they perfected on Special Forces teams. One,
Special Operations Consulting-Security Management Group, has recruited
Iraqi informants who provide intelligence that helps the company assess
threats, said Michael A. Janke, the company's chief operating officer.
The combination of a deadly insurgency and billions of dollars in aid
money has unleashed powerful market forces in the war zone. New
security companies aggressively compete for lucrative contracts in a
frenzy of deal-making.
"A lot of firms have put out a shingle, and they're not geared to
operate in that environment," said Mr. Hoffman, the Armor Group chief
executive.
One security company, the Steele Foundation, recently turned down an
$18 million contract for a corporation that wanted a security force
deployed within only a few days; Steele said it simply could not find
enough qualified guards so quickly. Another company promptly jumped at
the contract.
"They just throw bodies at it," said Kenn Kurtz, Steele's chief
executive officer.
Early on in the war, private security contractors came mostly from
elite Special Operations forces. It is a small enough world that
checking credentials was easy. But as demand has grown, so has the
difficulty of finding and vetting qualified people.
"At what point do we start scraping the barrel?" asked Simon Faulkner,
chief operating officer of Hart, a British security company. "Where are
these guys coming from?"
When four guards working for a subcontractor hired by Erinys were
killed in an attack in January, they were revealed to be former members
of apartheid-era security forces in South Africa. One had admitted to
crimes in an amnesty application to the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission there. "We were very alarmed," said Michael Hutchings, the
chief executive of Erinys Iraq. "We went back to our subcontractors and
told them you want to sharpen up on your vetting."
Troops and Guards: Distinctions Are Hard to Keep
For private security contractors, the rules of engagement are
seemingly simple. They can play defense, but not offense. In fact,
military legal experts say, they risk being treated as illegal
combatants if they support military units in hostile engagements.
"We have issued no contracts for any contractor to engage in combat,"
Mr. Lumer, the Army procurement official.
What has happened, Mr. Lumer said in an interview, is that the Pentagon
has, to a "clearly unprecedented" degree, relied on security companies
to guard convoys, senior officials and coalition authority facilities.
No one wants regular troops "standing around in front of buildings," he
said. "You don't want them catching jaywalkers or handing out speeding
tickets."
But in Iraq, insurgents ignore distinctions between security guards and
combat troops. And what is more, they have made convoys and authority
buildings prime targets. As a result, security contractors have
increasingly found themselves in pitched battles, facing
rocket-propelled grenades, not jaywalkers.
It is in those engagements, several security executives said, that the
distinctions between defense and offense blur most. One notable example
came two weeks ago, when eight security contractors from Blackwater USA
helped repel a major attack on a coalition authority building in Najaf.
The men fired thousands of rounds, and then summoned Blackwater
helicopters for more.
In an interview, Patrick Toohey, vice president for government
relations at Blackwater, grappled for the right words to describe his
men's actions. At one moment he spoke proudly of how the Blackwater men
"fought and engaged every combatant with precise fire." At another he
insisted that his men had not been engaged in combat at all. "We were
conducting a security operation," he said.
"The line," he finally said, "is getting blurred."
And it is likely to get more blurred, with private security companies
lobbying for permission to carry heavier weapons.
"We will keep pressing for that," said Mr. Faulkner, the Hart executive
especially after four of his men spent 14 hours on a roof of their
building in Kut fighting off 10 times as many insurgents. Another Hart
employee was killed in the assault, his body later dismembered by the
mob.
"I cannot accept a situation where 4 of our people are being besieged
by 40 or 60 Iraqis, where they're talking to me on a telephone saying,
`Who's coming to help?' " Mr. Faulkner said.
They are also seeking ways to improve communications with military
units.
Two weeks ago, a team of private security guards fought for hours to
defend a coalition authority building in Kut. They later complained
that allied Ukrainian forces had not responded to their calls for help.
Even routine encounters between allied forces and private security
teams can be perilous. Mr. Janke, the security company executive and
himself a former Navy SEAL, said that in a handful of cases over the
last year, jittery soldiers have "lit up" fired on security companies'
convoys.
No one was killed, but standard identification procedures might have
prevented those incidents, Mr. Janke said.
Sorting out lines of authority and communication can be complex. Many
security guards are hired as "independent contractors" by companies
that, in turn, are sub-contractors of larger security companies, which
are themselves subcontractors of a prime contractor, which may have
been hired by a United States agency.
In practical terms, these convoluted relationships often mean that the
governmental authorities have no real oversight of security companies
on the public payroll.
In other cases, though, the government insists that security companies
abide by detailed rules. A solicitation for work to provide security
for the United States Agency for International Development, for
example, contains requirements on everything from attire to crisis
management.
"If a chemical and/or biological threat or attack occurs, keep the area
near the guard post clear of people," the document states, adding in
capital letters, "Remember, during the confusion of this type of act,
the guards must still provide security for employees or other people in
the area."
The words are emphatic, but empty.
Government contracting officials and company executives concede that
private guards have every right to abandon their posts if they deem the
situation too unsafe. They are not subject to the Uniform Code of
Military Justice, nor can they be prosecuted under civil laws or
declared AWOL.
Scott Earhart said he left Iraq because he was disgusted at the risks
he was asked to take without adequate protection or training.
Mr. Earhart, 34, arrived in Iraq in October to work as a dog handler
for a bomb-detection company hired by Custer Battles. A former
sheriff's deputy in Maryland, he said that there were not enough
weapons and that his body armor was substandard.
"If you didn't get to the supply room in time you wouldn't have a gun,"
he said.
Mr. Earhart said the breaking point came when he was asked to drive
unarmed to Baghdad from Amman, Jordan. "I felt my safety was in
jeopardy," he said.
Mr. Battles, of Custer Battles, said that it had taken longer than
expected to get weapons shipments, and that the company had had "growth
issues, like everybody else." But, he stressed, "under no circumstances
did we let people out into the field without proper equipment."
Clearer Rules: Search for Standards, Even a Philosophy
For more than a decade, military colleges have produced study
after study warning of the potential pitfalls of giving contractors too
large a role on the battlefield. The claimed cost savings are
exaggerated or illusory, the studies argue. Questions of coordination
and oversight have not been adequately resolved. Troops could be put at
risk.
Several senior American commanders in Iraq and Kuwait, or who have
recently returned, expressed mixed feelings about the use of private
security companies.
"The key thing is there are many requirements that are still best
filled with combat units that can call on gunship support Apache and
Kiowa Warriors overhead medevac, and just plain old reinforcements,"
one senior Army general wrote in an e-mail message to The Times. "Our
task is to outsource what MAKES SENSE given the enemy situation."
Security executives themselves are pushing for clearer roles and
standards. In Washington, Pentagon lawyers are reviewing the rules
governing security companies. At the same time, coalition authority and
Iraqi officials are drafting operating rules for the private security
companies.
The draft rules urge the use of "graduated force" first shout, then
shove, then show your weapon, then shoot. And they spell out when the
guards may use deadly force. But they do not cover precisely how
security operators will be screened and trained.
For now, companies are often writing their own rules and procedures for
Iraq.
"It's an industry that if it's not careful could easily blend into what
is usually referred to as war profiteers or soldiers of fortune or
mercenaries," "It is a very ill-defined operating space right now," Mr.
Battles said. "We draw the lines."
Custer Battles went so far as to hire an expert in military ethics,
Paul Christopher, who is the former head of the West Point philosophy
department. Mr. Christopher is helping the company define its place and
policies in the chaos of Iraq.
"He's the anti-Rambo," Mr. Battles said. "This is a deep thinker."
Eric Schmitt contributed reporting from Washington for this
article.
No Blood For Oil
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