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View Full Version : YOU THOUGHT WE WERE ALREADY IN DEEP SHIT...WELL THINK AGAIN


stefan segal
03-04-2007, 12:15 AM
http://www.buzzflash.com/store/reviews/524

Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army (Hardcover)
By Jeremy Scahill

BUZZFLASH REVIEWS


From Nation Books:

Meet Blackwater USA, the powerful private army that the U.S. government has quietly hired to operate in international war zones and on American soil. Its contacts run from deep inside the military and intelligence agencies to the upper echelons of the White House. Blackwater is the elite Praetorian Guard for the “global war on terror,” with its own military base, a fleet of twenty aircraft, and 20,000 soldiers at the ready. Run by a multimillionaire Christian conservative who bankrolls President Bush and his allies, its forces are capable of overthrowing governments, and yet most people have never heard of Blackwater.

Blackwater is the dark story of the rise of a powerful mercenary army, ranging from the blood-soaked streets of Fallujah to rooftop firefights in Najaf to the hurricane-ravaged US gulf to Washington DC, where Blackwater executives are hailed as new heroes in the war on terror. This is an extraordinary exposé by one of America's most exciting young radical journalists.

“Jeremy Scahill’s exposé of the Blackwater mercenary firm forcefully demonstrates the grave dangers of outsourcing the government’s monopoly on the use of force.”
--Joseph Wilson, former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq

“Jeremy Scahill skillfully chronicles the birth of America's frightening Praetorian Guard, one that has been unleashed--25,000-strong--in Iraq. These hired guns, with their black uniforms and automatic weapons, appeared on the streets of New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina. They operate, at home and abroad, beyond the bounds of legal constraints and are controlled by secretive puppet masters, such as Erik Prince, who have close ties to the radical Christian Right. Should our nation enter a period of instability following another terrorist attack on American soil, an economic collapse or a series of environmental disasters the tyranny that groups such as Blackwater impose on others could become the tyranny they impose on us. The rise of this unchecked mercenary force, as Scahill understands, could presage the final stage in the collapse of American democracy.”
--Chris Hedges, former New York Times Middle East Bureau Chief

“If the Republicans lose in 2008, they will leave office armed and dangerous. Blackwater is the utterly gripping and explosive story of how the Bush Administration has spent hundreds of millions of public dollars building a parallel corporate army, an army so loyal to far right causes it constitutes nothing less than a Republican Guard. The most important and chilling book about the death throes of U.S. democracy you will read in years and a triumph of investigative reporting.”
--Naomi Klein, author No Logo

"Of all the insane Bush privatization efforts, none is more frightening than the corporatizing of military combat forces. Jeremy Scahill admirably exposes a devastating example of this sinister scheme."
--Michael Moore, Academy Award Winning Director

stefan segal
03-05-2007, 12:13 AM
http://toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070301/OPINION02/703010312/-1/OPINION


Article published Thursday, March 1, 2007
Profit upon profit


WHEN definitive histories of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are written, one of the most intriguing chapters is bound to be the extent to which the conflicts have been prosecuted with heavy support from private military contractors who cashed in handsomely - and excessively.

While the Pentagon has at least 138,000 uniformed personnel in Iraq, with more on the way, there are also some 100,000 civilian contractors, half of them providing quasi-military security services for the government.

These security personnel mostly operate in the background, but not always. In 2004, four men employed by one of the major contractors, Blackwater USA, were ambushed and killed, and two of the bodies were strung up on a bridge at Fallujah.

The incident received wide attention, and was used as a rallying cry. The top U.S. official in Iraq cited the killings as "dramatic examples of the ongoing struggle between human dignity and barbarism."

Three years later, investigation of the contractors' role is providing some dramatic examples of war profiteering involving Blackwater and KBR, subsidiary of Vice President Dick Cheney's old corporate home, Halliburton.

As reported by the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, Pentagon auditors are looking at improprieties in a "four-tiered chain" of security contractors, with Blackwater at the bottom and KBR at the top.

Blackwater billed the next firm up the chain $2.3 million, the newspaper reported. "Now the Pentagon has calculated that by the time KBR got around to billing the government, the tab to the taxpayers … had reached $19.6 million. The government is moving to take that money back, charging it was improperly spent."

That's but one example. An audit two years ago of another Blackwater contract, this one with the State Department, determined that the firm was double-billing for services, and improperly including profit in its overhead costs. The result, the audit said, was "a duplication of profit, but also a pyramiding of profit because, in effect, Blackwater is applying profit to profit."

Critics of the use of private security contractors call them mercenaries, who operate in a shadowy realm of no-bid contracts and lax control by the Pentagon.

To us, the arrangement is the perfect recipe for profiteering, always a concern in any war but never more so than in the seemingly endless conflict in Iraq.

Investigators should not be blind to political connections that may have greased these contracts. In addition to the vice president's well-known ties to Halliburton, the founder of Blackwater, Erik Prince, has been a major Republican campaign contributor. Originally from Holland, Mich., he is the brother of Betsy DeVos, former Michigan GOP chairman, whose husband, Dick, was the unsuccessful candidate for governor last fall.

All in all, the private contracting maze that suffuses America's current foreign conflicts should keep auditors busy for years. The public deserves to know who's unduly profiting from these wars.