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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (8706)6/15/2004 12:46:21 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 15516
 
Bush can't get anything done correctly...he just digs himself in deeper and deeper to protect his corporate cronies

Nation Builders and Low Bidders in Iraq

June 15, 2004
By P. W. SINGER
WASHINGTON - From the abuses at Abu Ghraib prison to the
mutilation of American civilians at Falluja, many of the
worst moments of the Iraqi occupation have involved private
military contractors "outsourced" by the Pentagon. With no
public or Congressional oversight, the Pentagon has paid
billions of dollars to companies that now have as many as
20,000 employees carrying out military functions ranging
from logistics and troop training to convoy escort and
interrogations. Yet despite the problems and the widespread
accusations of overbilling, it appears the civilian
leadership at the Pentagon has learned absolutely nothing
from the whole experience.

Last month the Pentagon awarded a $293 million contract for
coordination of security support to a British firm called
Aegis Defense Services. The huge contract has two aspects:
Aegis will be the coordination and management hub for the
more than 50 other private security companies in Iraq, and
it will provide its own force of up to 75 "close protection
teams," each made up of eight armed civilians who are to
protect staff members of the United States Project
Management Office.

The contract is a case study in what not to do. To begin
with, a core problem of the military outsourcing experience
has been the lack of coordination, oversight and management
from the government side. So outsourcing that very problem
to another private company has a logic that would do only
Kafka proud. In addition, it moves these companies further
outside the bounds of public oversight.

Moreover, with the handover of Iraqi sovereignty in just
weeks, why is the Pentagon, rather than the Iraqis
themselves, making this decision? Indeed, it seems contrary
to the overall American strategic goal of handing over the
responsibilities for security to the Iraqis as a prelude to
getting out of the business ourselves.

The contract also repeats the "cost plus" arrangement that
has proved problematic in the past. In effect, this deal
rewards companies with higher profits the more they spend,
and thus is ripe for abuse and inefficiency (as we have
seen with the accusations of overbilling that have swirled
around Halliburton). It has no parallel in the best
practices of the business world, for the very reason that
it runs counter to everything Adam Smith wrote about free
markets.

Finally, the usual mechanisms that increase efficiency in
contracting - like choosing, rewarding and punishing firms
based on their experience and reputation - have again been
short-circuited. One would think such a major contract
would go to a company that has a long operating history, or
experience in such roles, or other major activities on the
ground in Iraq. Instead, Aegis has been in existence for
little more than a year, has worked primarily on antipiracy
efforts rather than security coordination, and has never
before had a major contract in Iraq. (Aegis is not even on
the State Department's list of recommended security
companies in Iraq.)

The chief executive of Aegis, Tim Spicer, is a former
British Army officer turned private warrior who titled his
memoir "An Unorthodox Soldier." He is infamous in Britain
for his role in the Sandline affair of 1998, in which a
company he founded shipped 30 tons of arms to Sierra Leone
in contravention of a United Nations arms embargo. His
client in the case was described by Robin Cook, the British
foreign minister, as "an Indian businessman, traveling on
the passport of a dead Serb, awaiting extradition from
Canada for alleged embezzlement from a bank in Thailand."
When Mr. Spicer told the press that the British government
had encouraged his operation, it nearly brought down Prime
Minister Tony Blair.

Mr. Spicer also was a key character in a 1997 army mutiny
in Papua New Guinea. The local army, upset that Mr. Spicer
had received a $36 million contract to eradicate a
rebellion there, instead toppled the government and put him
in jail.

It seems hard to believe that the people awarding the Iraq
contract had any knowledge of this history. But it may
actually be the case, considering the skewed way in which
responsibility for private military contracts is spread out
over the government to some of the strangest of places.
(Recall that the private military interrogators at Abu
Ghraib prison were originally hired through a computer
services contract overseen by an Interior Department office
in Arizona.) The Aegis deal was awarded by the Army
transportation command in Fort Eustis, Va., an office with
no apparent experience in dealing with the private military
industry.

The strength of systems of democracy and capitalism are
that they are supposed to be self-correcting and
self-improving. When mistakes are made, lessons are learned
so that the errors are not repeated. When it comes to the
private military world, though, our government seems to be
doing its utmost to learn nothing. It repeatedly ignores
not just the basic lessons of better business, but also
those of smart public policy.

P. W. Singer is a fellow at the Brookings Institution and
the author of "Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the
Privatized Military Industry."

nytimes.com