A KING AMONG MERCENARIES?Former CIA clandestine operative
Robert Baer, author of
See No Evil and a loose model for the George Clooney character in "
Syriana" has an article up in
Vanity Fair profiling
Tim Spicer, the CEO of a British
PMC called
Aegis Defence Services. A sample.
"
Iraq's Mercenary King"
"No one planned for a private army of this size. Like most things in the Iraq war, it just happened. After the Iraq National Museum was looted, in April of 2003, and even four months later, after the U.N. headquarters was destroyed by a car bomb, the Pentagon assumed it was dealing with garden-variety crime and terrorism—nothing a good whiff of grapeshot couldn't quell. With U.S. forces stretched thin, why not let private military contractors deal with routine security? They could protect the coalition offices, the supply shipments, the embassies, and also the reconstruction teams, the journalists, the U.N. workers, and the aid organizations. After all, guns for hire in Afghanistan had been keeping Hamid Karzai alive.
As the security situation deteriorated and the insurgency became more sophisticated, the contractors were forced to adapt, operating as small military units, carrying automatic weapons and rocket launchers, and traveling in convoys of heavily armored S.U.V.'s. Their tactics included driving at 90 miles an hour or more and shooting at any vehicle that appeared to be a threat. In some cases, military contractors fought pitched battles. Today, when they get in trouble, contractors can call on help in the form of military air support or a quick-reaction force.
Who are these contractors? Watch the passengers in Dubai waiting for flights to Kabul and Baghdad and you'll get an idea. Half of them are fortysomething, a little paunchy, their hair thinning. They haven't done a pull-up or run an obstacle course in 20 years. You have to suspect that many are divorced and paying alimony, child support, and mortgages on houses they don't live in. The other half, in their late 20s and early 30s, have been enticed into leaving the military early, quadrupling their salaries by entering the private sector. They bulge out of their T-shirts, bang knuckles, shoulder-bump. They can't wait to get into the action.
The mercenaries crowd the duty-free counters buying boxes of Cuban Cohiba cigars and bottles of Jack Daniel's—nights on mortar watch can be very long. There's no doubt they can afford it. Men with service in an elite military unit have been known to make up to $1,500 a day. More typically a Western military contractor will earn $180,000 a year. Depending on the contract, benefits can include a hundred days of leave, kidnapping insurance, health insurance, and life insurance." Hmmm. I know a couple of people who've done that kind of work, I wonder if they'll chime in on that assessment. It is worth noting that Baer himself has had an exceptionally colorful career with the CIA; so much so that you could easily imagine him sitting in a bar with
Robert Young Pelton or
Robert Kaplan, comparing scars like Captain Quint and Sheriff Brody aboard the Orca.
PMC/MERCENARY RELATED POSTS, THREADS, BOOKS AND LINKS:Corporate WarriorsMountainRunner"WILL SOLDIERING HEAD BACK TO THE FUTURE?""WHEN THE EL SALVADOR OPTION IN IRAQ INVOLVES ACTUAL SALVADORANS"Global GuerillasThomas P.M. BarnettThe Small Wars CouncilNeither Shall The SwordIntel DumpForeign Policy In FocusComing AnarchyThe Nation ( hat tip to Patrick Squire via Tom)Labels: CIA, mercenary, military, military contractor, pmc, robert baer, vanity fair