Thursday, December 8, 2011

Essay 4 Final

Russell Kimmel
Dr. Ken Kerr
EN101-16
6 Dec. 2011
Private Military Contractors: Paying for Poor Performance
            To many people, Iraq is a war fought like any other war. But in truth, the war is a test of privatizing the military, a test that contractors have failed. At some points during the occupation, there were more private military contractors than U.S troops. Even at this high concentration of contractors to support the military, they still have failed to adequately supplement the U.S. forces, while also causing significant damage to foreign relations and at a high cost to the government. Private military contractors harm the United States in the long run by ruining foreign relations, weakening the United States’ armed forces, and wasting taxpayers’ money.
            Private military contractors hurt foreign relations by mistreating Iraqis, causing anger against the U.S.  For security purposes, contractor convoys sometimes drive counter flow, in other words, northbound on a southbound road (Fainaru 115). Another problem is contractors also drive very aggressively, running other cars off the road (Rasor and Bauman 68). In one case, a Blackwater convoy ran eighteen vehicles off the road in one trip (Fainaru 164). During these convoys, contractors also have a tendency to fire on suspicious cars or civilians on the sides of the streets (“Mercenaries”). For example, Blackwater employees killed three people by firing on a taxi, with one of the people killed not even being in the car (Fainaru 139). In another case, a Crescent Security convoy shot at a truck and killed two Iraqi police officers (Fainaru 65). In one Kellog, Brown, and Root (KBR) convoy, the truck leader told his convoy guards to shoot any cars that got too close, even if they had families in them (Rasor and Bauman 121). Because of their driving conduct and pointing their weapons at bystanders, Blackwater convoys made enemies basically every trip (Scahill 71). An unnamed Iraqi security official at the Ministry of the Interior sums up what negative connotations contractors bring other Americans:
They are part of the reason for all the hatred that is directed at Americans, because people don’t know them as Blackwater, they know them only as Americans. Blackwater has no respect for the Iraqi people. They consider Iraqis like animals, although actually I think they have more respect for animals. We have seen what they do in the streets. When they’re not shooting, they’re throwing water bottles at people and calling them names. If you are terrifying a child or elderly woman, or you are killing an innocent civilian who is riding in his car, isn’t that terrorism?(qtd. in Fainaru 140)
Finally, one contractor even admits that he believes the actions of his company enrage the Iraqi populace (Rasor and Bauman 127).
            Contractors also hurt foreign relations by not having rules of engagement and not being bound by the international rules of war. The contractors are restrained by two rules, no offensive fighting and escalation of force on approaching vehicles, and sometimes contractors ignore both of these regulations (Pelton 215). Contractors are not bound by the international laws of war because they are not defined in the rules. The existing law works off of two actors, the soldier and the civilian. Contractors are a mix between the two, meaning neither set of laws can apply to them (Mandernach). Because of Coalition Provisional Authority Order 17, contractors could not even be prosecuted for the heinous acts stated earlier for most of the Iraq war. This order, issued by Ambassador Paul Bremer, prevents contractors from being prosecuted under Iraqi law (Scahill xx; Fainaru 136). In one instance, a contractor named Moonen was drinking one night and shot one of the Vice President of Iraq’s bodyguards, and he was only punished by being shipped out of Iraq the next day (Fainaru 165). Following this incident, The President and the Secretary of Defense both had no idea when asked about how contractors could be prosecuted for their crimes (Fainaru 25). Only recently has an agreement between the U.S. and Iraq allowed contractors to be tried under Iraqi law (Lam).
             Another detractor to foreign affairs is the lack of government oversight for contractors, in effect meaning the government does not even know what it’s paying for. The government has    not placed any oversight mechanisms to monitor contractor performance, but the U. S. embassy maintains that it has delegated officials to monitor performance. Yet in truth, these officials are not required and are not inclined to oversee contract performance, basically because it would mean more work (Singer 239). Even the Government Oversight Administration (the investigative office of Congress) employees assigned to this task are poorly trained and fail to notice contractors taking advantage of the government (Singer 154). One contractor even claimed that the government had no right to monitor its actions or inspect its work (Rasor and Bauman 87-88). During a meeting to discuss their poor performance, KBR lied to the Army about following regulations that were in place (Rasor and Bauman 19). One officer in Iraq says that Blackwater can basically do whatever it wants and get away with it (Fainaru 138). As Dr. Hammes, retired Marine Corp officer and Senior Research Fellow in the Strategic Research Center, says,"Unless it provides a government officer or noncommissioned officer for each construction project, convoy, personal security detail, or facilities-protection unit, the government does not control, or even know about, their daily interactions" (Hammes).
             Because of all the bad feelings and bad press, the United States’ foreign relations are hurt when the U.S. is forced to defend contractors from both the public and insurgents. Whenever the public asks critical questions about contractors, the government cannot answer them because of the poor oversight (Fainaru 25). In legal battles, Blackwater consistently hides behind legislation that prevents the Army from being sued by former employees’ families (Eviatar). As for defending contractors against insurgents, all contractors’ convoy trucks are supposed to have a panic button in them. When a contactor presses the panic button, the button sends a signal to the Army. The Army in turn organizes a response. These responses make the U.S. look weak because they have to defend those whom they are paying for defense (Fainaru 99).  U. S. forces also react whenever contractors are killed. For example, the long and bloody campaign to pacify Fallujah was caused by the death of four Blackwater contractors (Scahill 10; Bennett).
            Further damaging foreign relations is the fact that contactors recruit from countries with bad reputations and questionable sources. For instance, Blackwater has hired commandos from Chile, who served under the brutal military dictatorship of General Pinochet (Scahill 192; Spencer). In like manner, a subsidiary of Blackwater recruits troops from the Philippines, Nepal, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras, Panama, and Peru, many of whom have poor        records when it comes to observing human rights (Scahill xxiii). At one point, Military Professional Resources Inc. hired an entire unit of Spetznaz, Russian Special Forces known for their brutal training and tactics (Singer 84). In one tragic case, Crescent Security hired local Iraqis, who later turned on their employer and kidnapped and killed six other contractors, without even a background check before employment (Fainaru 49, 63). Moonen, mentioned earlier for his unpunished actions, was rehired by a Kuwaiti contractor only two months after his incident (Fainaru 167). KBR hired foreign drivers, some of which had never driven large trucks before, to run convoys from Kuwait to Iraq. Sometimes these foreign drivers steal the goods by simply leaving the convoy and driving off into the desert (Rasor and Bauman 66). In regards to recruitment, Geoff Clark, security manager for shipping contractor Agility, says in a comment about warehouse guards in Umm Qasr that, ”you’ve got some who are very professional, and others I wouldn’t let protect a cup of [urine]” (qtd. in Fainaru 142).
            One major argument of proponents of private military contractors is the ability to free up soldiers to do their primary job, which is to engage in combat. Most importantly, contractors run the supply lines for the military, for instance delivering food, parts, and ammunition to forward operating bases (Hammes). In other settings, contractors perform maintenance on high tech equipment, such as specialized electronics and aircraft carrier systems, that our servicemen now lack the expertise to do (Hedahl).Another job contractors fulfill is the training of local forces, such as the training of the new Iraqi army (Hartung).Contractors also perform translation and interrogation for various agencies (Lam). Finally, contractors fill the role of an extremely flexible workforce, almost like a temp agency for soldiers. When needed, more contractors can be hired to fill positions, and when the need for their services is no longer required, the contractors are let go (Hammes).  While proponents see these attributes as beneficial, some actively weaken the United States military by stealing jobs, taking, troops, and damaging morale.
            Tasks normally completed by U. S. troops are taken by contractors. These contractors do not necessarily do a better job than servicemen, and certainly cannot be replaced for nonperformance like servicemen can (Rasor and Bauman 46). Under the new system of contractor logistics, the Army has to complain to and plead with contractors to do their jobs, and sometimes they still do not complete their work (Rasor and Bauman 35). Because of the supply shortages caused by the lack of work, many troops had to scavenge for food, water, and parts to survive and keep operational (Rasor and Bauman 33). If a run is too risky or the government is a little slow with payment, contractors are allowed to refuse to do their jobs without penalties. While contractors can adopt this type of policy, if a soldier tried to refuse, he would be court-martialed and sent to prison (Singer 159; Rasor and Bauman 1).
            Another factor weakening the military is contractors draw troops away from the armed forces. In some cases the incentive of being paid more than six times the amount of their current salary is too much for soldiers, and they leave the military to join a contractor (Quirk).  On the other hand, certain contractors actively influence soldiers to leave the military, much to the dismay of their commanders (Scahill 154). As a result, some people use military service simply to meet the requirements of becoming a contractor (Singer 204).
            Another way the U.S. military is weakened by contractors is the damage caused to morale. Troops are demoralized by the high pay of contractors and their almost unlimited freedom. These differences also create dissent among the troops, weakening unit cohesiveness (Singer 197). Contractor’s actions can also adversely affect the attitude of the troops (Rasor and Bauman 80). Contractors also demoralize troops by their immunity from the law. Whereas the soldiers would be tried under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, the contractors receive no punishment (Eviatar). Soldiers are also demoralized by the lack of supplies, supplies that never reached them because of contractor’s poor performance (Rasor and Bauman 34).
            While private military contractors harm the U.S. by weakening the United States’ armed forces, they also waste a great deal of taxpayers’ money by inflation, waste, and fraud.
On average, individual employees are paid upwards of six-hundred dollars a day (Scahill xx). Despite this information, proponents of contractors state that the concept saves money. They try to back up with the fact that there is no training or long term costs associated with per contract employees (Cancian). Others say that the competitive nature of bidding brings down costs (Schreier). The fact is that the contractors lasting nature means that their high prices for expedience will cost more money in the long run (Singer 180). Furthermore there is evidence that the bidding is only offered to one company, so there is no competition (Isenberg).
The first way contractors waste money is by inflating the prices of their services to get more money out of the United States government. Contractors inflate their prices by taking advantage of their cost-plus contracts. The profits gained from these contracts are a percentage, usually one or two, of how much a contractor spends completing a contract. Because profit is percentage based, contractors do not need or want to look for a cheaper price when buying supplies or finishing a job (Rasor and Bauman 22). The leading supply contractor KBR (Spencer) leases SUVs from a Kuwaiti company they are aligned with for seventy-five hundred dollars a month, more than five times the normal amount (Rasor and Bauman 17).
            Because of the cost-plus contract, contractors are almost encouraged to waste money on the procurement of supplies. KBR is notorious for buying broken or subpar equipment. They buy uninspected trucks for convoys and discover later that the trucks do not even run (Rasor and Bauman 16-17). KBR also wastes money on buying equipment from blacklisted sources or sanctioned countries (Singer 142). In one case of buying soft serve ice cream machines, KBR bought nonfunctional machines from Iran, then bought new ones from Kuwait, and billed the U.S. Army for both of the shipments. KBR also buys unnecessary food products like Neer Beer (Rasor and Bauman 142). Over a billion dollars has been wasted by KBR at the Theater Distribution Mission and two million dollars a week are lost to mismanagement of supplies (Rasor and Bauman 39).
            In another effort to increase cost, contractors encourage their employees to over clock their hours. KBR employees at one point clocked 120 hour work weeks, but the Army complained about high incurred labor costs. Now KBR employees clock eighty-four hours a week, the equivalent of working twelve hours a day, seven days a week.  (Rasor and Bauman 14).These same employees are known to only work two hours a day, then simply sit around (Rasor and Bauman 41).
            As a result of the blatant profiteering attitude, some contractors bill the Department of Defense for activities they did not do. On one particular base, KBR ran a recycling project and simply threw the recycling in the burn pit with the normal trash, while charging more for the recycling service (Peter). KBR also fails in its duty to repair air conditioning systems. Sergeant Gary M. Davenport, in Iraq at Camp Speicher, says “It seems KBR, at the administrative level, has found a way to get paid for a job without ever having to do it” (qtd. in Rasor and Bauman 138-9). Custer Battles, a relatively small company with large contracts, created its own subsidiaries to charge to, and then added on their own charges and billed the government (Rasor and Bauman 89). Custer Battles also received payment for a contract that was cancelled before it began (Rasor and Bauman 86).
            Despite the outrageous profit, some contractors still do a substandard job when they do fulfill a contract. For example, DynCorp was hired to train the new Iraqi police force, and sent contractors that had no police or military training (Griffin 284). Later, when supplying actual officers for another operation, DynCorp sent in overweight and overage employees (Singer 153).  In like manner, KBR convoys often do not make it to their drop off points because of poor maintenance, but KBR is still paid for the delivery (Rasor and Bauman 66-67).          
            Contractors waste money, weaken the military, and vilify and discredit America on the world stage. The contractors make a mockery of an honorable profession, a mockery that damages the United States as whole and its military. These abuses will continue unchecked unless the government steps up and regulates the contractors thoroughly and decisively. The government must force the contractors to perform, and recover the funds stolen from them. Only then soldiers can be content they are being provided for, and Americans can feel confident that they are being protected.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Big Bad Essay 4

Private military contractors are harmful to the USA.

Economically, Diplomatically, and Military

Proponents say they are politely expedient, cheaper, and more effective.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Essay 3

The Detrimental Effects of Using Private Military Contractors
                On March 31, 2004, in Fallujah, Iraq, the bodies of four Americans beaten and burned, with two of the bodies being suspended off of a bridge. This incident sparked a long and bloody campaign to pacify the city of Fallujah. This response would be expected of such an act toward U.S. soldiers, but this is  not the case. Those four men were private military contractors. Along with the short term negative effects of that incident, private military contractors have brought a longer lasting impact. The use of private military contractors has negatively affected the United States diplomatically, militarily, and fiscally.
                Using private military contractors affected the United States diplomatically by  turning the  Iraqi populace against the United States. Contractors performed actions that would enrage the poplace. They would drive counter flow of traffic, and force other vehicles off of the road(Fainaru 115; Rasor and Bauman 68). There are multiple instances of contractors firing on and even killing civilians (Fainaru 139). An unnamed Iraqi security official at the Ministry of the Interior sums up what negative connotations contractors bring other Americans:
They are part of the reason for all the hatred that is directed at Americans, because people don't know them as Blackwater, they know them only as Americans. Blackwater has no respect for the Iraqi people. They consider Iraqis like animals, although I actually think they have more respect for animals. We have seen what they do in the streets. When they're not shooting, they're throwing water bottles at people and calling them names. If you are terrifying a child or elderly woman, or you are killing an innocent civilian who is riding in his car, isn't that terrorism? (Fainaru 14)
One contractor even admitted he believes the actions of his company enrages the Iraqi populace (Rasor and Bauman 127).
                Even the United States military has suffered from the use of private military contractors. Troop morale was lowered due to the differences in pay and freedoms between the two groups (Singer 187). Gary Schaub Jr., a professor at the US Air Force War College, states, " a majority of officers… are uncomfortable with [contractor's] intrusion into the profession of arms, and are cognizant of their negative effects (Schaub)." Contractors also weaken the Armed Forces by maintaining and operating high tech equipment. These actions take the expertise out of the Armed Forces hands, and makes the Armed Forces reliant upon the contractors (Hedahl).  Contractors further weaken the military by enticing soldiers away with higher pay and benefits (Quirk). Soldiers were also demoralized by contractors' lack of accountability for their actions (Eviatar). Another way the Armed Forces were weakened was through contractors underperforming. These deficiencies ranged from to delivering the wrong supplies or not delivering supplies at all (Rasor and Bauman 66-67).
                Finally, the use of contractors has greatly affected  the Department of Defense budget.
Contractors are paid on a cost-plus contract system, which rewards high costs and punishes savings (Rasor and Bauman 142). This system has led to ballooning costs. Of these costs there is even a enormous waste attached to them. David Isenberg, author of Shadow Force: Private Security Contractors in Iraq and an expert on private military contractors states, "If the $31-billion estimate is correct, that would mean that 15 percent of the total $206 billion spent on contracts to date was wasted, and $60 billion would be 29 percent. No matter how you slice it or inflation adjust it, that's real money (Isenberg)."
                Just as the Fallujah incident brought consequences to the United States, future conflicts can only bring  more effects to the table. Based on private military contractors track record,  the effects they cause will further impair the United States. Overall, the use of contractors led to an angered Iraqi populace, a weakened military, and a vastly over extended budget.

Works Cited
Eviatar, Daphne. " My Own Private Military: Private Military Contractors Turn to David Hammond When                They Get in Trouble for Their Work in Iraq. And They Get in a Lot of Trouble." American Lawyer.        29. 7 (July 2007): 17(3). Student Resource Center - Gold.Web. 31 Aug 2011.
Fainaru, Steve. Big Boy Rules: America's Mercenaries Fighting in Iraq.Philadelpia: De Cape, 2008. Print.
Hedahl, Marcus. "Blood and Blackwaters: A Call to Arms for the Profession of Arms." Journal of Military                Ethics 8.1 (2009): 19-33. Academic Search Premier. Web. 15 Sept. 2011.
Quirk, Matthew. "PRIVATE MILITARY CONTRACTORS." Atlantic Monthly (10727825) 294.2 (2004): 39.       Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 28 Oct. 2011.
Rasor, Dina and Robert Bauman. Betraying Our Troops: The Destructive Results of Privatizing War. New                York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2007. Print.
Singer, P.W. Corporate Warriors: The Rise of Privatized Military Industry. London: Cornell University,      2003. Print.
Isenberg, David." War and Private Contractors: Can't Live with Them, Can't Live Without Them.”               Huffington Post ( 2  Sept. 2011). Web.6 Sept. 2011.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

storage

http://belfercenter.ksg.harvard.edu/publication/19402/private_military_contractors_come_with_strings_attached.html

Essay 3 prep work

What Do I Know:
Using contractors is bad for the US diplomatically, militarily, and fiscally.
What do I need to find out:
Quotations to support them.

Thesis Statement:

The use of private military contractors creates detrimental effects on the US diplomacy, military, and economy.

Topic Sentences:
Using private military contractors caused loss of face in foreign affairs.
Using private military contractors weakened US armed forces by drawing troops away and providing poor  support.
Using private military contractors increased defense spending enormous amounts.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Final Draft Essay 2

Russell Kimmel 
Dr. Ken Kerr
EN101-16
4 Oct. 2011         
Private Military Contractors Verses a Standard Unites States Army Unit
                In the face of economic crisis in the United States, one business sector has continued to waste taxpayer dollars. In the last ten years the United States has been at war, it has spent over 206 billion dollars on private military contractors. The estimated waste on these contracts is up to sixty billion dollars (Isenberg). In two specific cases, Kellog, Brown, and Root leased vehicles for five times the average price and lost two million dollars worth of supplies a week at the Theater Distribution Mission (Rasor and Bauman 17).  This money is being wasted when a standard United States Army unit could fulfill the same job more effectively. Standard Army units surpass private military contractors in accountability, equipment, and standards.
                First, private military contractors lack accountabilityfor their actions. The United States government generally has no idea what contractors are doing on a daily basis (Hammes). Even if officials know contractors are underperforming, it is extremely difficult to replace contractors due to convoluted contracting procedure (Rasor and Bauman 35). Meanwhile, in the realm of justice, contractors can go unpunished for even the most egregious crimes, such as the shooting of two Iraqi police officers (Fainaru 65).  This absence of consequences was due to contractors being unable to be charged under Iraqi law until 2010 (Lam).
                Furthermore, private military contractors lack proper equipment and vehicles. Contractors buy whatever equipment they can afford, whether it be top of the line or out of a trash heap (Rasor and Bauman 142).As a result, contractors use subpar vehicles to fulfill contracts. In one case, their contract paid for armored cars, but the contractors used soft skinned vehicles to make more profit ("Private"). In other instances, broken vehicles were purchased without so much as an inspection (Rasor and Bauman 16).
                Lastly, private military contractor's poor recruiting standards and unequal levels of trainingpropagate substandard performance. Companies such as Blackwater USA hire soldiers from countries with questionable human rights records (Scahill xxiii). Kellog, Brown, and Root hired foreign drivers, some of which had never driven large trucks before, to drive convoys in and out of Iraq (Rasor and Bauman 66). In regards to unequal training, contractors can have anywhere from Special Forces level training to no combat experience whatsoever (Singer 84:Fainaru 49). Geoff Clark, security manager for shipping contractor Agility, says in a comment about the training and conduct of  warehouse guards in Umm Qasr that, " you've got some who are very professional, and others I wouldn't let protect a cup of piss" (qtd. in Fainaru 142).
                Whereas private military contractors lack accountability, United States Army units have a strict accountability structure, both in oversight and in a justice system. Soldiers report up the chain of command, with the officer above them directly responsible for their actions (Holbrook). This structure leads towards efficiency and high performance. In addition, Soldiers are accountable to their own dedicated justice system, the Uniform Code of Military Justice (Eviatar). If soldiers commit a crime, they are charged and punished within the system (UMCJ). This accountability lends the Army credibility and responsibility.
                In contrast to contractors poor equipment, Army units have standardized equipment and vehicles. According to the official U.S. Army Fact Files, every piece of equipment must meet a minimum standard of quality. Soldiers can have confidence that their gear will perform to their expectations (U.S. Army). Soldiers also do not need to worry about having the right vehicle for the job, as they can be assigned anything from an armored Humvee to an Abrams main battle tank (Goarmy.com).
                Whereas contractors have haphazard recruiting, the United States army has very controlled recruiting and training standards. The Army will not take just anyone to be a soldier; the applicant must meet certain criteria such as physical fitness or intelligence (Powers). A recruit that falsifies his information to join can even be charged with a crime (UMCJ). As for training, all soldiers receive copious amounts of training before they are even given a specific job. Every soldier goes to Basic Combat Training, which lasts ten weeks, and then continues on to any number of Advanced Individual Training schools, where he will learn to fulfill his specific role in the Army (Goarmy.com). Furthermore soldiers can go onto even more training in their field courtesy of the Army (Goarmy.com).
                With such a poor economic situation in the United States, the government cannot afford to waste money on contractors. When contractors are paid to do a job, and the job could be done better by a unit already in the defense budget, money is being thrown away. The government should stop hiring subpar contractors when the United States Army can complete the same task with more accountability, better equipment, and superior training.

Monday, October 3, 2011

rough draft

Russell Kimmel 
Dr. Ken Kerr
EN101-16
DATE    
Private Military Contractors Verses a Standard Unites States Army Unit
                In the face of economic crisis in the United States, one business sector has continued to waste taxpayer dollars. In the last ten years the United States has been at war, it has spent over 206 billion dollars on private military contractors. The estimated waste on these contracts is up to sixty billion dollars (Isenberg). This money is being wasted when a standard United States Army unit  could fulfill the same job more effectively. Standard Army units surpass private military contractors in accountability, equipment, and standards.
                To begin, private military contractors lack accountability for their actions. The United States government generally has no idea what contractors are doing on a daily basis (Hammes). Even if officials know contractors are underperforming, it is extremely difficult to replace contractors due to convoluted contracting procedure (Rasor and Bauman 35). In the realm of justice, contractors can go unpunished for even the most egregious crimes, such as the shooting of two Iraqi police officers (Fainaru 65).  This lack of consequences was due to contractors being unable to be charged under Iraqi law until 2010 (Lam).
                Private military contractors lack proper equipment and vehicles. Contractors buy whatever equipment they can afford, whether it be top of the line or out of a trash heap (Rasor and Bauman 142). Contractors use subpar vehicles to fulfill contracts. In one case, their contract paid for armored cars, but the contractors used soft skinned vehicles to make more profit (Private Military Contractors in Iraq). In other instances broken vehicles were purchased without so much as an inspection (Rasor and Bauman 16).
                Private military contractor's poor recruiting standards and unequal levels of training propagates substandard performance. Companies such as Blackwater USA hire soldiers from countries with questionable human rights records (Scahill xxiii). Kalliburton Brown and Root hired foreign drivers ,some of which had never driven large trucks before, to drive convoys in and out of Iraq (Rasor and Bauman 66). In regards to unequal training, contractors can have anywhere from special forces level training to no combat experience whatsoever(Singer 84: Fainaru 49). Geoff Clark, security manager for shipping contractor Agility, says in a comment about the training and manner of  warehouse guards in Umm Qasr that, " you've got some who are very professional, and others I wouldn't let protect a cup of piss" (qtd. in Fainaru 142).
                While private military contractors lack accountability and quality, the United States Army excels in the areas of accountability, equipment, and standards.
                United States Army units have a strict accountability structure, both in oversight and in a justice system. Soldiers report up the chain of command, with the officer above them directly responsible for their actions ( Holbrook). This structure leads towards efficiency and high performance. Soldiers are accountable to their own dedicated justice system, the Uniform Code of Military Justice (Eviatar). If soldiers commit a crime, they are charged and punished within the system (UMCJ). This accountability gives the Army credibility and responsibility.
                Army units have standardized equipment and vehicles. According to the official U.S. Army Fact Files, every piece of equipment must meet a minimum standard of quality. Soldiers can have confidence that their gear will perform to their expectations (Fact Files). Soldiers also do not need to worry about having the right vehicle for the job, as they can be assigned anything from an armored Humvee to an Abrams main battle tank (Army Careers & Jobs).
                The United States army has very controlled recruiting and training standards. The Army will not take just anyone to be a soldier; the applicant must meet certain criteria such as physical fitness or intelligence (Powers). A recruit that falsifies his information to join can even be charged with a crime (UMCJ). As for training, all soldiers receive copious amounts of training before they are even given a specific job. Every soldier goes to Basic Combat Training, which lasts ten weeks, then continue on to any number of Advanced Individual Training, where he will learn his specific role in the Army (Goarmy.com:Soldier life). Furthermore soldiers can go onto even more training in their field courtesy of the Army(Army.com:Benefits).
                With such poor a economic situation in the United States, the government cannot afford to waste money on contractors. When contractors are paid to do a job, and the job could be done better by a unit already in the defense budget, money is being thrown away. The government should stop hiring subpar contractors when the United States Army can complete the same task, with more accountability, better equipment, and superior training.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Thesis, development plan, and topic sentences.

THESIS: Standard Army units surpass private military contractors in accountability, equipment, and standards.


1.PMCs lack accountability in their performance and actions.
2.PMCs lack standardized equipment and proper vehicles.
3.PMCs have poor standards of recruitment and varied levels of training.
4.The Army has a strict command structure that provides oversight and accountability.
5.The Army has standard issue equipment and vehicles.
6.The Army carefully vets its recruits and all soldier have at least a basic level of training.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

New Essay, New Post

What I know
PMC and army training differs
Army and PMC pay rates differ
Their organization differs
Their equipment differs
Their working environments differ
What do I Need to know
How exactly all these things differ
What my research told me
Army training holds to a certain  level at all points, but can be exceeded by special jobs, but never is lower than standard: PMC training can range from none to Special forces grade
Army is payed according to a modest pay scale: PMC are paid exorbitant rates
The Army has a strictly regimented system and chain of command: PMCs lack any chain of command and authority is held by supervisors if by any
The Army has standard issue weapons and vehicles: PMCs use whatever they can get a hold of.
The Army's environment is based on core values and obedience: PMCs environments are based on making money

Thursday, September 15, 2011

FINAL DRAFT ESSAY 1

Russell Kimmel 
Dr. Ken Kerr
EN101-16
15 Sept.  2011
Private Military Contractors
                In modern warfare a new idea has taken a firm hold in the mind of military and civilian leadership. That new idea is the outsourcing of traditional military jobs to private military contractors. Private military contractorsare companies that blur the line between civilian and military in accountability, funding, and function.
                Private military contractors have questionable accountability, both criminally and in simple oversight. While theyoperate under the employment of the United States Military, they are unable to be tried under the Uniform Code of Military Justice (Hedahl). For most of the Iraq War, contractors were not able to be tried under Iraqi law due to Coalition Provisional Authority Order 17 (Fainaru 136). It was not until the Status of Forces Agreement between the U.S. and Iraq that allowed contractors to be tried under Iraqi law. This agreement did not go into effect until 2010 (Lam).Furthermore, contractors also cannot be sued by their former employee's families because they hide behind legislation that prevents soldier's families from the suing the U.S. Army (Eviatar). As for oversight, contractors usually lack any type of supervision. As Dr. Hammes says,"Unless it provides a government officer or noncommissioned officer for each construction project, convoy, personal security detail, or facilities-protection unit, the governmentdoes not control, or even know about, their daily interactions" (Hammes). Often the officials delegated to provide oversight from the U.S. embassy generally fail to do so ( Singer 239). Even the Government Oversight Administration (the investigative arm of Congress) employees assigned to this task are poorly trained and fail to notice if contractors are taking advantage of the government (Singer 154).
                Private military contractors are funded very differently than the armed forces. Their contracts usually come from the State Department, Department of Defense, or the U.S. Agency for International Development (Isenberg). Most noteworthy is the amount of pay that contractors receive. On average contractoremployeescollect up to five or ten times more wages than the average soldier (Hedahl). This can amount to employees earning almost six-hundred dollars a day (Scahill xx). Furthermore, most contracts are what is called "cost-plus," which means the more a contractor spends, the more money the company receives. The contractor's profit is a percentage of the expenditure, so higher costs incurred are more profitable than contracts that stay on budget (Rasor and Bauman 22).By the end of the fiscal year 2011 over 200 billion dollars will have been spent on contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan(Isenberg).
                Private military contractors function to free up soldiers to do their primary job, which is to engage in combat. Most importantly, contractors run the supply lines for the military, for instance delivering food, parts, and ammunition to forward operating bases (Hammes).As a result, contractors prepare the food on bases as well. They cook and serve the food in the mess halls to soldiers and contractors alike (Rasor and Bauman 142).In other settings, contractors perform maintenance on high tech equipment, such as specialized electronics and aircraft carrier systems, that our servicemen now lack the expertise to do (Hedahl). Another job contractors fulfill is the training of local forces, such as the training of the new Iraqi army (Hartung).Contractors also perform translation and interrogation for various agencies (Lam).  Even though all these tasks are not combat related, contractorsdo take on armed roles. These roles include guarding of locations and convoys (Rasor and Bauman 121). In addition, contractors also performed bodyguard roles for the U.S. State Department in Iraq (Scahill 77).Finally, contractors fill the role of an extremely flexible workforce, almost like a temp agency for soldiers. When needed, more contractors can be hired to fill positions, and when the need for their services is no longer required, the contractors are let go (Hammes). This flexibility prevents the expenditure of political power to expand the standing armed forces, and the long term spending associated with career soldiers (Hammes).
                Private military contractors are a key part of how we fight wars today. Contractors may blur the line between military and civilians, but they have secured a large foothold in our fighting style. Accountability is ,at times, shoddy, and funding a complicated affair, but contractor's flexibility makes them an invaluable tool.


















Works Cited
Eviatar, Daphne. " My Own Private Military: Private Military Contractors Turn to David Hammond When                They Get in Trouble for Their Work in Iraq. And They Get in a Lot of Trouble." American Lawyer.        29. 7 (July 2007): 17(3). Student Resource Center - Gold.Web. 31 Aug 2011.
Fainaru, Steve. Big Boy Rules: America's Mercenaries Fighting in Iraq. Philadelpia: De Cape, 2008. Print.
Hammes, T. X. "Private Contractors in Conflict Zones." JFQ: Joint Force Quarterly 60 (2011): 26-37.            Academic Search Premier. Web. 15 Sept. 2011.
Hartung, William D. "Outsourcing Is Hell." Nation 278.22 (2004): 5-22. Academic Search Premier. Web.     15 Sept. 2011.
Hedahl, Marcus. "Blood and Blackwaters: A Call to Arms for the Profession of Arms." Journal of Military                Ethics 8.1 (2009): 19-33. Academic Search Premier. Web. 15 Sept. 2011.
Isenberg, David." War and Private Contractors: Can't Live with Them, Can't Live Without Them.”               Huffington Post ( 2  Sept. 2011). Web. 6 Sept.  2011.
Lam, Jenny S. "Accountability for Private Military Contractors Under the Alien Tort Statute." California   Law Review 97.5 (2009): 1459-1499. Academic Search Premier. Web. 15 Sept 2011.
Rasor, Dina and Robert Bauman. Betraying Our Troops: The Destructive Results of Privatizing War. New                York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2007. Print.
Scahill, Jeremy. Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Private Mercenary Army. New York:                 Nation, 2007. Print.
Singer, P.W. Corporate Warriors: The Rise of Privatized Military Industry. London: Cornell University,      2003. Print.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

My Rough Draft Deuce

Russell Kimmel 
Dr. Ken Kerr
EN101-16
DATE
Private Military Contractors
                In modern warfare a new idea has taken a firm hold in the mind of military and civilian leadership. That new idea is the outsourcing of traditional military jobs to private military contractors. Private military contractors(PMCs) are companies that blur the line between  civilian and military in  accountability, funding, and function.
                Private military contractors have questionable accountability, both criminally and in simple oversight. While they operate under the employment of the United States Military, they are unable to be tried under the Uniform Code of Military Justice(Hedahl). For most of the Iraq War, Contractors were not able to be tried under Iraqi law due to Coalition Provisional Authority Order 17(Fainaru 136). It was not until the Status of Forces Agreement between the U.S. and Iraq that allowed contractors to be tried under Iraqi law. This agreement did not go into effect until 2010(Lam). Furthermore contractors also cannot be sued by their former employee's families because they hide behind legislation that prevents soldier's families from the suing the army(Eviatar). As for oversight, contractors usually lack any type of supervision. As Dr. Hammes says," Unless it provides a government officer or noncommissioned officer for each construction project, convoy, personal security detail, or facilities-protection unit, the government does not control, or even know about, their daily interactions(Hammes)." Often the officials delegated to provide oversight from the U.S. embassy generally fail to do so( Singer 239). Even the Government Oversight Administration ( the investigative arm of Congress) employees assigned to this task are poorly trained and fail to notice if contractors are taking advantage of the government (Singer 154).
                Private military contractors are funded very differently than the armed forces. Their contracts usually come from either the State Department, Department of Defense, or the U.S. Agency for International Development(Isenberg). Most noteworthy is the amount of pay that contractors receive. On average contractor employees collect up to five or ten times more wages than the average soldier (Hedahl). This can amount to earning almost six-hundred dollars a day (Scahill xx.)Furthermore most contracts are what is called "cost-plus", which means the more a contractor spends, the more money the company receives. The contractor's profit is a percentage of the expenditure, so higher costs incurred are more profitable than contracts that stay on budget (Rasor and Bauman 22). By the end of the fiscal year 2011 over 200 billion dollars will have been spent on contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan (Isenberg).
                Private military contractors function to free up  soldiers to do their primary job, which is to engage in combat. Most importantly,  contractors run the supply lines for the military, for instance delivering food, parts, and ammo to forward operating bases (Hammes).Furthermore contractors prepare the food on bases as well. They cook and serve the food in the mess halls to soldiers and contractors alike (Rasor and Bauman 142). In other settings contractors  perform maintenance on high tech equipment, such as specialized electronics and aircraft carrier systems,  that our serviceman now lack the expertise to do (Hedahl).Another job contractors fulfill is the training of local forces, such as the training of the new Iraqi army (Hartung).Contractors also perform translation and interrogation for various agencies (Lam).  Even though all these  tasks are not combat related,  contractors do take on armed roles. These roles include guarding of locations and convoys (Rasor and Bauman 121). In addition contractors also performed bodyguard roles for the U.S. State Department in Iraq (Scahill 77). Finally, Contractors fill the role of a extremely flexible workforce, almost like a temp agency for soldiers. When needed, more contractors can be hired to fill positions, and when the need for their services is no longer required, the contractors are let go (Hammes). This flexibility prevents the expenditure of political power to expand the standing armed forces, and the long term spending associated with career soldiers (Hammes).
                Private military contractors are a key part of how we fight wars today. Contractors may blur the line between military and civilians, but they have secured a large foothold in our fighting style. Accountability is at times shoddy, and funding a complicated affair, but contractor's flexibility makes them an invaluable tool.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

My Rough Draft

Russell Kimmel 
Dr. Ken Kerr
EN101-16
DATE
Private Military Contractors
                In modern warfare a new idea has taken a firm hold in the mind of military and civilian leadership. That new idea is the outsourcing of traditional military jobs to private military contractors. Private military contractors(PMCs) are companies that blur the line between  civilian and military in  accountability, funding, and function.
                Private military contractors have questionable accountability, both criminally and in simple oversight. While they operate under the employment of the United States Military, they are unable to be tried under the Uniform Code of Military Justice(Hedahl). For most of the Iraq War, PMCs were not able to be tried under Iraqi law either due to Coalition Provisional Authority Order 17(Fainaru 136). It was not until the Status of Forces Agreement between the U.S. and Iraq that allowed contractors to be tried under Iraqi law. This agreement did not go into effect until 2010(Lam). PMCs also cannot be sued by their former employee's families because they hide behind legislation that prevents soldier's families from the suing the army(Eviatar). As for oversight, PMCs usually lack any type of oversight. As Dr. Hammes says," Unless it provides a government officer or noncommissioned officer for each construction project, convoy, personal security detail, or facilities-protection unit, the government
does not control, or even know about, their daily interactions(Hammes)." The officials delegated to provide oversight from the U.S. embassy generally failed to do so( Singer 239). Even the Government Oversight Administration ( the investigative arm of Congress) employees assigned to this task are poorly trained and fail to notice contractors taking advantage of the government (Singer 154).
                Private military contractors are funded through U.S. government. Their contracts usually come from either the State Department, Department of Defense, or the U.S. Agency for International Development(Isenberg). The average contractor receives up to five or ten times more pay than the average soldier (Hedahl). This can amount to earning almost six-hundred dollars a day (Scahill xx.) Most contracts are what is called "cost-plus", which means the more a contractor spends, the more money the company receives. The profit is a percentage of the expenditure, so higher prices are more profitable for them (Rasor and Bauman 22). Over 200 billion dollars will have been spent on contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan by the end of the fiscal year (Isenberg).
                Private military contractors function to free up  soldiers to do their primary job, which is to engage in combat. PMCs run the supply lines for the military (Hammes). PMCs provide the food on bases as well (Rasor and Bauman 142). Contractors also do maintenance on high tech equipment, such as radar and aircraft carriers,  that our serviceman now lack the expertise to do (Hedahl). PMCs also train local forces to fight, such as the Iraqi military (Hartung).PMCs also preform translation and interrogation for various agencies (Lam).  PMCs also take on armed roles. These include guarding of locations and convoys (Rasor and Bauman 121). PMCs also preformed bodyguard roles for the U.S. State Department in Iraq (Scahill 77). PMCs also fill the role of a extremely flexible force. When needed, more contractors can be hired, and when the need goes away, the contractors are let go (Hammes). This also prevents the expenditure of political power to expand the standing armed forces (Hammes).
                Private military contractors are a key part of how we fight wars today. They may blur the line between military and civilians in their accountability, funding, and function, but they are not going away anytime soon.

My thesis, and topic sentences

Thesis:Private military contractors(PMCs) are companies that blur the line between  civilian and military in  accountability, funding, and function.
TS1.Private military contractors have questionable accountability, both criminally and in simple oversight.
TS2.Private military contractors are funded through U.S. government.
TS3.Private military contractors function to free up  soldiers to do their primary job, which is to engage in combat.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

To post old info...

What do I know?
PMC’s can be private or publicly traded.
PMC’s are taking over things normally done by the armed forces proper.
PMC’s are of questionable legality.
PMC’s seem to lack oversight.
What do I need to learn?
What jobs are PMC’s taking over?
Are PMC’s actually legal?
Is there any oversight for PMC’s?
Does using PMC’s save money?
How does the use of PMC’s affect the USA’s image?
How do PMC’s operate?
Who controls the hiring of PMC’s?

Now then, for the rest about the sources. Anything from a Wikipedia will have a whole host of problems. You either won’t know who the author is, or if you do, they will probably have credentials to back up their claims. Links are commonly dead, and the pages can go for weeks without being updated.
Now for bedtime, with more progress to be posted tomorrow.

Straight to the Source

So I figure I found a pretty good source here.  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-isenberg/war-and-private-contracto_b_944365.html

The article is current, since it was posted 4 days ago. The author is has good credentials,and has been writing on the subject for quite some time. He even has a book out about it.

Well class is wrapping up so I'll finish up this post at home.
And now that I have my password back I can actually post all the work I've already done but haven't posted yet. So expect a full update later.

Russell out.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

So This Is New...

I have created a blog for the express purpose of documenting the progress of my papers for english class. Herein you shall read of the privatization of our military and defense research. Most behind the scenes work for the US armed forces is now by private contractors. These things include supplying food, base housing, and parts management.

I choose this topic because as a soldier in the Army, I will have to deal with these people quite regularly. And if I climb the ranks to the level of working in the Pentagon, I may one day be choosing which companies to award contracts to. And it is tax dollars being spent to pay these companies, so I think we all can learn a little bit more about where our money is going..

Let the work begin,
Russell K