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Private Contractors and Covert Wars in Latin
America
By Cyril Mychalejko
Al-Jazeerah: CCUN, June 14, 2010
U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) threatened to issue
subpoenas against the U.S. Defense and State Departments last month if they
continue to refuse to accurately account for billions of dollars spent on
private contractors assisting Washington in the 'war on drugs' in Latin
America. But McCaskill's concerns raise broader questions about oversight
and transparency of a controversial industry and its ever expanding role in
Washington's foreign policy.
"We asked for this information from the
State Department and the Defense Department (DoD) more than three months
ago. Despite our repeated requests, neither Department has been able to
answer our questions yet,"
said
U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill at a
Senate hearing on May 20.
The Defense Department, which
could only provide an estimate of how much of $5.3 billion it spent on
counternarcotics operations in the last decade, actually outsourced what
turned out to be an incomplete audit to a private contractor.
Contractors such as
DynCorp and
Northrop Grumman working in South and Central America are paid to spray
drug crops, work with foreign militaries and police, offer intelligence and
operational support, and conduct public relations assignments.
McCaskill, who said "there is almost no transparency," added that she "will
not hesitate to use subpoenas."
Meanwhile, the United Nations
is pushing for a new international convention to regulate Private
Military and Security Companies (PMSC's).
“This industry, which deals
with heavy weaponry in conflict zones is less regulated than the toy
industry,”
said
José Luis Gómez del Prado, chair of the UN's Working Group on the use of
mercenaries, in April.
The Working Group, worried about the
"increased privatization of war and security,"
urged Washington last August to allow more public oversight with its use
of PSMC's, especially those contracted by U.S. intelligence agencies.
One requirement included in the proposed legal framework for PMSC's
would be the termination of immunity agreements covering private security
personnel. This would affect Washington's
controversial new
base agreement with Colombia which
grants diplomatic immunity to US military personnel and private defense
contractors.
William F. Wechsler, Deputy Assistant Secretary of
Defense for Counternarcotics and Global Threats, used his
testimony at
the Senate to
connect the 'war on drugs' with the 'war on terrorism.'
"Terrorists associated with Islamic Radical Groups (IRGs), as well as
narcoterrorist groups such as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC), operate sophisticated networks designed to move not only weapons,
drugs, and other materials, but people as well. A wealth of intelligence
reporting has linked many IRG members to both drug trafficking and alien
smuggling. The DoD, through extensively coordinated projects with Federal
law enforcement agencies, has developed collaborative and effective methods
for detecting, and monitoring, the movement of illegal drugs," said
Wechsler. "Such trafficking, in which terrorists with transnational reach
commonly engage, is a present and growing danger to the security of the
United States, our forces abroad, and our allies."
This should cause
particular concern in the region given President Obama's
expansion of covert special forces operations in the fight against
al-Qaeda and other terrorist organizations. Furthermore, contractors that
are working in intelligence gathering could be shielded from public or
Congressional oversight due to potentially classified designations to their
operations.
Unfortunately, McCaskill's tough stance with the Defense
and State Departments is more a matter of fiscal concern rather than
operational mission. She believes that private contractors' "efforts are
crucial to the success of the United States’ mission in Latin America."
There needs to be both national and global efforts to legally reign in
an industry which was recently
exposed for
teaching torture to Mexican Police just a day after the 'war on drugs'
was officially expanded in Mexico through the
Merida
Initiative, a joint security agreement between the U.S. and Mexico.
To think that the toy industry is more heavily regulated is no laughing
matter.
Cyril Mychalejko is an editor at
www.UpsideDownWorld.org.
--
Cyril Mychalejko
www.UpsideDownWorld.org
www.CanaryInstitute.org Skype: cyrilm.udw
cmychalejko@gmail.com
http://upsidedownworld.org/main/international-archives-60/2539-private-contractors-and-covert-wars-in-latin-america
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