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'World being ruled by private military
companies'
Pakistan
Times
Monitoring Report
KARACHI: There are at least
90 Private Military Companies (PMCs) involved in the Business of War and
killing innocent people by operating in 110 countries worldwide, says a
report by journalist Nasir Mahmood.
These corporate armies, often providing services normally carried out by a
national military force, offer specialized skills in high-tech warfare,
including communications and signals intelligence and aerial surveillance,
as well as pilots, logistical support, battlefield planning and training.
They have been hired both by governments and multinational corporations to
further their policies or protect their interests.
International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) through its
nearly two-year investigation into the business of war has uncovered the
existence of PMCs as the new world order’s mercenaries have come to be
known, allow governments to pursue policies in tough corners of the world
with the distance and comfort of plausible deniability.
This is a new breed of opportunists that has come to dominate the global
landscape of conflicts since the end of the Cold War. Gone is the superpower
ideological divide that once gave a strange sort of order to the world’s
wars. In its place are entrepreneurs, selling arms or military expertise and
support, and companies, whose drilling and mining in some of the hottest
spots often prolong conflict and instability. Additionally, the military
downsizing that followed the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the
Soviet Union flooded the market with surplus arms and trained soldiers
looking for a job.
This incredible dump of goods and services has made it much easier for
non-state actors to fight a war. The ICIJ has found that these non-state
actors – despite their appearance of being freelancers—have copious
connections to intelligence services, multinational corporations, political
figures and criminal syndicates in the United States, Western and Eastern
Europe, Russia, Africa and the Middle East. Often they work as proxies for
national or corporate interests whose involvement is buried under layers of
secrecy.
“Western chancelleries have not renounced their self-proclaimed right to
influence the course of events,” the French political scientist
Jean-Françoise Bayart wrote in the journal ‘African Affairs’ in April 2000.
“But they now prefer to act through private operators, including both
commercial companies and non-governmental organizations, and even in the
field of defense.”
These companies do not present the underbelly of war commerce and, indeed,
their supporters argue that PMCs save lives and bolster security, all while
being more cost-efficient than national militaries or international
peacekeeping operations. But many operate in the same black hole of
information that allows war profiteers to work with impunity.
Much of what has been called war during the past decade –especially in
places like Sierra Leone and Angola—is merely an extreme form of
criminality. Some of the arms dealers and entrepreneurs tracked in the ICIJ
investigation crossed regularly between the secretive worlds of war
commerce, organized crime and terrorism. One measure of their influence is
the deadly trade in arms.●
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