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The New Mercenaries and the Privatization of Conflict


THOMAS K. ADAMS


© 1999 Thomas K. Adams


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>From Parameters, Summer 1999, pp. 103-16.
Go to Summer issue Table of Contents.
Go to Cumulative Article Index.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
In January 1999, the Ethiopian air force was proudly demonstrating its newly
acquired Su-27 fighter-bombers when suddenly one aircraft lost an engine and
plunged toward the ground. The pilot ejected in a burst of pyrotechnics and
parachuted safely to a landing near the spectators, but when he removed his
flight helmet a very European face emerged, that of Colonel Vyacheslav Myzin,
formerly of the Russian air force. Colonel Myzin is one of the new
mercenaries.[1]
A certain amount of near-hysteria has been generated in the past few years by
the issue of privatized military elements such as the colonel, loosely
characterized as mercenaries. The United Nations and some African states
(some of whom hire mercenaries) have been especially vociferous in this
regard. Nevertheless, the realities of the 21st century will make it
inevitable that so-called mercenaries will play a greater role than in the
past.
It is a very old practice for rulers to fight some or all of their wars by
hiring foreigners, militarily skilled groups and individuals who have no
special ideological stake in the conflict at hand. Loosely speaking, these
hired soldiers are grouped together as "mercenaries." At the dawn of the 21st
century, when various entities (states, corporations, political movements,
etc.) find themselves in need of military or large-scale security services,
hiring mercenaries is an obvious recourse. When even major states are
reducing their armed forces and showing less interest in foreign military
adventures because of pinched economic circumstances and a changed political
environment, smaller states may be doubly motivated to go the presumably
cheaper mercenary route. During the 1990s a number of corporations termed
"international security firms" or "private military companies" have sprung up
to service this demand. These are distinguished from ordinary security firms
that provide building watchmen and the like, essentially private guards. Such
local security firms have limited functions and neither use nor provide
training in military methods, leadership, or equipment. The new international
security firms, however, embody all those features.
A 1997 study by the private Center for Defense Information lists dozens of
such organizations with international operations. South Africa has been the
leading home of international security companies, including Executive
Outcomes, Combat Force, Investments Surveys, Honey Badger Arms and
Ammunition, Shield Security, Kas Enterprises, Saracen International, and
Longreach Security. International military firms based in other parts of the
world include Alpha Five, Corporate Trading International, Omega Support
Ltd., Parasec Strategic Concept, Jardine Securicor Gurkha Services (Hong
Kong), Gurkha Security Guards (Isle of Man, UK), Special Project Service Ltd.
(UK), Defence Systems Ltd. (UK), Science Applications International
Corporation (SAIC), Vinnell Corporation (US), and Military Professional
Resources Inc. (US).[2] Executive Outcomes (South Africa) has been described
as "the world's first fully equipped corporate army."[3]
None of these would describe itself as a mercenary force, since the term is
loaded with negative connotations. At best, it recalls images of colorful
adventurers, not the sort of solid, reliable image these firms are anxious to
project. The inexact term "mercenary" is often used as a term of opprobrium,
applied to any police, military, or paramilitary which the user dislikes. At
the extremes, it is applied to ordinary private guards and security personnel
and to any person who is paid for military-related services, including the
paid professional armies of modern nation-states.[4] For purposes of this
discussion, we will use the ordinary language definition of a mercenary:
individuals or organizations who sell their military skills outside their
country of origin and as an entrepreneur rather than as a member of a
recognized national military force. The particular emphasis here is on those
groups organized as corporations that provide such services.
Growth, History, and Definitions
In 1994, the United Nations became sufficiently alarmed about the increasing
use of mercenaries to appoint an official to investigate the issue. Enrique
Bernales Ballesteros, the UN Special Rapporteur on Mercenaries, reported a
growing number of hired fighters appearing in Zaire, Angola, Rwanda,
Tajikistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Afghanistan, and former Yugoslavia.
According to Ballesteros, there has been a "significant presence of
mercenaries" in the armed conflicts in these countries. The report showed
special concern about the involvement of large, well-organized, and
well-equipped private military forces such as Executive Outcomes.[5]
This kind of alarm can be expected since the UN is an organization of states,
and states have always jealously guarded their monopoly on the use of force,
especially deadly force. This monopoly has emphatically included the right to
create and employ military forces. In the UN view, mercenary activity is a
violation of the principles of sovereign equality, political independence,
and the territorial integrity of member states. But since hired fighters are
most commonly used in intrastate conflicts, where rulers desperately need
their services, little effective action has been taken. However, states are
not the only customers for military skills. Mercenaries can be expected to
become significant players in private, group, and corporate conflict,
increasingly so if social destabilization increases, degrading the protective
and policing capabilities of states. The early indications of this can be
seen in reports of former military specialists ranging from ex-commandos to
armament and training experts hired by multifarious employers including drug
cartels and international corporations.[6] One such example apparently came
to light when Colombian officials charged a former Israeli officer, Yair
Klien, of arming and training drug traffickers, a charge that Klien
denies.[7]
Hired soldiers have a long history but not a highly regarded one. Foreign
mercenary soldiers were used by nearly every ancient empire from the Hittites
forward, including Persia, China, Greece, and Rome. Xenophon, it will be
recalled, was a mercenary leader in the service of a foreign king.[8]
However, it was in the warring mini-states of Renaissance Italy that
mercenaries probably enjoyed the most prominence. During this period (c.
1420-1600) the condottieri served whoever would pay and did so without
stigma. War was a barbaric business. The citizens of rich and flourishing
states were not about to waste their time or their lives in pursuit of it.[9]
This attitude was mirrored elsewhere for another 200 years during the rise of
nationalism. But, as the nation-state grew to become the dominant form of
social organization, so did nationalism and the identification of the state
as the locus of loyalty. By the time of American independence the founders
could list the King of England's use of "foreign mercenaries" as a specific
offense against him. After the French Revolution combined nationalism with
universal conscription and spread its ideals throughout Europe and the West,
"it was considered correct that every man should fight for his country and
dishonorable that a man should serve under another flag."[10] During the
period since 1799, the unwritten belief that mercenary service was immoral
and improper came to be thought of as a moral law, and the use of mercenaries
often caused bitter resentment. Still, under customary international law,
mercenaries were treated in the same manner as other combatants and if
captured were entitled to treatment as prisoners of war. However, the 1977
protocol to the Geneva Convention of 1949, Article 47, sought to codify
disgust for mercenaries. For signatories to this protocol, mercenaries are
considered outlaws, placing them in the category of criminals or worse.[11]
Historian Anthony Mockler suggests that by the end of the 20th century, this
belief is "almost instinctive," pointing out that "it is generally forgotten
how comparatively recent and illogical this sentiment is."[12]
For purposes of this discussion, there are three types of mercenaries. The
first might be called the "traditional" type, consisting of groups and
individuals who have military skills directly applicable to combat or
immediate combat support. Where once they might have been canoneers, archers,
or siege engineers, now they offer combat training, leadership, or combat
support skills: artillerymen, combat aviators (including helicopter pilots),
military engineers, and the like. They are basic, industrial-age, high-tech
forces. Russian ex-military aviators flying fighters for the Congo government
are an example.[13] They are almost always trained veterans of the armed
forces of major powers and seldom basic infantry soldiers. They may conduct
training for basic soldiers (provided by the client) and even lead them in
combat. These are often ad hoc groups of individuals who respond to ads
placed by the sponsoring state, but in recent years higher forms of
organization have appeared, as corporations or their subsidiaries, for
example. Consider the recent deal by Russian-based Sukhoi Design Bureau to
provide Su-27s to Ethiopia for its war with Eritrea. Although Ethiopia was
anxious for modern aircraft, the country lacked trained aviators. As part of
the sales agreement, Sukhoi reportedly included former Russian military
pilots, mechanics, and ground personnel on contract, in effect delivering a
small, but complete, air force.
The second type is a late 20th-century phenomenon--fairly large commercial
companies that provide the kind of services expected of a general staff in
one of the more developed national armies: high-quality tactical,
operational, and strategic advice for the structure, training, equipping, and
employment of armed forces. These are composed almost exclusively of retired
senior officers and noncommissioned officers of major armed forces, usually
including at least a few former generals. With an array of subcontractors,
they are capable of providing most of the services required to field an armed
force: advisory strategic planning, force development, research and threat
analysis; general staff training, including air and naval operations;
training in multi-service, combined operations including intelligence and
electronic warfare; and combined arms training for tactical units. These
organizations specialize in helping industrial-age armies transit into the
21st century through the incorporation of techniques for conducting infotech
warfare. Military Professional Resources Incorporated (MPRI) of Alexandria,
Virginia, is an example of this type. We shall return to MPRI shortly.
The third type provides highly specialized services with a military
application, but these groups are not in themselves notably military or
paramilitary in organization or methods. Although members of such an
organization may or may not have military experience or training, they have
skills and abilities with military as well as civilian use. These are usually
much smaller than the first two types, performing such functions as personal
protection, signal intercept, computer "cracking," secure communications, or
technical surveillance. An example of these is AirScan, a company based in
Titusville, Florida. According to the company's website, AirScan "provides
day/night operational superiority," performing "airborne surveillance and
security operations and specialized consulting services for a variety of
customers across a number of mission areas. Many of our clients require
discretion and their privacy is respected." Like most such firms, the company
serves a wide variety of clients, including the US Department of the Interior
and multinational oil companies.[14] In Angola, AirScan uses light
twin-engine aircraft (Cessna 337s), equipped with low-light television,
infrared, and other sensors, to provide aerial surveillance on the periphery
of oil fields.
These latter two types of activity did not emerge overnight. Although
civilian contractors have been providing noncombat services to the military
since at least the Middle Ages, they seldom undertook basic military
functions. That was the province of the traditional mercenary fighter and
trainer. But since the mid-1970s, some purely military activities have become
increasingly privatized. Since major powers have often been politically
unwilling (the United States), unable (Great Britain), or unwelcome (Russia)
to provide the needed military services, this gap was filled by defense
contractors, usually either American or British. The first large-scale
project came in 1975, when the Vinnell Corporation of California received a
multimillion-dollar, long-term contract to create and operate an entire
training establishment for the Saudi Arabian National Guard. This differed
from earlier arrangements since Vinnell was not merely building or even
operating facilities such as drydocks or telephone systems, but actually
undertaking to provide military equipment and large-scale combat training.
Still in operation outside Riyadh, the Saudi capital, the endeavor now
encompasses all the skills and equipment required to train and field fully
equipped light armored brigades complete with artillery support and
antiaircraft weapons.[15] Reportedly, Vinnell advisors provided "tactical
support" and advice to the Saudi military when it retook the Grand Mosque at
Mecca after antigovernment forces occupied it in 1979. At least two
Vinnell-trained Saudi armored brigades fought in the Gulf War of 1991.
Down in the Trenches: Executive Outcomes
Executive Outcomes is an example of the first type of mercenary group,
providing expert services in connection with combat and combat support. It
represents the expanded model of the military contractor. It was founded in
1989 by veterans of the South African Defense Forces and registered in
Britain in 1993.[16] The organization promised:

*   To provide a highly professional and confidential military advisory
service to legitimate governments.
*   To provide sound military and strategic advice.
*   To provide the most professional military training packages currently
available to armed forces, covering aspects related to sea, air, and land
warfare.
*   To provide advice to armed forces on weapon and weapon platform
selection.
*   To provide a total apolitical service based on confidentiality,
professionalism, and dedication.

Executive Outcomes came to prominence in March 1993 when rebels from UNITA
(National Union for the Total Independence of Angola) captured an oil storage
area. The Forcas Armadas Angolanas (FAA) was unable to eject the rebels.
Executive Outcomes assembled a group of 50 former officers and
noncommissioned officers who organized and led an attack by 600 FAA troops
against the storage area compound, quickly recapturing it. Casualties were
minimal (three South Africans were wounded), and the drilling equipment
suffered only superficial damage. Executive Outcomes then took on the
responsibility of guarding the area. When UNITA charged that the oil company
was using white mercenaries, the oil company replied that they were a
mixed-race force of security guards.[17]
This success was followed in September 1993 with a contract to protect a
diamond mine in Canfunfo in Lunda Norte, Angola. Estimates put the contract
at $40 million (about half for soldiers and half for equipment and supplies).
The men were provided as "military trainers" but were allowed to carry out
preemptive strikes against UNITA if they felt they or the mine was
threatened. At one point, UNITA troops overran the mine, leaving 36 dead, most
 of them from the security firm. Events after that are unclear, but Executive
Outcomes apparently regained possession of the mine and, in 1998, began
training soldiers of the Angolan army.
In March 1995 an Executive Outcomes team went to the aid of the
rebel-beleaguered Kono diamond mines in Sierra Leone. The force was assembled
and in action by April, taking just 11 days to drive the rebels away from the
capital and, using helicopter gunships, chase them out of the diamonds
fields. The most interesting aspect of all this, however, is perhaps the
method of payment. The chronically impoverished government of Sierra Leone
apparently paid for these services by giving a company called Branch Energy
the concession to operate the Koidu diamond field (the Sierra Leone
government retains a 60-percent ownership). Reputedly, Branch Energy is owned
by Strategic Resources Group, a British company based in the Bahamas, that in
turn owned Executive Outcomes. It seems that the firm was able to barter its
services for large shares of a client nation's natural resources and
commodities. According to a British government evaluation reported by Inter
Press Service: "On present showing, Executive Outcomes will become ever
richer and more potent, capable of exercising real power, even to the extent
of keeping military regimes in being. If it continues to expand at the
present rate, its influence in sub-Saharan Africa could become crucial."[18]
Executive Outcomes claimed to supply men and expertise to seven countries in
Africa, among them Kenya, Angola, and Uganda. In 1998, the company claimed to
be discussing deals with customers in Malawi, Mozambique, Sudan, and even a
client in Southeast Asia.[19] However, the heyday of Executive Outcomes
seemed to come an abrupt halt on 1 January 1999 when the company went "out of
business," apparently in response to new South African laws banning mercenary
activity by its nationals. A triumph of high-minded legislation? Perhaps, but
oddly enough, Executive Outcomes' Pretoria offices remain staffed, and its
employees in Sierra Leone have begun working for a new firm called Lifeguard.
In Angola, former Executive Outcomes employees are reportedly working for
both the national government and the UNITA rebels that oppose it.[20]
Up in the Executive Suite: Military Professional Resources Inc.
MPRI is a prime example of the second type of "mercenary" activity, one
providing general-staff-like services. It is less interested in the heat of
combat than in strategic planning and the disciplined routine of higher
military headquarters. Formed in 1986, the firm has over 350 full-time "core"
employees and an estimated 2000 more available for contracts that can run
from a few days to several months. Advertising itself as having the "the
world's greatest corporate military expertise," the firm consists of former
military professionals (largely retired senior officers and noncommissioned
officers) who provide large-scale military planning and training. The
Alexandria, Virginia, firm reportedly posted a volume of business in excess
of $24 million for 1996.[21]
As described by MPRI, "the company's business focus is on military matters,
to include training, equipping, force design and management, professional
development, concepts and doctrine, organizational and operational
requirements, simulation and wargaming operations, humanitarian assistance,
quick reaction military contractual support, and democracy transition
assistance programs for the military forces of emerging republics." Company
officials say Military Professional Resources Inc. is distinguished by its
professionalism, its adherence to US policy, and its refusal to fight a war
for its customers.[22]
MPRI carried out a number of interesting smaller tasks including a US
contract in 1994 to send 45 border monitors to Serbia to ensure that arms
were not being smuggled to Bosnian Serb fighters in Bosnia. But the company
first gained its reputation with a major project in Croatia, beginning in
September 1994.[23] With the explicit consent of the US State and Defense
Departments, the firm undertook to modernize and retrain the command
structure of the Croatian national army, including the general staff. In the
summer of 1995, with such assistance, the formerly inept Croatian army
mounted Operation Storm, a successful summer offensive into the region of the
Krajina. In less than a month they ejected Serb-supported forces and 150,000
Croatian Serb civilians with remarkably little bloodshed. Control of the
region, long held by the Serbs, returned to Zagreb. According to observers,
the Croat forces used typical American combined-arms tactics, including
integrated air, artillery, and infantry movements, as well as maneuver
warfare targeted against Serbian command, control, and communication systems.
French and British officials accused MPRI of helping to plan the Croatian
invasion, an allegation denied by the company.[24] Correctly or not, MPRI
received credit for a major success.
This was quickly followed by a renewable 13-month contract with Bosnia,
valued by Bosnia's UN ambassador, Muhamed Sacirbey, at "tens of millions of
dollars." The contract was financed by a number of Islamic countries,
according to newspaper reports. The Bosnian army received more than $100
million in surplus military equipment from the US government under a
so-called "Equip and Train Program." MPRI contractors helped with everything
from planning long-term defense strategy to conducting war games and
demonstrating the new tanks and artillery.[25]
Potential for Growth, Potential for Problems
The successful track record of companies like Executive Outcomes, MPRI, and
others (notably Sandline International) makes them a realistic option for
governments that see privatized military training as an effective way to
stretch their military budget. For the risk-averse, like the US military,
employing such private contractors can help to overcome the political
reluctance to become involved in situations where risks are high and there is
little domestic constituency for the involvement of US troops. An example is
the US decision in 1998 to contract with DynCorp, a Virginia-based firm, for
verification monitors in Kosovo while other countries involved provided
officers from their national militaries.[26]
There is, however, a basic question of accountability when private
corporations encroach on what has traditionally been the responsibility of
governments, the United Nations, or regional alliances like NATO. Governments
are accountable to their people and their legislatures. Private corporations,
on the other hand, have little accountability to the public and are to some
degree shielded from the scrutiny of government. Herbert Howe, a Georgetown
University professor who specializes in the privatization of armed conflict
in Africa, adds, "I think the major worry that everyone has about this sort
of thing is, will these forces become a force unto themselves, kind of rogue
elephants?"[27]
James L. Woods, a Washington defense consultant, agrees: "If the
international community cannot get its act together and help these countries
keep themselves together and protect commerce and protect the citizenry,
you're going to see more and more" examples of private contractors doing the
job. Woods, a partner in the consulting firm of Cohen & Woods International,
added, "It's the same in the American cities where the forces of law and
order are losing control in certain neighborhoods. A lot of people are
building walls around their compounds and hiring armed guards to protect
them." Over time, Woods suggested, these enterprises could become stronger
than some of the sovereign states they are hired to protect.[28]
If this sounds like hyperbole, consider the struggle of the international
community to cope with these developments. On one hand, there is widespread
belief that the mercenary phenomenon is a potentially dangerous and
destabilizing development, but it is also an accommodation to the reality
that states are no longer willing (or in some cases able) to meet the
financial and political costs of maintaining their monopoly on the use of
deadly force. The United Nations has continued to criticize African
governments in particular for hiring mercenaries to provide security in
return for a stake in the host nation's rich mineral resources. However, the
only realistic choices for such governments may be to obtain outside military
assistance in the form of mercenaries or forfeit power.
In his report on use of mercenaries, UN Special Rapporteur Enrique
Ballesteros characterized them as politically disconnected from the societies
into which they are introduced by governments. This, Ballesteros claimed,
made them instruments for oppression, used to violate human rights and to
impede the exercise of the right of people to self-determination. He asserted
that mercenary initiatives by private companies registered as security firms
in a third country were a threat to national sovereignty.[29] In so doing, he
repeated nearly verbatim the language of a 1992 General Assembly resolution
directed against the use of mercenaries.[30]
The report also took note of the economic influence that was sometimes gained
by the parent corporation, owners of the mercenary firm. "Once a greater
degree of security has been attained, the firm apparently begins to exploit
the concessions it has received by setting up a number of associates and
affiliates which engage in such varying activities as air transport, road
building, and import and export, thereby acquiring a significant, if not
hegemonic, presence in the economic life of the country in which it is operati
ng."[31]
Despite the foregoing position, there has been little success in creating
international legislation that will prevent the existence of mercenaries, and
it may be impossible to do so. Jeffery Herbst has pointed out some of the
problems in taking action against such firms, including their low asset base
and lack of permanent employees. As Herbst states, there "is no compelling
reason" for such firms to be headquartered in any particular place.[32]
It is instructive to note that an International Convention Against the
Recruitment, Use, Financing, and Training of Mercenaries, adopted by the UN
General Assembly in 1989, has yet to be fully ratified. None of signatories,
which include Austria, Barbados, Cyprus, Georgia, the Maldives, the
Seychelles, Suriname, Togo, and Ukraine, are significant suppliers of
mercenaries or home to large international security firms. But two of the
signatories, Angola and Zaire, overtly use mercenaries in their internal
struggles despite their own laws forbidding mercenary activity.[33]
This brings us to an obvious question. If other nations, individually or
collectively, are not going to contribute to multilateral peacekeeping or
peacemaking forces, shouldn't a state have the right to hire a force able to
keep order? It seems distinctly odd, both legally and morally, to argue that
a state is somehow required to depend on whatever conscripts it can muster
and train them as best it can, rather than obtain expert assistance from
outside. In cases such as Liberia (1997), one can plausibly argue that a
professional hired force would have been far preferable to the depredations
and general incompetence of the African multinational peacekeeping force.
Despite their apparent ineffectiveness, the legal initiatives to proscribe
mercenary activity are not unimportant. Should one of these initiatives
succeed, much intrastate security activity will become illegal. Those
individuals and groups who persist might easily find themselves in the same
status as bandits, pirates, and outlaws, literally eligible to be captured or
killed with impunity by anyone who has an interest in doing so. Their
position would be even worse than that of terrorists, since terrorists can
and often do claim at least some shred of political sanction for their
actions.
Part of the problem in obtaining anti-mercenary laws and treaties is that no
major power has taken a serious interest in promoting them. If corporate
mercenaries gain anything like the degree of power and influence predicted by
some analysts, the great powers would certainly find it in their interest to
implement legal constraints. Another part of the problem is the fact that not
all security firms are alike. Some, like MPRI, are actually de facto arms of
their national governments. Others may not be. The realities of the situation
are brought home by the experience of the United Nations. Theoretically, the
security forces of any nation hosting UN personnel and installations are
responsible for safeguarding them. But this becomes problematic when there
are no effective security forces or when such security forces as do exist are
part of the problem. The United Nations itself has made use of hired soldiers
in the field, notably in Somalia where armed clansmen were hired as guards.
Reportedly, one so-called mercenary firm assisted in providing security for
UN offices in Kinshasa during the unrest of 1997.
The military incapacity of the UN itself has also become an issue. Secretary
General Kofi Annan has stated flatly that the UN lacked the military capacity
and the political support to intervene in the slaughter of 500,000 Hutus
during the Rwandan genocide of 1993-94: "If I had one reinforced brigade,
that is, fire power and men--well trained and well equipped--I could have
saved hundreds of thousands of lives."[34] When national governments are not
interested in sending their armies to intervene in local conflicts, the UN
may be forced to resort to some sort of security firm. In 1995, when the
United Nations was trying to separate the armed elements from the refugees on
the Rwandan-Zairian border, no governments wanted to offer troops. "One of
the options examined was the possibility of bringing in other elements--not
necessarily troops from governments--who might be able to provide security,
assist the aid workers in the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR) and protect them as they did their work."[35] This is not a new idea.
Proposals to hire Nepalese Gurkhas or similar groups to man the UN permanent
professional rapid reaction forces have been around for years.[36]
In March 1998, employees of Sandline International, depicted by the press as
"a British mercenary force," helped restore the elected president of Sierra
Leone to power a year after he was ousted by a military coup. Officers of the
Sierra Leone army had seized control of the country in May 1997 and began a
brutal series of murders aimed at any possible political opposition. Despite
the coup and the public killings, Washington and other governments were
unable to mount effective action. In October, when all diplomatic attempts to
oust the mutinous generals had failed, the UN Security Council imposed an
ineffective arms embargo. Finally, Sandline was asked to help. Although
publicly depicted as a private security firm guarding "mining and
construction interests," Sandline told the press that it was asked by the
British High Commissioner in Sierra Leone to help train and equip a local
force capable of removing the generals. The American State Department was
also apparently kept fully informed, and the US government lent at least its
tacit support. Reportedly, the firm received $10 million for its part in the
action, including the cost of weapons and ammunition.[37]
This incident illustrates two points about the use of mercenary forces in the
21st century. The first is that, for the most part, they are not independent
operators. Although these firms are organized as profit-making corporations,
contrary to the fears of numerous commentators they are under the control of
the governments of the major powers and, as the Sandline and MPRI cases show,
operate only with their consent. This is especially true of the larger firms
such as MPRI, which has very close ties with the US departments of Defense
and State. Lurking at the bottom of much of the current animus toward hired
fighters is an argument founded in Western, especially Anglo-American, ideas
about democracy. A military force that is drawn from the people of a given
nation and dedicated only to the defense of that nation is seen as an
expression of the consent of the governed. They legitimize their government
by their desire to defend it. Recalling the use of mercenaries, especially in
Africa, to suppress genuine popular discontent and prop up tottering regimes,
opponents see mercenaries as an anti-democratic force. There is some validity
to this view, but a far greater number of corrupt and illegitimate regimes
throughout history have been sustained by native soldiers. The example of
Haiti comes to mind.
Future Focus
>From the point of view of the nation-state, military corporations are
dangerous for a far more fundamental reason: they generate military power
that does not reside in the nation-state itself. The real issue is not the
first two types of mercenary, the small groups with traditional military
skills and the larger advisory corporations. With regard to the first type
they can probably be controlled (but not eliminated) by the sort of
constraints the United Nations has been struggling to enact.
With regard to the second type--the advisory corporation--it is not
significantly problematic in its current form. None to date is known to have
worked against the interests of its parent nation. The reality is that they
are a de facto extension of the foreign policy of their state of origin.
Sandline, for example, apparently "provided the State Department with
information on the events in Sierra Leone"--political-military intelligence,
in other words--when US sources dried up after the 1997 coup.[38] They offer
a low-risk, low-cost, low-visibility way to exert military influence in a
time of diminished budgets and shrinking armed forces. In the words of
Sandline founder Timothy Spicer,

It's not so much that we can do things better than sovereign
governments--though sometimes in Africa a heavy machinegun can be as
effective as 10 tanks elsewhere--it's that we can do it without any of the
spin-offs that make military intervention unpalatable to governments;
casualties among [private military companies] do not have the same emotive
impact as those from national forces. And we can act quickly. Too often,
politicians won't make a decision to intervene either at all, or until it is
too late.[39]
The real concern for 21st-century conflict may lie with the third type of
mercenary, the technical specialist. If, as many believe, much future
conflict will be economic and infrastructural "cyber" warfare conducted
through information systems or via other high-technology means, these
individuals or organizations may be much more dangerous. But because they
provide military or paramilitary applications of civilian technologies with
many legitimate and useful purposes, they will be very difficult to regulate
or otherwise control. Nor are they as marginal to warfighting as they may
sound. Even the more old-fashioned mercenary organizations such as Executive
Outcomes have succeeded less because of their machine-guns than because they
are able to employ advanced methods such as radio-intercept and night-vision
devices and to use psychological operations techniques. Also, the nature of
the skills involved is such that the providers are not necessarily dependent
on former military experiences for their own training. Many of these firms
will be knowledge-oriented and have low capital bases. This means low
barriers for entry into the industry, especially at the bottom. It is also an
area where it is difficult to define an activity as "mercenary," since the
difference between peace and war can be largely a matter of intention.
Computer system professionals have many means to enter and survey information
systems for security flaws or lapses. Anyone can hire such firms, and whether
their discoveries are to be used for good or ill is invisible to the outside
observer until too late.[40] Finally, these corporations may prosper because
they provide services not otherwise available. Even the US Army has concluded
that in the future it will require contract personnel, even in the close
fight area, to keep its most modern systems functioning. This applies
especially to information-related systems.[41] Information warfare, in fact,
may well become dominated by mercenaries.
In a violent and often unfair world, it is certain that the demand for
mercenaries will not go away soon. If the great powers, collectively or
individually, are not willing to take up the role of global police in
unlikely and unrewarding places, it is equally certain that others will fill
that vacuum for good or for ill. In the end, the issue of mercenaries comes
down to a question of deciding what kind of world we want and are willing to
pay for, both in blood and money.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOTES
1. "The Russians Are Coming," US News and World Report, edition of 15 March
1999, via Internet http://www.usnews/issue/990315/15merc.htm, accessed 16
March 1999.
2. David Isenberg, "Soldiers of Fortune Ltd.: A Profile of Today's Private
Sector Corporate Mercenary Firms" (Washington: Center for Defense
Information, November 1997). An online version of this monograph is posted on
the CDI web site at www.cdi.org/issues/mercenaries; See also, Robert J.
Bunker, Five Dimensional (Cyber) Warfighting (Carlisle, Pa.: USAWC, Strategic
Studies Institute, 10 March 1998), pp. 2, 6; and Bruce D. Grant, "US Military
Expertise for Sale" (Carlisle, Pa.: USAWC, Strategy Research Project, 1998).
3. Thalif Deen, "UN Alarm Over Increase in Mercenaries," IPS (Inter Press
Service), 16 March 1997.
4. See, e.g., "Mercenaries Massacre 23 Pandits in Valley," Hindustani Times,
27 January 1998, www.hindustantimes.com/nonfram/270198/detFro01.htm, accessed
30 March 1999.
5. United Nations, "Report of the Special Rapporteur on Mercenaries," UN
document E/CN.4/1995/29, 29 August 1995, p. 2.
6. "Around the Nation: Texas," Law Enforcement News, 31 October 1997, p. 3.
7. "Private Israeli Firms Sell Security," Associated Press, 8 July 1998, via
Internet http://archive.ap.org/, accessed 1 August 1998.
8. G. T. Griffith, The Mercenaries of the Hellenistic World (London:
Cambridge Univ., 1935).
9. Michael Mallett, Mercenaries and Their Masters: Warfare in Renaissance
Italy (Totowa, N.J.: Rowman & Littlefield, 1974.
10. Anthony Mockler, The New Mercenaries (New York: Paragon House, 1987), pp.
6-7.
11. Gerhard Von Glahn, Law Among Nations (New York: Macmillan, 1986).
12. Mockler, p. 7.
13. "The Russians Are Coming," US News and World Report.
14. AirScan Inc., http://www.airscan.com/, accessed 12 January 1999.
15. Technically Vinnell is contracted by the US government on behalf of the
Saudi government, thus its personnel are not considered to be in the direct
employ of the Saudis for most legal purposes. "Vinnell Selected for Award of
$163.3 Million Contract for Saudi Arabian National Guard Modernization
Program," news release, BDM International, Inc., McLean, Va., 3 May 1995. BDM
is the parent company of Vinnell. The author has visited one of the five
Vinnell sites in Saudi Arabia. See also William D. Hartung, "Mercenaries
Inc.: How a U.S. Company Props Up the House of Saud," The Progressive, April
1996, pp. 26-28.
16. Executive Outcomes was something of a cause celebre among those concerned
about "mercenaries." There is an excellent webpage dedicated to information
about Executive Outcomes at http://users.wantree.com.au, accessed 10 January
1999.
17. ABC Radio, National Transcripts: "Diamond Mercenaries of Africa,"
Background Briefing, 4 August 1996.
18. Deen.
19. Executive Outcomes homepage, http://www.elvikingo.com, accessed 1
December 1998.
20. "Can Anyone Curb Africa's Dogs of War?" The Economist, 16-22 January
1999, p. 41.
21. MPRI (Military Professional Resources Inc.)
http://www.mpri.com/about/index.htm, accessed 5 May 1998.
22. Ibid.
23. Colum Lynch, "For US Firms War Becomes a Business," The Boston Globe, 1
February 1997, p. 1.
24. Ibid.
25. Ibid.
26. Johnathan Steele, "Private Military to Monitor Pullout," The Guardian
(London), 2 November 1998, p. 1.
27. "Private US Companies Train Armies Around the World," US News and World
Report, 8 February 1997, p. 13.
28. James L. Woods, private correspondence with the author, 17 May 1998.
29. Enrique Bernales Ballesteros, UN Press Release GA/SHC/3376, 5 November
1996.
30. United Nations General Assembly Resolution 47/84, 47 U.N. Supp. (No. 49)
at 165, U.N. Doc. A/47/49 (1992).
31. Ballesteros, p. 2.
32. Dustin Chick, "Mercenary Groups Discussed," Business Day, 11 December
1998, at http://www.bday.co.za/98/1211/news/n9.htm, accessed 21 January 1999.
33. United Nations Press Release GA/SHC/3378, 6 November 1996.
34. Karen Davies, "Genocide in Rwanda Could Have Been Prevented," Patriot News
 (Harrisburg Pa.), 5 May 1998, p. A7.
35. Kofi Annan, United Nations Press Release Sg/sm/6255, "Transcript of Press
Conference by Secretary-General Kofi Annan at United Nations Headquarters on
12 June 1997."
36. "Want Peacekeepers with Spine? Hire the World's Fiercest Mercenaries," U.S
. News & World Report, 30 December 1996, p. 42; and Edward N. Luttwak, "Where
Are the Great Powers? At Home with the Kids," Foreign Affairs, 73
(July-August 1994), 23-28.
37. David Graves and Hugo Gurdon, "US Says Sandline Experts Helped to
Overthrow Rebels," The Telegraph (London), 14 May 1998, at
http://www.telegraph.co.uk, accessed 13 January 1999.
38. Anne Markusen, "The Rise of World Weapons," Foreign Policy, No. 114
(Spring 1999), 40-51.
39. Tim Spicer, "Why We Can Help Where Governments Fear to Tread," white
paper, 24 May 1998, Sandline International, published in the Sunday Times
(London) opinion page, 24 May 1998.
40. See, e.g., George I. Seffers, "Stealthy New Software Enhances Hacker
Arsenal," Defense News, 15 March 1999, p. 1.
41. Major Hugh Blanchard (US Army, Ret.) government contractor, personal
correspondence with the author, 2 November 1998.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thomas K. Adams is a political-military strategist with more than 30 years of
experience in all forms of military operations other than war, including
counterguerrilla operations in Vietnam, humanitarian assistance in Haiti,
counterdrug missions in South America, and peace operations in Bosnia. His
recent publications include Special Operations and the Challenge of
Unconventional Warfare (Cass, 1998). His last operational military assignment
was with the NATO stability force in Bosnia. A retired US Army lieutenant
colonel, Adams holds a Ph.D. in political science from Syracuse University,
an M.A. in international relations, an M.S.Sc. in social psychology, and a
B.A. in liberal arts.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
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