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Senate Report: Mismanaged US Contractor Money Aids Enemy in Afghanistan
The U.S. military has only minimal knowledge of - and exercises virtually no control over - the thousands of Afghans it indirectly pays to guard its installations, including "warlords and strongmen linked to murder, kidnapping, bribery" and to the Taliban, Senate investigators said in a blistering report released Thursday.
Local residents meet with Afghan an US soldiers to discuss security at an outpost near Forward Operation Base Howz-e-Madad, Zhari district, Kandahar province, Afghanistan, Wednesday, Oct. 6, 2010.
(AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd) The bipartisan report, compiled after a year-long investigation, notes that the military has recently launched its own investigations of the situation and has taken some steps to address it. In one of the most significant steps, Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, has issued new contractor guidelines.
Still, the Senate investigation documents a failure to properly vet, train and supervise Afghan security subcontractors, hired by U.S. and other international firms under multimillion-dollar military contracts.
That failure has cost American lives, undermined the U.S. mission and the Afghan government, and "helped play into the hands of the enemy," said Sen. Carl M. Levin (D-Mich.), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Some of the Afghan security subcontractors, Levin told reporters Thursday, are "creating the very threat they are hired to combat."
Committee staff reviewed more than 125 Defense Department security contracts dated between 2007 and 2009 and provided a detailed account of two in which subcontractors had direct and well-known ties to the Taliban. The report recounts an instance in which the military raided a Taliban meeting being held at the house of a subcontractor. It also notes instances in which security subcontractors were believed by U.S. military intelligence to be Iranian agents.
According to the U.S. Central Command, the report said, there were more than 112,000 Defense Department contractor personnel in Afghanistan as of April 30. As of May, more than 26,000 armed private security personnel - nearly all of them Afghans - worked for the Pentagon and other U.S. agencies.
Subcontracted Afghans provide perimeter security for U.S. forward operating bases, civilian installations and development projects, as well as for the truck convoys that carry most of the food, fuel, weapons and other supplies for the U.S.-led coalition.
In congressional testimony in December, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton acknowledged concern that the United States was indirectly funding warlords and the Taliban. In June, a House subcommittee investigation found that Afghan private security contractors ran a "protection racket" in which militias, some tied to the Taliban, received money to protect supply convoys.
Early this year, Afghan President Hamid Karzai pledged to disband private security contracting firms. This week, Afghanistan's Interior Ministry announced that it had begun disarming those companies that are unlicensed.
In a letter Tuesday to Levin, Gates said the report had helped the Defense Department "understand the nature of the problems associated with contracting in Afghanistan." He said oversight has already been expanded in an effort to "benefit our forces on the ground while not providing aid to our enemies."
The military has been reluctant to remove U.S. troops from combat and other duties to protect the supply convoys. But in the wake of the earlier subcommittee report, it has looked for alternatives, including using Afghan national security forces to guard the trucks. The next step of Karzai's phase-out of the private security firms, U.S. military officials said, will target those providing convoy escorts. Replacement of the "static" security discussed in the Senate committee's report will come at a later date, officials said.
Karzai has said he plans to incorporate the private guards into the armed forces. But that is seen as a monumental task, given the power of the warlords to whom many of the guards owe their loyalty, and the government's inability to match their pay scale.
The report and its conclusions were adopted without objection in a voice vote by the Armed Services Committee last week, and the 86-page document was declassified with few redactions.
An addendum signed by Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), the ranking minority member, and other Republicans said that while the report demonstrates "the risks of using private security contractors," it would be wrong to conclude that all were disloyal and that their use "always decreased the security of U.S. and Coalition forces, or . . . inevitably undercut the Afghan government."
The Republicans noted that there were few other "feasible options" available in Afghanistan until recently, given the large U.S. deployment in Iraq and the limited number of U.S. and coalition troops available for such tasks. They also faulted the report for failure "to acknowledge the positive impact of providing employment" to Afghans.
One lengthy narrative in the report illustrated the committee's findings in detail. In March 2007, it said, the military contracted with California-based Environmental Chemical Corp. to construct a base for the Afghan Air Corps on the site of a former Soviet air base at Shindand, in Herat province. The company subcontracted with the North American subsidiary of ArmorGroup, a British company, to provide site security at the base.
ArmorGroup, according to the report, subcontracted the task to two men identified in company documents as local "warlords," whom it nicknamed "Mr. White" and "Mr. Pink" after characters in the 1992 Quentin Tarantino movie "Reservoir Dogs," about hapless criminals who turn on each other after a jewelry heist. At least one of the two was recommended to ArmorGroup by military personnel at a U.S. forward operating base adjacent to the air base, the report said.
In July 2007, Mr. White was ambushed and shot just outside the air base, leading guards loyal to him to leave their posts and seek revenge against Pink forces they believed responsible. White survived but was killed by Pink in a firefight in the local bazaar that December. Pink was reportedly "holed up with the Taliban" after the shooting, the report said.
Despite his reported Taliban links, ArmorGroup continued to employ Pink, identified in U.S. military documents as a "mid-level Taliban manager," until the contractor received reports that guards under Pink's command were providing him with military security information."
Meanwhile, the contractor replaced White with his brother, identified as Mr. White II.
In August 2008, U.S. and Afghan forces conducted an operation on a house in the village of Azizabad, south of Herat, intended to kill or capture a high-value Taliban commander during a meeting with insurgents.
U.S. airstrikes were called in, resulting in the deaths of dozens of civilians. The incident sparked outrage throughout Afghanistan and led to a military apology and a change in coalition airstrike guidelines.
A U.S. Army investigation later found that some of the insurgents in the building "may have been security contractors or subcontractors for ArmorGroup," the report said. In fact, it said, the house belonged to Mr. White II, and he and seven men employed as security guards were among those killed.
"In addition," the report said, "a search of the raid site revealed 'extensive stores of weapons, explosives, [and] intelligence materials.' "
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48 Comments so far
Show AllThis is madness! Heathen!
Breaking news: Jones is stepping down. Donilon will be his replacement.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/10/08/jones-stepping-obamas-national-security-adviser/
This all but insures an escalation of Israeli agression worldwide.
http://www.jta.org/news/article/2010/10/08/2741190/obama-to-replace-jones-with-donilon
It is all madness. The US is at war with the guys they trained and are now negotiating with? The same madness reigns at home, check out "Why Are There M16s Outside Macy's?" http://bit.ly/9zoKdS
Yes Sherry, I imagine they think the show of arms will deter an attack but I wonder if New York was ever safer than Afghanistan.
Most ordinary accidents are a hundred times more deadly to Americans than terrorism just from the deaths on the highways alone.
The Afghan Taliban seem to be doing a fair job of both fighting the US and protecting the perimeters and supply lines of the war machine. But now the Pakistan Taliban are not as helpful after the latest air strikes.
War just does not live up to the hype anymore.
Alas, Jill, you're berating 'our' economic master plan.
Thanks, Jill.
More bizarre details emerge from our enduring fiasco in Afghanistan.
Borrowing from Little Rock writer Gene Lyons, our dealings with the Taliban in Afghanistan are like the Baptists in Texas. Who doesn't understand that?
The political Inquisition here in Iowa is to purge our state Supreme Court of the justices who voted unanimously in favor of same-sex marriage. To quote a Brian Duffy editorial cartoon, "We find the 7 Supreme Court Justices guilty of placing the Iowa Constitution above our beliefs."
Jill, I luv ya baby, but these jackals don't need our tax money. Don't you know?, they just print money at-will, now. With a click of the a mouse, and WAH-LAH!: Instant billions for all your warmongering needs! Need to pump-up the stock market? BAM! You got it! Friends down at the local bank need'n some cash to keep their toxic assets in hiding? Just give Obama or Little Timmy a call at the Treasury. They'll hook you up.
I honestly really do like your attitude, Jill. Watch out and keep your wits about you. I think you're in for a very rude awakening. The evil runs deeper than you'd ever suspect in your wildest dreams.
Jill, It's all about money, wealth IS power ... to them. The politicians and military brass are wanna be's willing to do anything for a piece of the golden pie, the new field bosses willing to whip anyone that gets out of line and causes trouble for their masters.
Thumbs up for suggesting starving the beast. I haven't contributed one red cent since George the Wanker read along with the upside down book in that classroom. Sure, I'm broke, but like Thoreau suggested; What is life without principals?
Be a jerk and go to work.
Do your job and do it right.
Life's a ball, tv tonight.
Do you love it?
Do you hate it?
There it is the way you made it.
Waaaaa! more F Zappa
As long as it protects the "security" of the US interests there, who cares if they're Taliban or Al-Queda? The real question is, how't the pipeline going?
The pipeline is not going anywhere.
The money is in the War.
Maybe the u.s. is playing all sides. Who knows who is doing what?
Why would i possibly accept the government's narrative on this "war"....or anything?
The money we spend over there makes their economy look like chump change. The war is the best economic opportunity they have had ever. Our governmental leaders probably mad because that is what they do.
Are we expected to be scandalized to learn that American warlords and strongmen linked to murder, kidnapping, and bribery have been paying Afghan warlords and strongmen linked to murder, kidnapping, and bribery?
If this were not such a tragic occupation to begin with it could go on tv as a sitcom. Tony
Tony, It will be!
Look what they did with Hogans Heroes!
General Petraus in the character of Colonel Klink!
wc652; Who could we get to play him, Karzi, barry? International and an instant hit. Tony
Thanks for a little humor wc652. General Betray us as the character Colonel Klink in Hogans Heroes. Now that just cracked me up! Mostly, great commentators on Common Dreams.
In June the House subcommittee investigation found that the whole Afghanistan war is nothing more than a protection racket. No, they did not say that, but if they had been honest they would have announced that conclusion!
We are the good thugs and the Taliban are the bad thugs until they accept our bribes, then they become the good thugs. There are no good guys or bad guys, like any U.S.war, only the flow of $$$$$ to the war profiteers, but our bad guys are more evil because it is their bad guys heroin poppies, potential pipe line, resources and country.
I wonder if the Taliban tribesmen, who grease 'our' Taxpayer-Funded Patriotic Corporate Contractor Monsters' sweaty-palms, as a pay-off for allowing them to deliver fuel for our troops through their lines . . .
(Ah, medium deep breath here . . . )
are the same ones allowed in on this scam?
nothing personal. it's just business.
For some reason this triggered a memory. The US Navy used to hold joint training with other countries (mostly South American).
The class was discussing "Command Decisions." One young officer, commander of a Navy destroyer escort or minesweeper said, "Talk about command decisions! I was at sea in my ship when I received a message. 'There is a revolution in progress in the capitol. Which side are you on?'"
Wotta sick game war is. Ranks right down there with politics.
Geeze people, Petraeus has everything under control: he has issued new contractor guidelines. Problem solved.
Really? Pashtuns? Those Pashtuns don't belong in Afghanistan, everyone knows that they are not indigenous to the region.
But seriously, Taliban? We used to call them "Mujahadeen" (freedom fighters).
When we armed and financed them to fight the Soviets, they were freedom fighters, now that they are fighting to expel imperial occupation forces from their land, they are evil Taliban.
The British imperialists called them that when they attempted to occupy the region over a century ago, but we don't need no history, we don't need no education, we don't need no context.
I know I am spoiling the fun, there are 100s of billions of free taxpayers dollars to be stolen, imperialism is good for business baby
No matter what, we all know that private enterprise is the only way to go. If private enterprise knows hiring the Taliban is the way to go, why would we even question it. And surely government giving guidlines is only interfering with good capitalism, which is always a mistake. After all this is just Global trickle down economics - do we really want to starve our enemy?
Just one of the rewards of privatizing the military. How long will this insanity of perpetual "war" go on before someone somewhere admits that the only solution is to go back to the good old days of the draft? Of course we know that won't happen because then the children of the rich might have to join in the effort. It's much better to simply pay someone else.
How about trying something totally new; Peace! Perhaps we could be like the vast majority of the countries on planet earth and NOT be fighting some other entity. There are no countries that can challenge our superior military might, except maybe North Korea, and Iran which we have "wisely" not invaded, so the U.S. has made up an enemy that doesn't have a physical place of existence; that is everywhere and nowhere at the same time. Knowing that there are people on the street who wish to take my wallet, or do me or my family harm, I could declare war on the fact that they create a sense of terror in my life. I could start shooting suspicious characters, and in certain areas of the city, I could shoot most everyone. I would be certified criminally insane. This country has business interests in "bad neighborhoods" where we really have NO business. Perhaps we should try negotiating for what we "need", rather than finding excuses to go in and take it! Don't try drafting my kids for these illegal wars for corporate profit. We haven't been attacked but a very few times since Pearl Harbor, and those times were in retaliation. Hell if the largest defense budget in the whole world; almost as much as the rest of the world spends combined isn't enough to defend our borders, their is no way militarily to be safe. We have to get along. The anti-Christ and the traitors are the ones who demand we kill our neighbor.
So the foxes are guarding the hen house and we're paying for them to do it? What the heck is going on? Are we really that stupid as to think the Taliban won't pay more with their poppy cash for their guys to be infiltrated?
If the Afghans are that soft on the Taliban, then let them have the Taliban and we pick up our marbles and go home.
End the insanity now!
As if we are in Afghanistan because of the Taliban "terrorists" and 911................
Can you say PIPE LINE???
Good grief!
If it is a given that garrisoning the world with hundreds of military bases and invading and occupying countries that have never been any kind of threat to our country is all in the interest of securing energy supplies, just imagine how energy independent we could have been by now had we spent trillions after World War 2 on infrastructure and alternative energy sources.
"In a letter Tuesday to Levin, Gates said the report had helped the Defense Department 'understand the nature of the problems associated with contracting in Afghanistan.'"
Poor Gates, the man is so clueless he needs a letter from a senator to tell him what the biz situation is in Afghanistan.
This is reminiscent of the pitiful and shameless testimony some of the politicos and military brass gave to the 9/11 Commission.
Somebody up there must know that until there is peace with the Taliban there will be no pipeline.... maybe that is why they both kill and hire them for security.
We don't need more oil now, and the War economy is laying off thousands of civilian government jobs.
Here is my big tip for the Pentagon: Your gonna need peace in the Mid-East in order to secure the oil for your next war.
...and of course, if a soldier knew the language fluently and were found to be gay---expulsion! American Taliban
"According to the U.S. Central Command, the report said, there were more than 112,000 Defense Department contractor personnel in Afghanistan as of April 30."
GEE, do you think our current economic situation is bad enough that maybe we should hire 112,000 economists to straighten out the financial mess we have here in America?????
Certainly the ones working on it now are not having much success - it just keeps getting worse!!!
There is no enemy in Afghanistan.
How frecking stupid and ignorant can a nation get?
The Taliban are a nasty bunch that wants to keep Afghanistan in the middle ages, kill anyone that doesn't abide by their religious rules and are certainly not anyones friend except their own who would freely murder any non believer. Witness the executions of the medical staffs and volunteers recently.
They are also a few other things generally speaking...no threat to us or our country, citizens of Afghanistan and as pointed out above, when they were part of the "Mujahadeen" and shooting Soviets occupying their country, just hunky dorey with us.
We do not belong there obviously and aside from that, anyone with even a passing knowledge of the Pentagon puschasing depts and their officers could hardly be surprised at the lack of control in spending or the corruption involved in the process.
This seems like the US is at war with itself. The ultimate jihad, eh?
Lede paragraph from the article:
"The U.S. military has only minimal knowledge of - and exercises virtually no control over - the thousands of Afghans it indirectly pays to guard its installations, including "warlords and strongmen linked to murder, kidnapping, bribery" and to the Taliban, Senate investigators said in a blistering report released Thursday."
And it took the Washington Post and the Senate a decade to figure this out...
It's not just about the oil. It's also about the poppies---billions in the drug trade, worldwide. And Big Pharma is up to its armpits trying to exterminate indigenous cultures. The goal is to financialize every aspect of human life.
I realize that many will not understand this connection, but this is a major reason your local government will arrest you for growing a weed called marijuana, an herbal medicine.
Slavery comes in many forms.
It's harvest time in the American Midwest. Corn and beans. The dust of the harvest is everywhere, inhaled. Almost none of it should be eaten by humans, as it is mostly GM poisoned.
The hubris of Western "civilization." Strange, is it not, that as my pain increases in my old age, nothing offered by my local pharmacy has fewer negative "side effects" than a couple of tokes of opium...
There are many forms of "dope." Television is among them. Grow your own brain. And teach your children. That is what humans need to do.
Corporations via the Citizens United decision are not humans. They merely approach Citizenship. They collapse when people stop believing in them.
Stop believing in them.
History will recall that the Fascists on the Court overreached here.
-30-
We should introduce them to the concept of the 'chair' to sit on.
Wow, Taliban guarding US bases!
(and their backups are the Blackwater/Xe war criminals!)
Oh-Mi-God,' we're in deep Caca!
TheAZCowBoy
Tombstone, AZ.
Pssst, in a pinch I'lll go with the Taliban warriors, K?
this is not mismanagement but part of the plan.
With contractors, the low bidder wins. Now you know why US soldiers are fed slop provided by sub-contractors. It would be too expensive and not profitable for corporations if US soldiers' meals were provided by other US soldiers. Ours is an army of coolies at the bottom and generals at the top who are captive to profit seeking corporations. It's what makes this country great!
Nothing ever surprises me regarding this "war". This article is just the tip of the ice berg when considering corruption in Karzais' government. It is likely that the US is going to be in Afghanistan for three to ten more years, or more, incurring more of our young men killed and providing free funds to the corrupt government of Kharzai.
Our "government" does not actively seek a conclusion to the "war"; our weak president has become a pawn for the military and attempts to seek answers to questions brought before the generals resulting in no agreement. The only conclusions found was to continue the "war", continued support for a corrupt government,continue to kill, hoping for a conclusion soon! Obama bowed to the military giving it almost all of what it wanted to continue their war. No end in sight........but the beat goes on.