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Outsourcing War: I.F. Stone’s Son on the Izzy Award to Jeremy Scahill
This statement was written for tonight's celebration of the Izzy Award for "special achievement in independent media" -- named after journalist I.F. "Izzy" Stone. The Izzy -- awarded by Ithaca College's Park Center for Independent Media -- is being presented to Jeremy Scahill for human rights reporting that elevated military contractor abuses to front-page news.
In 1953, my age group was required to register for the draft. I well remember that this lottery of life was a serious matter -- draftees only a year or two older than ourselves had already died in a Korean War not really over. Today, the United States, along with ninety other countries, has abandoned the draft in favor of the use of volunteers.
This use of volunteers -- although it has obvious advantages -- has the unfortunate disadvantage of liberating the Government's decision to use military force from the political pressures that would exist were the sons of middle- and upper-class citizens subject to draft.
The commercial outsourcing of the use of force further distances the American political process from its authorized violence. Blackwater was not just providing personal security, it trained more than 40,000 people a year in military defensive and offensive operations. Using mostly no-bid contracts, it was making a mint out of war.
Blackwater in Iraq is a descendent of Vietnam-era contractors like Brown and Root. I. F. Stone recognized the corrosive impact of lucrative deals for these outfits, and Jeremy Scahill has shown that the role and influence of contractors are even greater now than they were in Vietnam.
In particular, as Jeremy has shown, outsourced force has been harder to control than conventional military force and has led to so much trouble that the Iraqi Government sought to expel them from Iraq.
Because of the nature of the outsourcing process -- combined with the hazardous situation in Iraq -- Jeremy's important investigative reports have been hard-won -- requiring courage, commitment, and endurance.
So I can see why the Izzy Award Committee settled on Jeremy. And I can only approve since, whether he knows it or not, he and I are related.
He was born in 1974 when the movie "Andromeda Strain", released a year or so before, was having a huge success. For obscure reasons, its handsome hero -- who saved the world with only ten seconds to spare -- was given my exact name, Dr. Jeremy Stone.
As a result, for a few years, the name "Jeremy" became very popular with new parents. And so I have quite a few of these nominal offspring of Jeremy Scahill's age.
What can I say? It seems that the Izzy Award selection committee has chosen, for its second award, some kind of grandson of I.F. Stone!

6 Comments so far
Show AllThis is an apt statement by someone definitely qualified to make it. His father really blazed a trail any journalist would want to follow in many ways.
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When people say 'no one knew what would happen in Iraq/Afghanistan.....things didn't turn ou the way we expected' etc etc ad nauseam I direct them to Scahill as an introduction to what investigative journalism COULD be if practiced and to the likes of Scott Ritter from the 'knowedgeable expert' point of view! They ignore Scahill et all since they choose not be confused with facts. Scahill has done us a series of very great services few really appreciate. I do. Well deserved sir.
I would like to share part of an e-mail from a Marine officer serving in Afghanistan.
"Being a contractor is different than being in the military. Mostly everyone is here for the money not the troops. The disturbing issue is that American corporations are hiring 3rd World labor (to save money) and not hiring unemployed Americans. If companies like KBR, Fluor-Daniels, ITT, DynCorp and others would hire more Americans it would help drop our unemployment rate by .5% (write your Congressman). Again its all about the money.
Many are always looking to other government agencies for employment that can provide a better working environment and benefits. There are so many opportunities here for their employment its staggering. Its not so much about what you know, or your educational level, its all about do you understand the working environment of Afghanistan and can you endure. With the surge 13 new Forward Operational Bases (FOB) are opening up. The FOBs represent the core of the surge strategy. Have troops on the ground near provinces and small villages in effect being the local police."
draft > contractors > drones
once the powers have drones, many charades will no longer be necessary...even national ones...boundaries?
so many games and systems required to manipulate and control so many humans...
not so with drones...
just program, and click...
Scahill is one of the best who ever was at his trade, and that already when he was comparatively young. He is fearless, thorough, and very disciplined.
Stone himself is no longer really appreciated. He was by choice the ultimate outsider. He is really the pioneer--with Chomsky--of "Outside Intelligence"--which often tells you more, looked at correctly, than being there and talking to the supposed actors.
Scahill does both.