Global Policy Forum

US Control of Contractors in Iraq is Vital

Print
US diplomatic personnel in Iraq are protected by 5,000 private security contractors. In a 2008 survey, almost half of the US State Department personnel who interacted with private security contractors thought the contractors acted insensitively towards Iraqis and their culture. Aside from the infamous Nisour Square massacre, contractors would throw water bottles and other objects at civilians to clear them off roadways. This article published on The Hill questions the ability of private security contractors to properly protect US diplomats, and calls for US policymakers to increase oversight of PMSCs in Iraq.


By Molly Dunigan

February 1, 2012


With U.S. troops out of Iraq, the U.S. presence there will fall to 5,000 private security contractors charged by the State Department to guard American diplomatic installations and convoys, provide emergency medical evacuation and rescue U.S. diplomatic personnel if they fall under attack, among other tasks. Are security contractors up to the job?

The experience with private security contractors during the war was fraught with challenges that pose risks now. Iraqis, not surprisingly, hold negative feelings toward security contractors. Hostility peaked in 2007 when Blackwater contractors shot and killed 17 Iraqi civilians and wounded 20 others in Nisour Square. 

A recent RAND study titled “Hired Guns,” based on a 2008 survey of 152 U.S. military and 807 State Department personnel who had “sometimes” or “often” interacted with armed contractors, found that private security contractors provided critical skills and vital services to U.S. forces throughout the war in Iraq, acting as force multipliers when necessary.

But nearly one-quarter of U.S. military personnel surveyed in the study said they observed contractors in Iraq hindering military personnel. Twenty-five percent of these respondents said they observed armed contractors failing to coordinate with military commanders. Nearly 50 percent of State Department personnel who interacted with armed contractors did not think the contractors understood or were sensitive to Iraqis and their culture. 

More alarming, a quarter of U.S. military personnel and nearly 40 percent of State Department personnel who interacted with armed contractors had sometimes or often witnessed armed contractors taking unnecessarily threatening, arrogant or belligerent actions while deployed, including throwing water bottles and other objects at local civilians to clear them off roadways. 

Some 35 percent of diplomatic personnel who worked with armed contractors in Iraq between 2003 and 2008 reported having to “sometimes,” “often” or “always” manage the consequences of provoked or unprovoked actions by armed contractors against local citizens.

So how will diplomatic personnel manage the consequences of private security contractors’ actions now? There will be no U.S. troops to act as a buffer between contractors and Iraqi security forces, or any of the many insurgent groups that could rise to challenge U.S. diplomatic power.

Systems put into place over the past few years might provide clues, but some mechanisms developed to help coordination between private security contractors and coalition forces during the war might not be fully transferred to the Iraqi military in the wake of U.S. withdrawal. And language and cultural barriers still exist that could exacerbate problems.

Wartime measures enacted to ease the problems with security contractors include the creation of the Reconstruction Operations Center, and later of Contractor Operations Cells throughout the country. These helped with coordination between security contractors and coalition forces, and should stay in place to help contractors coordinate with the Iraqi military.

More recently, the U.S.-initiated Synchronized Predeployment and Operational Tracker (SPOT), a Web-based tool that uses scanning equipment to track contractor personnel in theater, helped enable better communication between private contractors and coalition forces. This, too, should stay in place, though the reliability of this new system is unknown.

After the Nisour Square shootings, the United States put video cameras in all convoy vehicles and placed a State Department Diplomatic Security Service agent in most of them. But taken together, these measures might not be enough to keep all problems at bay in the absence of U.S. troops.

U.S. officials in Iraq need to make oversight of security contractor operations a high priority. Depending on the state of security in Iraq going forward, U.S. policymakers might need to consider additional training requirements for security contractors to improve their sensitivity to Iraqi culture. Security contractors might need to be trained to implement new operating procedures as the security situation evolves.

Policymakers might also consider adding more coordination and oversight measures such as additional civil-military operations centers and U.S. government civilian oversight personnel to protect the fragile relationship between Iraqi civilians, Iraqi security forces and the U.S. presence.

Above all, it is important that U.S. officials maintain a close watch over the activities of security contractors in Iraq, adapting policy at the first signs of trouble. To this end, policymakers might seriously consider adopting a detailed contingency plan now that would help deal with any potential diplomatic fallout following incidents involving security contractors in Iraq. As the lessons of the war have shown, such incidents are not unlikely.

Dunigan is an associate political scientist at the RAND Corporation, a nonprofit institution that improves policy and decision-making through research and analysis.


 

FAIR USE NOTICE: This page contains copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Global Policy Forum distributes this material without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in 17 U.S.C § 107. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.