green tara nmazca.blog
embedded in the floating world








20040330

Opposite ends of the soldiering spectrum:
Mercernaries and troops at medical risk

"Thousands of former soldiers and police officers from Britain, the US, Australia and South Africa are earning wages as high as 600 pounds a day to protect Western officials, oil company executives and construction firm bosses in Iraq."

"With the casualty toll ticking ever upward and troops stretched thin on the ground, the Bush administration is looking to mercenaries to help control Iraq. These soldiers-for-hire are veterans of some of the most repressive military forces in the world, including that of the former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet and South Africa's apartheid regime.

"The rate of growth in the security industry is phenomenal," said Deborah Avant, a professor of political science and international affairs at George Washington University in Washington. "If you had asked a year ago whether there would be 15,000 private security in Iraq, everyone would have said you're nuts."

(The author notes that because these "agents" are employed by private firms, their injuries and deaths are not subject to release. The same could be said about their deployment and tactics.)



"In February, Blackwater USA, a North Carolina-based Pentagon contractor, began hiring former combat personnel in Chile, offering them up to $4,000 a month to guard oil wells in Iraq. The company flew the first batch of 60 former commandos to a training camp in North Carolina. These recruits will eventually wind up in Iraq where they will spend six months to a year.

"We scour the ends of the earth to find professionals -- the Chilean commandos are very, very professional and they fit within the Blackwater system," Gary Jackson, the president of Blackwater USA, told the Guardian."




I read this story about worldwide US troop deployment in Sunday's Plain Dealer: "The US has more than 150,000 soldiers and Marines either on combat or other high-risk duty in the far-flung tinderboxes of Afghanistan, Iraq, Haiti and the Balkans. Overall, the US military has about 2.7 million active-duty and reserve troops with more than 400,000 of them deployed in various concentrations in 135 countries...

"A wholesale rotation is under way in Iraq, with 100,000-plus U.S. troops leaving while others are rolling in to replace them. As best can be determined the U.S. force in Iraq and environs in coming weeks will total at least 120,000. Unlike the current makeup, which consists overwhelmingly of active-duty GIs, the new force will comprise about 40 percent reserve and National Guard troops."

That last sentence hit me for some reason. Perhaps it was the story I had read in the Cleveland Free Times about the controversial deaths of two Ohio Guardsmen in December. Perhaps it reminded me of the restrained emotion and tears at a farewell dinner for a 40-some-year-old King County Metro driver who was about to ship out to Iraq in November. Or maybe it was a line I read somewhere about how the influx of so many unexperienced reservists could result in higher casualties.

In any case, as I searched for the Scripps story above, I found this one in the SeaTimes: "To meet the demand for troops in Iraq, the military has been deploying some National Guard and Army Reserve soldiers who aren't fit for combat. More than a dozen members of the Guard and reserves said they were shipped off to battle with little attention paid to their medical histories...

"How many soldiers are unfit is unclear. Each soldier interviewed said he or she knew of others who -- like themselves -- were sent to Iraq despite health problems ranging from allergies requiring refrigerated medications to heart disease.

[A medical command] memo said the problem was a "KEY medical issue" and went on to say, "Frankly, we are burning out a lot of time and effort on shipping back folks who never should have come in the first place. Also runs a high risk of damaging folks."

Also: "More than two dozen suicides by U.S. troops in Iraq, and hundreds of medical evacuations for psychiatric problems, have raised concerns about the mental health of soldiers in Operation Iraqi Freedom. An Army Medical Department after-action report obtained by UPI suggests that the Army sent some soldiers to war who were mentally unfit in the first place."




There are so many other ways in which human energy and material resources can be used... and so many human needs that go unmet. This situation in Iraq will not bring more peace or happiness or democracy into the world. We have to be the agents of such change.
Opposite ends of the soldiering spectrum:
Mercernaries and troops at medical risk

mr damon 16:10









don't tread on me, either.
"Don't tread on me, either."

hunter stockton thompson, 1937-2005
HST 1937-2005


archive links below
olde booqmarx
del.icio.us-ness

human crises
more words

22 over 7
nmazca
email

feedburner
Subscribe with Bloglines

xml

public
discourse

the 18½ minute gap

2600

american samizdat

antipixel

bellaciao

black box voting

cryptome

did you know...?

disinformation

gonzo report

gringos peligros
{u.s. weapons
of mass destruction}

hack-a-day

infosthetics

languagehat

learning to be stupid
in the culture of cash

magpie

mostly africa

nippon goro goro

notes from somewhere bizarre

playahata

robot wisdom

spitting image

thirdredeye

turning the tide

veiled4allah

worldchanging

your negro tour guide
{archived, though}

xispas

youngfox

yukihime

zoomata




metanet

<<blackblogz>>

blogdex

del.icio.us

metafilter

popdex

seablogs

the world as a blog




daily media;
media on media

al jazeera

all africa

alternative press index

alternet

asia times

bangkok post

bernama

bbc online

corpwatch

counterpunch

democracy now!

earthtimes

east africa news

electronic frontier foundation

financial times

frankfurter allgemeine zeitung

geist

the griot

guardian unlimited

gulf times

haaretz

independent media center

international socialist review

iraq uncensored

jakarta post

journalism tutorial

khaleej times

kiplinger letter

le monde

mainichi shimbun

mediachannel

media chin-check

media lens

the memory hole

mexonline

middle east online

new scientist

news dissector

newseum front pages

newsmap

news of the weird

oneworld

outlook india

people's daily

the power
of nightmares

(bbc documentary)

qatar news agency

reporters sans frontieres

resurgence

reuters

rose-colored news

seeing black

stamen

state of the media

the sun

taipei times

testy copy editors

theocracy watch

times of india

tomdispatch

truthout

el universal

vanuatu news online

west africa news

who owns what

xinhua online

yahoo news photos

yellow times

yes!

yomiuri shimbun

znet




reference
materials
and other
resources

alternative writing
and shorthand systems

area codes by number

astronomical glossary

babelfish

barebones guide to html

chinese-english online dictionary

extisp.icio.us

fourmilab

global maps

international dialing codes

iso 8859-1 character set

japanese baby names

jewish encyclopedia

merriam-webster dictionary

oishii

opte project

seattle public library

touchgraph googlebrowser

word origins

world gazetteer population data

zipdecode



Previously...
11.02
12.02
01.03
02.03
03.03
04.03
05.03
06.03
07.03
08.03
09.03
10.03
11.03
12.03
01.04
02.04
03.04
04.04
05.04
06.04
07.04
08.04
09.04
10.04
11.04
12.04
01.05
02.05
03.05
04.05
05.05
06.05
07.05
08.05
09.05
10.05
11.05
12.05
01.06


The WeatherPixie
seattle dark sky clock

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

Creative Commons License

Kinja profile for Dr. Overtone
Listed on BlogShares
Listed on Blogwise
seattle weblog portal
globe of blogs
GeoURL
mr. damon's stumbleupon site

blogdex profiletechnorati profile
tigersushi

**