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[casi] Dyncorp Rent-a-Cops May Head to Post-Saddam Iraq



Dyncorp Rent-a-Cops May Head to Post-Saddam Iraq
Investigative Report
By Pratap Chatterjee
Special to CorpWatch
April 9, 2003
http://www.corpwatch.org/issues/PID.jsp?articleid=6328

The scenes of looting in Iraq are heart-rending: the Saddam Hospital in Nasiriyah in southern Iraq 
was pillaged last week by 20 armed thieves who grabbed a haul of drugs and several ambulances just 
as a man died in the hospital lobby from gunshot wounds. He sustained his injuries while resisting 
another gang that was trying to steal his car.

Basra's Sheraton Hotel saw mobs of young men stealing tables, chairs, carpets and even a grand 
piano. British military officials, while proclaiming they had seized control of the city, 
acknowledged that the telephone system had shut down this week because scavengers had ripped out 
all the equipment.

Commenting on the unfolding chaos an unnamed Pentagon official told the New York Times that they 
were seeking something more than the United Nations peace-keeping troops: "We know we want 
something a little more corporate and more efficient with cleaner lines of authority and 
responsibility."
Dyncorp Wants You

That plan appears to be almost ready. Half a world away from the bedlam in Iraq, just outside of 
Forth Worth, Texas, police recruiters are currently manning the phones for Dyncorp, a multi-billion 
dollar military Contractor. For Dyncorp the turmoil that is emerging in Iraq could mean a boom in 
business.

"When the area is safe, we will go in. Watch CNN. In the meantime fax us a resume if you want a 
job," Homer Newman, a Dyncorp recruiter told Corpwatch. But Chuck Wilkins, a company spokesman in 
Virginia, said: "The contract hasn't yet been awarded."

Yet a website has been offering Dyncorp jobs to "individuals with appropriate experience and 
expertise to participate in an international effort to re-establish police, justice and prison 
functions in post-conflict Iraq." The company is looking for active duty or recently retired cops 
and prison guards and "experienced judicial experts." Applicants must be US citizens with ten years 
of sworn civilian domestic law enforcement. The site even has a toll free number and a 
"cops.recruiting@dyncorp.com" email address for applicants.

The website explains that recruits will help "establish police stations and monitor activities 
determining the selection, screening and training processes for police officers, demonstrating 
police practices and techniques used by democratic societies advising local police on criminal 
investigation methods and monitoring their progress working side-by-side with police officers from 
around the world reporting humanitarian violation."

Dyncorp has plenty of experience in the rent-a-cop field in other hot spots: Armed DynCorp 
employees make up the core of the police force in Bosnia. DynCorp troops protect Afghan president 
Hamid Karzai, while DynCorp planes and pilots fly the defoliation missions over the coca crops in 
Colombia. Back home in the United States Dyncorp is in charge of the border posts between the US 
and Mexico, many of the Pentagon's weapons-testing ranges and the entire Air Force One fleet of 
presidential planes and helicopters. The company also reviews security clearance applications of 
military and civilian personnel for the Navy.

DynCorp began in 1946 as a project of a small group of returning World War II pilots seeking to use 
their military contacts to make a living in the air cargo business. Named California Eastern 
Airways the original company was soon airlifting supplies to Asia used in the Korean War. By last 
year Dyncorp, headquartered in Reston, Virginia, was the nation's 13th largest military contractor 
with $2.3 billion in revenue.

Earlier this week the company merged with Computer Sciences Corporation, an El Segundo, 
California-based technology services company, in an acquisition worth nearly $1 billion.
Alleged Human Rights Violations and Fraud

The company is not short on controversy. Under the Plan Colombia contract, the company has 88 
aircraft and 307 employees - 139 of them American - flying missions to eradicate coca fields in 
Colombia. Soldier of Fortune magazine once ran a cover story on DynCorp, proclaiming it "Colombia's 
Coke-Bustin' Broncos."

US Rep. Janice Schakowsky, an Illinois Democrat, told Wired magazine that hiring a private company 
to fly what amounts to combat missions is asking for trouble. DynCorp's employees have a history of 
behaving like cowboys," Schakowsky noted.

"Is the US military privatizing its missions to avoid public controversy or to avoid embarrassment 
- to hide body bags from the media and shield the military from public opinion?" she asked.

Indeed a group of Ecuadoran peasants filed a class action against the company in September 2001. 
The suit alleges that herbicides spread by DynCorp in Colombia were drifting across the border, 
withering legitimate crops, causing human and livestock illness, and, in several cases, killing 
children. Assistant Secretary of State Rand Beers intervened in the case right away telling the 
judge the lawsuit posed "a grave risk to US national security and foreign policy objectives."

What's more, Kathryn Bolkovac, a U.N. International Police Force monitor filed a lawsuit in Britain 
in 2001 against DynCorp for firing her after she reported that Dyncorp police trainers in Bosnia 
were paying for prostitutes and participating in sex trafficking. Many of the Dyncorp employees 
were forced to resign under suspicion of illegal activity. But none were prosecuted, since they 
enjoy immunity from prosecution in Bosnia.

Earlier that year Ben Johnston, a DynCorp aircraft mechanic for Apache and Blackhawk helicopters in 
Kosovo, filed a lawsuit against his employer. The suit alleged that that in the latter part of 1999 
Johnson "learned that employees and supervisors from DynCorp were engaging in perverse, illegal and 
inhumane behavior [and] were purchasing illegal weapons, women, forged passports and [participating 
in] other immoral acts."

The suit charges that "Johnston witnessed coworkers and supervisors literally buying and selling 
women for their own personal enjoyment, and employees would brag about the various ages and talents 
of the individual slaves they had purchased."

"DynCorp is just as immoral and elite as possible, and any rule they can break they do," Johnston 
told Insight magazine.

He charged that the company also billed the Army for unnecessary repairs and padded the payroll. 
"What they say in Bosnia is that DynCorp just needs a warm body -- that's the DynCorp slogan. Even 
if you don't do an eight-hour day, they'll sign you in for it because that's how they bill the 
government. It's a total fraud."

Meanwhile, policing post-Saddam Iraq may be more than Dyncorp bargains for. Iraqis say the exercise 
of bringing in foreign police is fraught with danger.

"People do not like Saddam, but they do not want a colonizing army," one young man told the 
Independent of London. "In the area where I live there was an older man, a retired soldier ... When 
he heard the Americans were coming he went and got his gun. When people asked why, he said it was 
because he did not want to be invaded."

CorpWatch
PO Box 29344
San Francisco, CA 94129 USA
Tel: 415-561-6568 Fax: 415-561-6493
URL: http://www.corpwatch.org
Email: corpwatch@corpwatch.org

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