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  1. #1
    The Black Senior Member Papewaio's Avatar
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    Default Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    BBC: Boom times ahead for dogs of war

    Represented were some of the UK's most successful, and controversial, mercenaries - although that is not a term the BAPSC to keen to use.
    "Private security companies are not subject to political considerations in the same way conventional armies are. Plus you don't have necessarily have to flag up money you spend on hiring mercenaries. It doesn't necessarily appear in the official defence budget.

    "Most importantly, if a private security contractor is killed on active duty, you don't get any body bag pictures on the front pages. That means no bad publicity for the government."
    Currently, the security company Blackwater appears to be top of the British firms' hate list.

    The US contractor is being investigated following an incident in Baghdad last September, in which 17 Iraqis died. It was just the latest in a number of controversial incidents involving the company.

    The shadow of the company lay heavy over Tuesday's conference, with speaker after speaker referring to the damage its actions may have caused to the reputation of private security firms worldwide.

    Said one: "We are already disliked and misunderstood, and the behaviour of Blackwater has brought headlines.

    "I don't believe anyone in this room thinks we should operate outside the law and be allowed to murder people. If anyone here does believe that, then we are stuffed."
    I can understand private companies using private security that is approved of by the government. But I don't approve of modern democratic governments using mercs to guard government people and infrastructure.

    Also the lack of oversight is not a good thing, it is an abhorrent one.
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    Default Re: Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    I feel that this is an outcome of the first Gulf War, where people got the notion that we could fight and win wars with almost no casualties. These days, the threshold for casualties is much smaller and any loss of life is a sever political setback. Contractors, on the other hand, are a different matter entirely...

    In any other time in history the casualties sustained in Iraq would be considered quite low, but in today's terms they are cause for withdrawal. While the fate of Iraq is not vital to the US(although arguable), I worry about what would happen if we get into a larger war.

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    Come to daddy Member Geoffrey S's Avatar
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    Default Re: Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    Quote Originally Posted by PanzerJaeger
    In any other time in history the casualties sustained in Iraq would be considered quite low, but in today's terms they are cause for withdrawal. While the fate of Iraq is not vital to the US(although arguable), I worry about what would happen if we get into a larger war.
    Perhaps the low tolerance for casualties is largely caused by fragile belief in the goals of the war in the first place.
    "The facts of history cannot be purely objective, since they become facts of history only in virtue of the significance attached to them by the historian." E.H. Carr

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    Nobody Important Member Somebody Else's Avatar
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    Default Re: Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    These companies do also contribute to low retention rates in the army. Same job (if not safer) with more pay.

    This is, I believe, a capitalist world, is it not? Supply and demand and all that. The British army is certainly - as the government puts is - stretched. Some might say overstretched. Either way, there's a niche in the market - wide open for Security Companies to step into.

    I would love for there to be no need for them, that either our army is sufficiently funded and supported to fight the wars we're getting them involved in; or that there were no wars to fight (human nature would seem to preclude that though).

    Hell, I might join one after my SSC is up...
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    Nobody expects the Senior Member Lemur's Avatar
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    Default Re: Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    Quote Originally Posted by PanzerJaeger
    These days, the threshold for casualties is much smaller and any loss of life is a sever political setback.
    I think it has jack-all to do with our times, but instead with the kinds of wars in which we're engaged. It has been demonstrated time and time again that democracies will tolerate huge casualties if they're engaged in a defensive war. Show Americans an existential threat, and they'll send our young men and women to die in the tens of thousands.

    What modern communications destroy is the public's appetite for casualties in what are perceived to be wars of choice. Note how nobody harps on the casualties sustained in Afghanistan. I believe that's because Americans know darn well that the attacks of 9/11/01 originated there. What you hear people moaning about is the casualties sustained in Iraq, which is widely believed to be a war of choice.

    America hasn't magically gotten soft and timid since WWII.

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    Lord of the House Flies Member Al Khalifah's Avatar
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    Default Re: Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    Quote Originally Posted by Somebody Else
    This is, I believe, a capitalist world, is it not? Supply and demand and all that. The British army is certainly - as the government puts is - stretched. Some might say overstretched. Either way, there's a niche in the market - wide open for Security Companies to step into.
    Yet more privitisation creeping into the British public sector then. They'll be privatising the NHS next. Oh wait...

    I agree, the low tolerance for casualties is what is holding the war effort back from reaching any meaningful conclusion. You can't win a war against an enemy that operates in attack groups of 3 with an overwhelming air campaign and strategic artillery bombardments. It doesn't work that way. All the "shock and awe" strategy achieved was to alienate the people that the coalition of the willing were supposedly trying to liberate. Its hard to specifically target one man with an AK in a building in the middle of a built-up area with a gun thats 10 miles away - collateral damage is innevitable. It sends a bit of a mixed message: "We value your democracy, but only as much as some cluster bombs and a few cruise missiles, certainly not as much as 100 dead soldiers."

    Had the coalition gone in with ground troops from the off, the campaign might have reached a better outcome by now. There wouldn't have been the need to destroy so much infrastructure - which is as vital to ordinary civilian life as to "insurgent life." Unfortunately, this is not a campaign which is valued highly by the people of Britain, America, Australia.... Their way of life is not percieved to be under threat so they will not tolerate casualties of the scale seen in the 19th and 20th centuries.
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    Feeding the Peanut Gallery Senior Member Redleg's Avatar
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    Default Re: Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    Quote Originally Posted by Lemur
    I think it has jack-all to do with our times, but instead with the kinds of wars in which we're engaged. It has been demonstrated time and time again that democracies will tolerate huge casualties if they're engaged in a defensive war. Show Americans an existential threat, and they'll send our young men and women to die in the tens of thousands.
    You are in essence correct about the kind of wars engaged but your leaving one critical piece out concerning about the time we live in. Believe it or not the United States was involved in conflicts before WW2 that were wars of choice, but the public was unaware of the events until after the conflict. The aspect of instant communication and the amount of media available to the general public is an aspect of our time that prevents wars of choice from gaining much public approval because we are better informed then previous times. You kind of covered it your second paragraph but your initial point neglects that fact - when you argue that it has jack all to do with our times.

    America hasn't magically gotten soft and timid since WWII.
    While my grandfather was alive he might of argued with you about that - the depression made for a lot of hard men doing hard things during WW2.

    But as a nation we have not gotten as soft and timid as some would like to believe we have.
    O well, seems like 'some' people decide to ruin a perfectly valid threat. Nice going guys... doc bean

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    Insomniac and tired of it Senior Member Slyspy's Avatar
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    Default Re: Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    I don't like the idea of private contractors doing security work that should be the job of the national armed forces. It merely highlights weaknesses in the forces (notably lack of men and equipment), creates a weak link in the occupying forces. Knowing the general trend of privatisation it probably costs more, while doubt serving as a useful band-aid both for military purposes and for political expedient.

    I'm no great fan of the idea of private firms in Iraq hiring private armies either, although I can see why their security demands it. This is not a good sign IMO. It does not suggest that we are winning.

    I give this from the view-point of an ignorant civilian (although the servicemen I've spoken to generally dislike soldiers of fortune, even if they once served alongside them). No doubt those here of a military background will have a more worthwhile input.
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    Part-Time Polemic Senior Member ICantSpellDawg's Avatar
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    Default Re: Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    It's easy to say that in a defensive war we would fight hard and win, but it's debatable. We have revisionists saying that, essentially, we caused the war with Japan by cutting off civilian supplies and boycotting businesses. "Putting pins in snakes will one day get you bit". It isn't a far stretch to say that we would have people asking us to cede land and may actually give in, do to "what we owe them".

    In a larger war I have no doubt that the propaganda machines on the other side(s) combined with our massive casualty rates will send us reeling. If it even gets that far before we curl up and die from intense talk.

    Sign of the times indeed. Our countries are filled with lazy and treacherous cowards and well intentioned pacifists. Maybe It's about time that harder working/fighting people incinerated our culture. Talking points?

    Contractors are a PR loophole for the government and until we come to a consensus about what the hell we are doing as a country, they will be necessary.
    Last edited by ICantSpellDawg; 12-06-2007 at 15:27.
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  10. #10
    Nobody expects the Senior Member Lemur's Avatar
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    Default Re: Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    Quote Originally Posted by TuffStuffMcGruff
    Our countries are filled with lazy and treacherous cowards and well intentioned pacifists. Maybe It's about time that harder working/fighting people incinerated our culture. Talking points?
    This kind of broad-brush generalization really honks me off. I assure you that Americans would fight the bloodiest fight you can imagine to defend our nation and our way of life. It's a complete and utter logical fallacy to say, "Oh, sure, I know we fought hard in the past, but kids these days ..."

    I count on two constants: (1) Things are usually getting better, and (2) people complain about how things are getting worse.

    So as not to derail the thread completely, I am very conflicted about mercenaries. I think they could be useful as all get-out in tamping down conflicts in nasty corners of the world that no first-world nation would ever want to touch. But the lack of accountability is a serious issue, and one which we have not addressed in our current Iraqi adventure.

  11. #11
    Dux Nova Scotia Member lars573's Avatar
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    Default Re: Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    Quote Originally Posted by Lemur
    I think it has jack-all to do with our times, but instead with the kinds of wars in which we're engaged. It has been demonstrated time and time again that democracies will tolerate huge casualties if they're engaged in a defensive war. Show Americans an existential threat, and they'll send our young men and women to die in the tens of thousands.

    What modern communications destroy is the public's appetite for casualties in what are perceived to be wars of choice. Note how nobody harps on the casualties sustained in Afghanistan. I believe that's because Americans know darn well that the attacks of 9/11/01 originated there. What you hear people moaning about is the casualties sustained in Iraq, which is widely believed to be a war of choice.

    America hasn't magically gotten soft and timid since WWII.
    And yet here in Canada Iraq and Afghanistan are viewed are being the same. Wars of choice as you put it. Every week that a flag drapped coffin rolls off a Hercules, I read opinion pieces slamming Shrubs imperial wars (note wars plural). And how it's Canada's disgrace for being involved in one of them.
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  12. #12

    Default Re: Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    Quote Originally Posted by Lemur
    I think it has jack-all to do with our times, but instead with the kinds of wars in which we're engaged. It has been demonstrated time and time again that democracies will tolerate huge casualties if they're engaged in a defensive war. Show Americans an existential threat, and they'll send our young men and women to die in the tens of thousands.

    What modern communications destroy is the public's appetite for casualties in what are perceived to be wars of choice. Note how nobody harps on the casualties sustained in Afghanistan. I believe that's because Americans know darn well that the attacks of 9/11/01 originated there. What you hear people moaning about is the casualties sustained in Iraq, which is widely believed to be a war of choice.

    America hasn't magically gotten soft and timid since WWII.
    I certainly would not consider WW1 a defensive war, yet many more thousands of Americans died on the fields of Europe. WW2 is a stretch as well...

    Times have certainly changed, and so have American sensibilities.

  13. #13
    Nobody expects the Senior Member Lemur's Avatar
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    Default Re: Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    Quote Originally Posted by PanzerJaeger
    I certainly would not consider WW1 a defensive war, yet many more thousands of Americans died on the fields of Europe.
    And if you've been reading your history, you know that the American public was extremely reluctant to get involved in WWI, and that it was a tremendously unpopular war. No doubt the internet message boards of the day thrummed with people saying, "Americans have lost that gumption we had in the Spanish-American war."
    Quote Originally Posted by PanzerJaeger
    WW2 is a stretch as well...
    ORLY?
    Quote Originally Posted by PanzerJaeger
    Times have certainly changed, and so have American sensibilities.
    When voicing such sentiments, it's customary to also say, "You kids get off my lawn!"
    Last edited by Lemur; 12-06-2007 at 21:41.

  14. #14

    Default Re: Rise of Modern Mercs aka Security Contractors

    Quote Originally Posted by Lemur
    And if you've been reading your history, you know that the American public was extremely reluctant to get involved in WWI, and that it was a tremendously unpopular war. No doubt the internet message boards of the day thrummed with people saying, "Americans have lost that gumption we had in the Spanish-American war."
    So would you say that Americans are willing to take 117,465 deaths in Iraq (or anything close to that), or have times changed?

    Read back a little further in history... cause and effect.

    When voicing such sentiments, it's customary to also say, "You kids get off my lawn!"
    Im 20 years old. I know how the people of my generation think and I know how their parents think. Hell, even my own father who served in the German military and is a proud descendent of German soldiers from way before WW1 offered to buy me a car if I didn't join the marines. Western society is soft...

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