Pubdate: Thu, 10 May 2001
Source: Salon (US Web)
Copyright: 2001 Salon
Contact:  http://www.salon.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/381
Author: Arianna Huffington
Note: Arianna Huffington is a nationally syndicated columnist and author of 
eight books. Her latest, "How to Overthrow the Government," was published 
in 2000 by Regan Books (HarperCollins)

WHAT IS WASHINGTON TRYING TO HIDE?

The government outsources the war on drugs so it can point fingers at the 
private sector when the body bags start pouring in.

When longtime drug warriors like Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., and Rep. Mark 
Souder, R-Ind., start blasting American anti-drug efforts in Latin America, 
you know that something is rotten in Peru. And Colombia. And Washington.

That's exactly what happened last week when representatives of the State 
Department, the Drug Enforcement Administration, U.S. Customs and the drug 
czar's office appeared in front of the House Committee on Government Reform 
to discuss the United States' role in the midair murder of an American 
missionary and her infant daughter last month in Peru.

Well, not exactly "discuss." More like equivocate and pass the buck. Just 
another day on the Hill for drug warriors. It's as if these apparatchiks 
had all morphed into a famous character from that other war: Sgt. Schultz 
from "Hogan's Heroes." They knew "noth-ing"! How many planes have been shot 
down over the years? They didn't know. Who had ultimate authority over the 
CIA contractors who fingered the plane? Nobody could say. How many 
different contractors are being used in the drug war down there? Dunno.

Their continual stonewalling made Burton pricklier than that mean woman on 
"Weakest Link." "When Americans are killed, why does it take so long to get 
an explanation?" fumed Burton. "It seems like we're pulling teeth to get 
it." Souder was equally apoplectic: "We're conservative Republicans who 
have carried the ball for the drug war, but you're making it very difficult 
for us."

But at least these guys showed up. The CIA, the key U.S. player in the 
Peruvian shoot-down, didn't even bother.

So why all the secrecy and obfuscation? Just what is it they're trying to hide?

Perhaps it's the fact that our government is funding a war being conducted 
by hundreds of American citizens, working for private security companies 
with innocuous-sounding names like DynCorp, AirScan and Military 
Professional Resources Inc.

It's a classic end run. When Congress agreed to fund last year's $1.3 
billion aid package to Colombia, the approval came with strict limitations 
on the number of U.S. military personnel that could be deployed in the 
region (500) and a prohibition on those troops engaging in combat-related 
tasks. But these private military contractors -- mostly made up of one-time 
U.S. soldiers and paid for with our tax dollars -- don't have to abide by 
any such rules.

It's hard to know exactly how much these corporate soldiers are costing us, 
since many of them are being funded out of the CIA's so-called black budget 
- -- but the dollar figure is estimated to be over $1 billion.

DynCorp alone is being paid $600 million by the State Department to help in 
drug eradication and interdiction. But in February, DynCorp pilots ended up 
in a firefight with left-wing guerrillas. Yet the U.S. government is still 
claiming that we're not being dragged into Colombia's civil war.

"American taxpayers," says Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., a vocal critic of 
the private armies, "already pay $300 billion a year to fund the world's 
most powerful military. Why should they have to pay a second time in order 
to privatize our operations?" Schakowsky has recently introduced 
legislation that would ban the government from using these private 
companies to help fight the drug war.

"Power exercised in secret," said former Sen. William Proxmire, "especially 
under the cloak of national security, is doubly dangerous." Now the cloak 
is the drug war, but the secrecy and lack of accountability are just as 
dangerous.

Outsourcing the war makes it possible to proceed with a policy without 
having to defend it in public -- or having to deal with those annoying body 
bags and flag-draped coffins. As Myles Frechette, the former U.S. 
ambassador to Colombia, put it: "It's very handy to have an outfit not part 
of the U.S. armed forces, obviously. If somebody gets killed or whatever, 
you can say they're not a member of the armed forces."

It's a political twist on the old philosophical conundrum: If Americans are 
blown to pieces in a South American forest but no one hears about it, did 
they really die? And if they did, would it lead to a privatized Gulf of 
Tonkin incident?

If, as it has been said, information is the WD-40 of democracy, then 
suppression of information is the surest way to desiccate the lubricant 
that keeps the system running.
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MAP posted-by: Beth