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Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry [Paperback]

Singer
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Paperback, July 23 2004 --  
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Corporate Warriors: the Rise of the Privatized Military Industry Corporate Warriors: the Rise of the Privatized Military Industry 4.9 out of 5 stars (10)
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Book Description

July 23 2004 Cornell Studies in Security Affairs
As violence spreads in Iraq, many have been stunned by the extensive roles that private firms now are playing in the fighting. In seeking to understand exactly what was going on, ABC, BBC, CBS, CNN, The Economist, Fox News, The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Los Angeles Times, NPR, PBS, USA Today, and the Washington Post all turn to one source: Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry.

Named among the year’s top five books in international affairs by the Gelber Prize, P.W. Singer’s groundbreaking book from Cornell University Press explores one of the most interesting, but little understood developments in modern warfare. Over the last decade, a global trade in hired military services has emerged. Known as "privatized military firms" (PMFs), these businesses range from small consulting firms, who sell the advice of retired generals, to transnational corporations that lease out wings of fighter jets or battalions of commandos. Such firms number in the hundreds. They have an estimated annual revenue of over $100 billion. And, they presently fill military roles in over fifty countries, including in Afghanistan and Iraq. From recent events in Iraq, where some 15,000 private military contractors work on behalf of the coalition, including the four men brutally killed in an ambush in Fallujah earlier this year, to Latin America, where three American private military contractors have been held captive by Colombian rebels for the last 16 months, to Sub-Saharan Africa, where private military personnel earlier this year were arrested as part of an alleged coup plot in Zimbabwe and Equatorial Guinea, these firms appear in the world's hotspots and headlines again and again. Yet, until Corporate Warriors, no book has opened up this powerful new industry to the public eye.

Now released in paperback, Corporate Warriors provides the first comprehensive analysis of the private military industry. The book traces the firms’ historic roots in the mercenary outfits of the past and the more recent underlying causes that led to their emergence at the end of the Cold War. In a series of detailed company portraits, Singer then describes how the industry operated and the three sectors within the industry: how military provider firms, like Executive Outcomes, a South African company made up of ex-Apartheid fighters, offer front-line combat services; how military consulting firms, like MPRI, a Virginia-based firm staffed by U.S. Army veterans, provide strategic and military training expertise for clients around the world; and, finally, how military support firms, like Vice President Cheney’s former Halliburton-Brown & Root, carry out multi-billion dollar military logistics and maintenance services, including running the U.S. military’s supply train in Iraq.! In fact, the book’s portrait of how exactly Halliburton got into the lucrative, but now controversial, military support business has served as a resource for investors, reporters, congressional investigators, and soldiers alike.

Singer then explores the many implications of this industry, ranging from their impact on military operations to their possible roles in international peacekeeping. He analyzes how the hopes for economy and efficiency duel with the risks that come from outsourcing the most essential of government functions, that of national security and soldiers’ welfare. The privatization of military services allows startling new capabilities and efficiencies in the way that war is carried out. However, as demonstrated in Iraq, the mix of the profit motive with the fog of war raises a series of troubling questions –for international affairs, for ethics, for management, for civil-military relations, for international law, for human rights, and, ultimately, for democracy. In other words, when it comes to military responsibilities, private companies’ good may not always be to the public good.

Corporate Warriors is a hard-hitting analysis that provides a fascinating first look inside this exciting, but potentially dangerous new industry. Its research has been featured by every single major news outlet in the United States and covered by media over 20 different countries.

Easily accessible to general readers, the book provides a critical but balanced look at the businesses behind the headlines. With the continued expansion and growth of this industry in the coming years, Corporate Warriors will be the essential sourcebook for understanding how the private military industry works and how governments must respond. As one reviewer describes, "Many fine volumes about U.S. foreign policy and world events have been published in recent months. This one is something special. Corporate Warriors might just be a paradigm shift. It may change the way people look at history and analyze current events…a must-read…"


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From Publishers Weekly

A security analyst at the Brookings Institution, Singer raises disturbing new issues in this comprehensive analysis of a post-Cold War phenomenon: private companies offering specialized military services for hire. These organizations are nothing like the mercenary formations that flourished in post-independence Africa, whose behavior there earned them the nickname les affreux: "the frightful ones." Today's corporate war-making agencies are bought and sold by Fortune 500 firms. Even some UN peacekeeping experts, Singer reports, advocate their use on grounds of economy and efficiency. Governments see in them a means of saving money-and sometimes a way to use low-profile force to solve awkward, potentially embarrassing situations that develop on the fringes of policy. Singer describes three categories of privatized military systems. "Provider firms" (the best known being the now reorganized Executive Outcomes) offer direct, tactical military assistance ranging from training programs and staff services to front-line combat. "Consulting firms," like the U.S.-based Military Professional Resources Inc., draw primarily on retired senior officers to provide strategic and administrative expertise on a contract basis. The ties of such groups to their country of origin, Singer finds, can be expected to weaken as markets become more cosmopolitan. Finally, the overlooked "support firms," like Brown & Root, provide logistic and maintenance services to armed forces preferring (or constrained by budgetary factors) to concentrate their own energies on combat. Singer takes pains to establish the improvements in capability and effectiveness privatization allows, ranging from saving money to reducing human suffering by ending small-scale conflicts. He is, however, far more concerned with privatization's negative implications. Technical issues, like contract problems, may lead to an operation ending without regard to a military rationale. A much bigger problem is the risk of states losing control of military policy to militaries outside the state systems, responsible only to their clients, managers, and stockholders, Singer emphasizes. So far, private military organizations have behaved cautiously, but there is no guarantee will continue. Nor can the moralities of business firms be necessarily expected to accommodate such niceties as the laws of war. Singer recommends increased oversight as a first step in regulation, an eminently reasonable response to a still imperfectly understood development in war making.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Every American Should Read This! May 17 2004
Format:Paperback
This book should be on the essential reading list for any class on American politics, ethics, or foreign policy.

When I took military ethics at Texas A&M University, Manuel Davenport walked into class the first day and asked, "What is a military officer?"

In unison, the class responded, "Managers of violence."

As one of two 'nonregs' in the class, that made the hair on the back of my neck stand up. In a piece Professor Davenport wrote in Army (May 1980), "Professionals or Hired Guns? Loyalties are the Difference," he noted the peculiar demands of the military profession and what sets it apart. To be a mercenary, a hired killer, is tantamount to being a paid murderer. That is not what the profession is about. For mercenaries, the client is a private entity, and loyalties are to the employer, not the nation, and certainly not humanity. To outsource our defense is to put it in the hands of people whose motive is profit, not the honor of public service, respect for the republic, or the protection of their the country and people they love. Dwight Eisenhower is surely spinning in his grave!

Tragically, this is where we are going: we have outsourced our republic. The government no longer has a monopoly on the use of force, even in our own military operations. Now, private companies are calling the shots. We have even outsourced the ROTC on 200 campuses! Bremer's personal guards, and much of our intelligence is in private hands. Who is really in charge?

As the abuses in Iraq demonstrate, there is a reason to have military officers. If not, we would simply empty our prisons on the enemy and go home. Hiring mercenaries is the downfall of any republic. What will happen when the mercenaries out-gun the United States Army? Who will we turn to then? Brown & Root? Blackwater? What if our enemies outbid us? What if terrorists pay more?

We're being sold out!

Joe Adams, Ph.D.
Mississippi State University

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5.0 out of 5 stars Groundbreaking Work Jun 12 2013
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
A very well written, impeccably approached account on the topic. Provides groundbreaking information and summary of all backgrounds and function of private military firms. In this updated edition, a summary account of the book - in perspective of its newly proven accuracy, four years after publication - is provided by the author, with very effective results.
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Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Singer is a pioneer who has shown than vast shift in the ways wars are fought. Privateers, soldiers of fortune mercenaries used to be the stuff of bad books and movies and now they are a mainstay though which modern countries go to war. He starts by pointing out that the second largest troop contributing country in the recent Iraq war after the US military was US contractors. This should be enough to get a reader interested in this subject. A must read for anyone interested in this new frontier.
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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars probably great
I have not read the book but the author was on a t.v. special called soldiers for hire. while mercenaries have some good purposes that the show adressed, the author gave some... Read more
Published on July 19 2004 by "thmnshw4"
5.0 out of 5 stars First Steps in Studies of Privatization
Why does it take PW Singer to give us an accurate history of the Sierra Leone war and the role of private warriors? Read more
Published on Mar 24 2004 by Loring D. Wirbel
5.0 out of 5 stars Messiah, Mercenary, or Menace?
This book is an intelligent, extremely well researched look at the expanding global use of Private Military Firms (PMF's) in warfare. Read more
Published on Jan 28 2004 by Joanneva12a
5.0 out of 5 stars An intelligent, groundbreaking, & highly controversial book
Most folks will automatically assume this is a book about the latest generation of mercenaries. While that's certainly an aspect of this industry, there's a far more surprising... Read more
Published on Sep 11 2003 by Restorm
5.0 out of 5 stars Contemporary Warfare, Expanding Markets
Corporate Warriors is an exceptionally well written, well sourced book that will forever alter the way you view the present and future of American foriegn policy and of... Read more
Published on Aug 25 2003 by Jim Albert
5.0 out of 5 stars essential for our times
Singer's categorizations of military assistance organizations confer clarity in a fragmented, heterogenous field of activity. Read more
Published on Jun 22 2003 by W. Clifton Holmes
5.0 out of 5 stars a fascinating look at the dark underbelly of the military
Singer is renowned as an expert in the privatization of the military, and has appeared regularly on major news programs like CNN, CNBC, and Nightline. Read more
Published on Jun 11 2003 by Joshua A. Steinitz
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