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100,000 Mercenaries, the Forgotten "Surge"
What is striking about the current debate in Washington - whether to "surge" troops to Iraq and increase the size of the U.S. Army - is that roughly 100,000 bodies are missing from the equation: The number of American forces in Iraq is not 140,000, but more like 240,000.What makes up the difference is the huge army of mercenaries - known these days as "private contractors." After the U.S. Army itself, they are easily the second-largest military force in the country. Yet no one seems sure of how many there are since they answer to no single authority. Indeed, the U.S. Central Command has only recently started taking a census of these battlefield civilians in an attempt to get a handle on the issue...
The private contractors are Americans, South Africans, Brits, Iraqis and a hodgepodge of other nationalities. Many of them are veterans of the U.S. or other armed forces and intelligence services, who are now deployed in Iraq (and Afghanistan and other countries) to perform duties normally carried out by the U.S. Army, but at salaries two or three times greater than those of American soldiers.



Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (1)
at 18:56 on January 12th, 2007
Kudo's !
glad someone is bringing this up.
I met some of these guys in New Orleans.
They are getting paid between $500 and $800 a DAY !
x100,000
do the math.
i was going to try and get a loan fro the SBA, and i was still 20 yards form the building when they damn near tackled me,
asking if i had any weapons or tazers on me ?
they were armed to the teeth.
There were 9 of them in the building,
and 7 Katrina victims trying to get help.
figure their salaries just for securing that building
from hurricane victims LOL
not funny though, really SAD.
blackwater new orleans and hurricane katrina
blackwater new orleans and hurricane katrina more
more blackwater