VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД
breakingnews
Go to main page   USA   News   Pentagon outsources War on Drugs to Blackwater  
MORE ON THE STORY
AFP Photo / Patrick Baz  13.12.2011, 01:34 11 comments

US in Iraq: Soldiers out; Blackwater in?

"The biggest thing in my mind is 'Will the press, will members of Congress and others continue to say it’s just a name change?” Tim Wright asks CNN. “Will they accept this as real change now?'"

Marijuana plants are burned during an anti-drug operation in Guatemala (AFP Photo / Getty Images) 11.01, 01:32 9 comments

US laundered millions for drug cartels

The Mexican Drug War has so far yielded around 50,000 deaths and has become one of the biggest problems poised on North America during the last century.

Mitt Romney (AFP Photo / Mark Wilson) 07.10.2011, 01:15 6 comments

Nightmare neocons join Team Romney

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney announced today a star-studded roster of conservative shot-callers that he has acquired to advise him on national security and foreign policy issues.

US Election 2012
Image from militaryphotos.net 29.06.2011, 18:44 6 comments

Blackwater killer gets 30 months, Newburgh 4 get 25 years

Before a federal court room this week, US Attorney Neil MacBride was rather blunt about what actions a former Blackwater security guard undertook while working in Afghanistan in 2009.

UAE prince hires Blackwater founder to build private army 16.05.2011, 20:12 1 comment

UAE prince hires Blackwater founder to build private army

The crown prince of Abu Dhabi has enlisted the infamous founder of Blackwater security services to build him an 800-member private army of foreign troops for the United Arab Emirates.

AFP Photo / Patrick Baz 22.04.2011, 22:01 3 comments

Blackwater trial resurrected

A US appeals court has reopened the case against four Blackwater Worldwide guards who were involved in a 2007 shooting in a Baghdad public square which left 17 Iraqis dead.

Pentagon outsources War on Drugs to Blackwater

Published: 19 January, 2012, 22:20
Edited: 20 January, 2012, 21:14

In a file picture dated 05 February 2005, members of the US-based Blackwater private security firm scan Baghdad city centre from their helicopter (AFP Photo / Marwan Naamani)

In a file picture dated 05 February 2005, members of the US-based Blackwater private security firm scan Baghdad city centre from their helicopter (AFP Photo / Marwan Naamani)

TAGS: South America, Drugs, USA, Government Spending, Culture, War, North America


For skeptics of how the American government has conducted its so-called War on Drugs, don’t worry, it will soon be out of their hands.

The US Department of Defense has transferred its armed efforts in Latin and Central America in the War on Drugs to Academi, the private military contractors formerly known as Blackwater, reports BBC Spanish. Before they altered their branding to be known as Xe, then most recently Academi, Blackwater underwent immense criticism for a series of scandals involving contract employees executing civilians throughout the Middle East.

That same company that trained contractors to mercilessly slay helpless Iraqis will now be ushering military contractors south of the border to help combat the War on Drugs there, the outlet reports. With the Constitution only legally allowing the Pentagon to get away with so much, the BBC reports that the transition of control to private contractors will allow them to get away with what “US military forces are not allowed or not encouraged to do.”

The company previously known as Blackwater is just one of several private contractors that have been awarded contracts out of the Department of Defense, reports BBC, and their specific deal will award them several million dollars towards “providing advice, training and conducting operations in drug producing countries and those with links to so-called ‘narco-terrorism’ including Latin America.”

What’s more, it is reported, that those contracts were no-bid agreements authorized by the Pentagon. Under such deals, the DoD forks over federal funds to private companies without ever seeking better offers from competitors.

As long ago as 2007, the Pentagon was considering billions of dollars worth of contracts to private contractor aid in the War on Drugs, but the BBC reports that the latest deal will actually aid in the “transfer” of control out of Washington and instead put the actions of enforcing drug production and trafficking in the hands of civilians, not servicemen bound by certain rules and regulations.

Additionally, the transition will allow the government to usher billions into the War on Drugs, but to the public it will appear as if the effort is, on the periphery, nothing more than another DoD contract. Opposition has long existed to the lengthy War on Drugs, and by continuing the efforts in Central and South America without relying on further Pentagon expenditures, less money will appear to be focused on ongoing operations.

“They surreptitiously want to reduce anti-drug budget by transferring it to private agencies,” Larry Birns, director of the Council on Hemispheric Affairs tells the BBC. “The drug war is unpopular and has no political weight except in an election year like this, so the Department of Defense wants to remove that spending from their accounts.”

Bruce Bagley, head of International Studies at the University of Miami, tells BBC that the move will appear to cut out “the high political cost” of continuing the War on Drugs directly out of the Pentagon, but could create a massive backlash of the citizens of the countries in question become aware that private mercenaries are being installed to conduct armed operations.

The move is expected to send contractors into Mexico, Colombia and Caribbean and other locales to the south of the United States.

+26 (43 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
Ron Paul (Reuters / Chris Keane) 19.01, 21:04 31 comments

Ron Paul fights indefinite detention of Americans

Ron Paul took a day off from the campaign trail on Wednesday, not to pause from politics, but to urge his colleagues on Capitol Hill to overturn the provision in the National Defense Authorization Act that allows indefinite detention for Americans.

Defense Authorization Act
Spencer Platt / Getty Images / AFP 19.01, 23:23 35 comments

20 percent of Americans are mentally disturbed

Are there a lot of mentally ill Americans, or am I just crazy?

Shermaine January 27, 2012, 01:43
-1

With all these silly websites, such a great page keeps my intnreet hope alive.

clearwater (unregistered) January 24, 2012, 20:27
+2

So, drug dealers and drug warriors (and drug users),

maybe you can unify your business models to ensure propper business and leave the rest of the people and societies alone, thank you very much. Maybe you could even help to rebuild the countries you are operating in? Then everybody can be happy.

Sphere-Of-Influence January 24, 2012, 08:57
+17

I can already see whats coming. In a year these guys will mow down an entire village for a nicklebag. Just be prepared for a PR Nightmare for both Blackwater and America. Just admit the war on drugs has failed drastically, legalize it, tax it and move on!