Private Warriors: Military Contractors in Iraq
Private Warriors: New PBS Doc Questions Role of Military Contractors in
Iraq
http://www.pacifica.org/programs/dn/050621.html
A new PBS documentary titled "Private Warriors," raises questions about the
accountability of the private companies working in Iraq and the Pentagon's
increasing reliance on them. We speak with the producer and correspondent,
Martin Smith and Brookings Institution fellow, Peter Singer who is author of
"Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry."
It's been two and half years since the invasion of Iraq. Month after month,
the army cannot meet its recruitment goals. At the same time, the military
has increasingly been outsourcing services to private contractors. Between
the logistics giant Halliburton and numerous armed security companies,
private military contractors now comprise the second largest force in Iraq,
far outnumbering the allied troops.
A new documentary titled "Private Warriors," gives viewers an unprecedented
behind-the scenes look at companies working in Iraq like Kellogg Brown &
Root, the Halliburton subsidiary and Erinys a South African private security
company. The film raises questions about the accountability of these
companies and the Pentagon's increasing reliance on them. This is an excerpt
that begins with Marine Colonel Thomas X. Hammes. He served as a base
commander in Iraq in early 2004.
* "Private Warriors,", excerpt of Frontline documentary premiering June 21
at 9:00pm on PBS.
Click for more information: "Private Warriors"
* Martin Smith, producer and correspondent of "Private Warriors." He has
contributed to FRONTLINE over the years as both an award-winning producer
and reporter. In recent years, Smith's focus has been on Al Qaeda and the
war in Iraq.
* Peter Singer, Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution and Director of
the Project on U.S. Policy Towards the Islamic World at the Saban Center for
Middle East Policy. He is author of "Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the
Privatized Military Industry."
"I Will Go On Until I Have Even the Slightest Hope of Justice" - Rare
Broadcast Interview With Pakistani Rape Survivor Mukhtar Mai
The Pakistani government is barring a woman from coming to the United States
to speak out about her case and the plight of women's rights in Pakistan.
She was gang-raped on orders by her local tribal counsel. We play a rare
broadcast interview with Mukhtar Mai from her home in Pakistan and we speak
with a Pakistani journalist who met with her in April. [includes rush
transcript - partial]
We spend the rest of the hour looking at the case of Mukhtar Mai - a
Pakistani rape survivor who has become an international symbol of the
ongoing struggle for women's rights in Pakistan.
In June 2002, a group of men gang-raped Mukhtar Mai near her home in
Pakistan. The rape was ordered by her local tribal counsel as punishment for
a crime allegedly committed by her 12-year-old brother. After her rape,
Mukhtar Mai was forced to walk home nearly naked before a jeering crowd of
three hundred onlookers.
According to The New York Times, on average, a woman is raped every two
hours in Pakistan, and two women a day die in so-called honor killings. Most
of the cases go unnoticed, but Mukhtar Mai defied tradition by fighting back
against her attackers in the courts. She testified against them. A number of
them were convicted and sent to prison. With the compensation money she
received, she opened elementary schools in her village.
Last week, Mukhtar Mai was back in the headlines when the Pakistani
government barred her from leaving the country in an attempt to block her
from publicizing her case. Amnesty International had planned to bring her to
the United States. On the eve of her trip, she was detained by Pakistani
government officials and placed under house arrest. The government then
apparently tried to intimidate her by ordering the release of the 12 men
connected to her rape.
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf admitted that he had ordered Mukhtar
placed on the no fly list, telling reporters "I don't want to project a bad
image of Pakistan." But her detention had the opposite effect, sparking
international condemnation. The Pakistani government now says Mukhtar Mai is
free to travel wherever she wants. But there is one small problem - they
confiscated her passport. Once again, Mukhtar Mai is refusing to be silent
and is speaking out to the local and international media about her case. New
York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof writes, "President Musharraf may have
ousted rivals and overthrown a civilian government, but he has now met his
match - a peasant woman with a heart of gold and a will of steel."
I reached Mukhtar Mai yesterday at her home in Pakistan. I began by asking
her if she was free to travel outside the country. Translation is provided
by Pakistani journalist Azra Rashid.
* Mukhtar Mai, interviewed June 20, 2005.
* Azra Rashid, Pakistani journalist who traveled to Mukhtar Mai's village in
April 2005 and met with her.
* Mukhtar Mai, speaking in April 2005.
* Asma Jahangir, head of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, speaking
in April 2005.
* Dr. Israr Ahmad, head of Tanzeema-e-Islami, speaking at a protest in
Pakistan, April 2005.
For a copy of today’s program, call 1 (800) 881 2359. Our website is
www.democracynow.org . Our email
address is mail@democracynow.org
============================

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/warriors/
Private contractors from Halliburton/KBR and Erinys, current and former
military officials and other experts talk about their experiences in Iraq,
the industry's growth, and more...
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/warriors/interviews/
Main Page -
Tuesday, 06/22/05
Message Board by American
Patriot Friends Network [APFN]
APFN MESSAGEBOARD
ARCHIVES
