Filed under: Books, economics, Peace, War | Tags: Axis of Evil, Big Boy Rules, Blackwater, Steve Fainaru, Triple Canopy
Big Boy Rules: America’s Mercenaries Fighting in Iraq by Steve Fainaru
I’ve been listening to the audio version in my car. Usually I avoid books that look like this because they are glorified versions of weapons technology, hero worship, and killing “the other.” This cover was slightly deceiving, and luckily, I had heard a book review on NPR before I saw the cover.
Fainaru has spent a lot of time in Iraq as a embedded journalist were he became interested in the “parallel army” that arose around the US military. When there weren’t enough US soldiers to cover missions, private contract armies arose including the now famous Blackwater, and Fainaru follows two lesser known companies (that contract to Halliburton); Crescent and Triple Canopy.
These contract armies have no rules, no official equipment, very little training, and make enormous paychecks. As opposed to many of the soldiers who make a small enough paycheck on combat pay that they are eligible for welfare benefits, the contract “soldiers” are pulling in $7,000 a month. Fainaru decides, under great controversy, to call these contract workers mercenaries. Hired guns. The problem is that ultimately, since they are contract workers, the US government is paying these bills. Enlisted soldiers stand by insulted while the “mercs” rake it in.
These mercs are the same young men who make up the US army. But they aren’t protected in the same ways. The contract mercenary that Fainaru follows throughout the beginning of the book swore that he would never get captured, and even had a death pact with his fellow mercenaries. John Cote, pronounced Co-Tay, was captured, skinned alive, and beheaded not too long after these series of interviews. He had done two tours of duty in the real US military in Iraq and Afghanistan and decided he couldn’t go back to “civilian life”. He traded his twenties, and eventually his life, for the money and adventure of working in a contract security company.
Because of the lack of rules and military control over the contract mercenaries, there is a lot of confusion over who governs them. When this question was posed to George Bush, Bush laughed and said, “That’s a great question, I’m going to have to ask Rumsfeld about that.” To which Rumsfeld replied that he didn’t know, and thought the President was responsible for that. Which means there was no one there to bring accountability when a merc went crazy and shot up a cab filled with civilians. There is no screening process, several of the mercenaries are self-proclaimed alcoholics and people who “just want to kill.” The residents of Alice’s Restaurant are welcome here.
Likewise, there is no one there when a convoy of mercenaries is driving around with no armor and no back-up support.
At the same time I’ve been reading Literature from the “Axis of Evil”: Writing from Iran, Iraq, North Korea, and Other Enemy Nations released by Words Without Borders.
This is a collection of stories from states considered enemies of the US government. It starts with the official Axis of Evil, Iran, Iraq, and North Korea. Countries that have little to nothing to do with each other, but which had been lumped into the same category by the Bush administration. The editors of this book note that they are in objection to the use of terms like Axis of Evil, and declare that they are also against the US notion of being against free trade of literature and culture with countries it doesn’t agree with. Many of the authors in this book are living in exile, being the subject of that kind of discrimination in their own countries.
The opening story, The Vice Principal in my opinion, is the best. It is an Iranian story of a boy who takes liberties with a writing assignment, and feels the wrath of a teacher who doesn’t agree with his opinion.
In the section of stories by North Korean authors, it is very apparent that there are tight restrictions on what people are allowed to write about, and I would even say that in the first story presented, A Tale of Music it appears that some of the original work was taken out and propaganda about “our dear leader” put in it’s place.
Other countries included are Syria, Libya, Sudan and Cuba. Cuba stands out, in that it is a culture that is much more open about sexuality than most of the others included. With it being the last group of stories included, the open sex and discussion of a character’s girlfriend’s period almost comes as a shock.
These two books were very interesting to read together. The mixing of US force policy and the point of view of the countries our policy is forced upon.
Filed under: Books, Buddhism, Peace, War | Tags: Alan Clements, Aung San Suu Kyi, Burma, Voice of Hope

Aung San Suu Kyi is a peace activist who has been under house arrest for almost two decades in Burma. Her outspoken opinions on how the Burmese government have oppressed the Burmese people have made her a threat to the totalitarian state, and luckily, rather than turning her into a martyr, the have just tried to keep her quiet by making it hard for her to communicate with the world.
One of the ideas that she presents that I find really interesting is “the questing” mind. “A questing mind is a great help towards withstanding violence or oppression, or any trend that is contrary to what you believe is right and just.” She makes a difference between a questioning mind – one that wonders – and the questing mind that actually seeks out the answers.
She argues that positive action is the first step to healing, so even though she has spent a large part of her life in seclusion and unable to see her family, she does not feel negatively about this because she has added so much positive action to the Burmese cause.
I think one of the reasons that the conservative right has such a hard time with intellectualism is that it may discover that it is wrong. Vaclav Havel stated, “The intellectual should constantly disturb, should bear witness to the misery of the world, should be provocative by being independent, should rebel against all hidden and open pressures and manipulations, should be the chief doubter of systems…he stands out as an irritant wherever he is.”
If you are being vigilant in these things, then taking the humanitarian point of view is necessary. Taking responsibility is a necessity.
These thoughts come from a book of conversations between Aung Sa Suu Kyi and an American Buddhist monk ordained in Burma Alan Clements.
Filed under: Books, War | Tags: Children at War, Democracy Now, Peter Singer, Wired for War
I mentioned the new book Wired for War by Peter Singer. I posted a radio link, but these videos are very good as well, outlining new phenomena like “war porn.”
Peter Singer also wrote a book about the rising role of children in war. His journalist ventures really show how any ethical considerations that may have once existed in warfare really don’t exist anymore.
Children at War
Filed under: Books, War | Tags: Bryan Mealer, Congolese women, Dr. Mukwege, Eve Ensler, Halliburton, The Congo
I highly recommend the Feb. 9th broadcast on www.democracynow.org. It interviews a Congolese doctor who has opened the only hospital in the Congo open to the thousands of women raped everyday as an act of war. This is something that has received very little press coverage in the US.
(This is an excerpt from the broadcast, but I highly recommend watching the whole show at their website.)
Also on today’s show was an interview with Pratap Chatterjee, author of Halliburton’s Army. He is an expert on corporate crime, and outlines the rise of contract employees in American military through Halliburton and KBR.
Halliburton’s Army: How a Well-Connected Texas Oil Company Revolutionized the Way America Makes War
What I find interesting in the connection between these two stories, is how clearly they outline economic disparity between countries. Chatterjee describes how Fijian truck drivers hired by KBR are paid $170 a trip to risk their lives to bring supplies into Iraq, while American contracters hired for the same job are paid upwards of $100,000 and given military protection.
In the Congo a massive civil war has been raging, largely funded by American backed Rwandian military, and woman are the major targets. But women are not worth anything in a war market. It is not cost effective to fund hospitals or provide police protection for Congolese women. For anyone thinking this has nothing to do with them, the war has been vastly elevated by foreign control of coltan mines – a naturally occurring metallic substance used in the production of cell phones, laptops, and play stations.
Power to Women and Girls of the DRC
<img src=”
” alt=”” />All Things Must Fight to Live: Stories of War and Deliverance in Congo
Filed under: Politics, War | Tags: Andrew Jackson, ethnic cleansing, immigration, Simon Schama
Simon Shuma with Bill Moyers on the Future of America
Above is a link to a great video on Bill Moyers journal. Shuma is a British writer who toured America making observations on how the cultural landscape is changing, including the rise in the fear of “the other.”
Simon Schama’s The American Future: A History
The US has harbored this myth of inclusion and moral superiority for decades. The myth of this being a welcoming land of immigrants is one created out of the convenience of the American people’s horribly short memory. The advantage of not having strong history classes in the public schools, is that what we don’t remember can’t affect us. How soon we forget that Andrew Jackson was the first master of ethnic cleansing long before WWII. The class and culture wars in the neighborhoods of Boston and New York, where each new wave of immigrants caused cries of the end of the country. First the Germans were going to destroy everything, then the Irish, now, as the woman in the video proclaims, “The Mexicans come with their diseases.”
Geography alone is an interesting factor in this perspective. Huge and isolated, we are both removed, and in a large way, protected from any country that might have a real problem with us. Our skewed and lacking view of the world comes in large part that the majority of Americans can’t afford to travel even if they want to. (I know that may be hard for some to believe, but remember that 90% of the wealth in America is owned by 1% of the people.) Now, this is a slippery subject, and I am not comparing poverty in America to poverty in a lot of other countries, because they are very different things, but 58% of all Americans will live below the US poverty line at some point in their adult lives.
And what does lack of exposure, combined with the memory of a time when you couldn’t afford groceries, combined with the fear of being in that place again – well, desperation, blame, and discrimination. In some people it inspires compassion and community, but I’m not getting the sense that we are leaning that way as a whole.
I read a lot of books about recent political violence, and I can’t help but get the sense that as an American, growing up in these protected lands, that, with the exception of journalist and soldiers, we really don’t have a clue. No one wants bombs dropped in their own backyard, but being privileged in this way has ruined our empathy, and our understanding. Put aside the moral highground, and notice that there is a lot more happening in the world then a bunch of people losing their houses to bad loans, at least if you live in a camper in Tennessee, as I do now, it’s not going to be blown-up while I’m in it. What I’m getting at, is that I have a real problem with a country that has never experienced war in it’s own neighborhoods, but has such huge opinions about it elsewhere.
I don’t think people really talk about war here. Sure there are political arguments about what Bush did, there are news reports on Gaza, but no one on the streets is talking about it. Life is the same here, shopping, work, dinner. Brush teeth, start again.
“Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both.” Benjamin Franklin








