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Marketing the New 'Dogs of War'
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Center For
Public Integrity
By Duncan Campbell
WASHINGTON, October 30, 2002 - The Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam have been fighting one of the world's longest
and bloodiest terrorist wars, but July 24, 2001, marked
their most devastating attack in 18 years of fighting
against the Sri Lankan government. In virtually destroying
Bandaranaike International Airport in the capital of
Colombo, the Tamil Tigers cut the country's only link to
the outside world.
Half of
the civilian fleet of Sri Lankan Airlines, the national
carrier, was destroyed. The Sri Lankan Air Force lost
almost a third of its assets ’Äì Russian transport
helicopters and fighters, Israeli interceptors, and
Chinese trainers. The cost of the attack was estimated to
exceed $500 million. Tourism vanished overnight, trade
collapsed, and Sri Lanka's economy slumped.
The long-term impact of the Tigers' attack was magnified
by the conduct of the City of London, the financial nerve
center of the United Kingdom. Brokers at the Lloyd's of
London insurance market imposed massive war risk
surcharges on shipping to Sri Lanka. The
shipping-dependent nation suddenly faced the loss of trade
and even essential food imports. With insurance surcharges
rising to a multiple of freight rates, costlier air
transport replaced surface ships. At a stroke, the country
faced rampant hyperinflation and economic collapse.
The terrorist Tigers had struck the blow, but it was the
London financiers whose conduct now threatened national
survival. Sri Lanka's High Commissioner in London, Mangala
Moonasinghe, was instructed to open negotiations, not with
the Tamil Tigers, but with the City's brokers.
Eight
Sri Lankan government negotiators
flew to London on Aug. 17, 2001, to meet with Lloyd's
underwriters and their War Risks Committee. After three
days of talks, the Lloyds team set up a "London Market Sri
Lankan War Facility." The rates for ships sailing to Sri
Lanka would still be high, despite the Sri Lankans
agreement to pay, within seven days, a bond of $50 million
against any claims that might be lodged for damage to
vessels heading for or in Sri Lankan waters. The Sri
Lankan government was also required to commission a full
security review of its airport and seaports and to
implement any recommendations.
Tim Spicer (Reuters)
The London brokers recommended that the Sri Lankan
government hire a British-based company, Trident Maritime,
to carry out the
security survey,
in conjunction with another security consultancy, Rubicon.
In Trident, the Sri Lankans had hired Tim Spicer, a man
simultaneously at the center of a number of scandals
provoked by his global mercenary activities and of an
effort to legitimize the status and sanitize the image of
the country's "dogs of war" ’Äì soldiers of fortune who
have mounted coups, guarded British, U.S. and Arabian
dignitaries and ambassadors, engaged in civil wars, and
run sabotage and terror activities from behind hostile
lines. From the Contra campaign in Nicaragua to organizing
and training Afghan or Kosovar insurgents, British
mercenary operators have been employed by the CIA, the
Drug Enforcement Agency and the U.S. State Department, as
well as by Britain's own Secret Intelligence Service
(SIS). (See Sidebar, "Cozy,
Clubby and Covert")
After decades of controversial intervention in the
developing world, these private military enterprises are
seeking legal recognition and standing. They wish for
re-branding as peacekeepers and conflict resolvers.
Politicians in the West seem quickly to have accepted a
convenient if illusory dichotomy just as it has been
handed to them ’Äì contrasting the old-style (and bad)
"dogs of war" with the new-style (and good) private
military companies, or PMCs, of the 1990s and beyond.
Although the acronym is now nearly universal, PMC (in the
sense of mercenaries) was unheard of in the English
language prior to late 1995. The new label has done much
to improve the image of private soldiers, if little to
affect the reality of their activities. The term has
commonly been used to refer to Executive Outcomes and
Sandline International, two names used by a single group
of British and South African businessmen and ex-military
officers. Their interventions in Angola, Sierra Leone and
Papua New Guinea during the mid 1990s aroused repeated
concern, setting off the current debates on "PMCs." The
most prominent figure from those debates was Spicer, a
50-year-old ex-British army officer who signed up as a
mercenary in 1996. Although his profile is lower now,
Spicer's adventures with Sandline resulted in police and
customs investigations, raids on his home and offices,
arrest, incarceration and deportation.
Spicer's exploits in Papua New Guinea in 1997 and Sierra
Leone in 1998 left a trail of judicial, government and
parliamentary inquiries in their wake, not to mention the
collapse of one government in Papua New Guinea. In 1997,
the foreign secretary of the newly elected British
government, Robin Cook, proclaimed that Britain would
henceforward pursue a novel "ethical foreign policy," in
which humanitarian, environmental and moral considerations
would be as important as traditional national interests.
Spicer and his men quickly made Cook's "ethical foreign
policy" a laughing stock.
British audiences saw pictures of a Royal Navy ship
helping service a Russian-made helicopter on behalf of
Spicer's mercenary force. And, in February 1999, a
scathing parliamentary report found that Foreign Office
officials and diplomats had withheld information from the
government about Sandline's plans to export arms to Sierra
Leone in violation of United Nations sanctions. Until the
row broke out, Spicer and his men from Sandline had been
attempting to restore the government of ousted President
Ahmad Tejan Kabbah ’Äì and in so doing to win access to
diamond and mineral concessions for his businessmen
backers.
Cook, the British foreign secretary, faced calls for his
resignation, but managed to hang on to his job until being
demoted in a later cabinet shuffle. In Papua New Guinea
the year before, Spicer's intervention had already had
more serious consequences. He had arrived on the islands
with 70 hired guns, mainly South Africans. They were there
to attack rebels on the detached island of Bougainville,
home to the world's largest and must lucrative copper
mine, recover it and restore it to operation.
His arrival provoked riots. The army rebelled and staged
a coup. Spicer became the new military target. He was
arrested, handcuffed, jailed and interrogated. At one
point, he thought he was about to be summarily executed.
Police found he was carrying $400,000 in cash. Army chiefs
accused his company, Sandline, of having made corrupt
payments through a Swiss bank account to Mathias Ijape,
then the defense minister of Papua New Guinea. In the wake
of the scandal, the country's prime minister, Julian Chan,
resigned, and his government collapsed.
Although he agreed to be interviewed for this report,
Spicer refused to discuss his operations for Sandline
International. He had not complained, he said, about
British newspaper reports that had accused him and
Sandline of improper financial conduct, including bribing
government ministers. But "we thought about it," he said.
His operations accomplished no good purpose. The
countries where Spicer and his Sandline and Executive
Outcomes colleagues intervened ’Äì particularly Angola and
Sierra Leone ’Äì remain poor, unstable and underdeveloped,
despite having rich resources which the private soldiers
had sought to secure for the benefit of their mercantile
patrons.
Spicer's short career with Sandline International ended
late in 1999 and, having moved into other ventures, he is
a relatively minor player in the rapidly expanding private
military and security business. But he may have one
decisive victory to his credit ’Äì he was the public face
of a campaign that sold political elites and the media on
the concept of the "private military company."
In 2002, Spicer pronounced his creed ’Äì that the world
was waiting for "the speed and flexibility with which they
[PMCs] can deploy, rather than wait for the U.N. to form a
force." He went further still, arguing that PMCs were
ideal vehicles to aid the Northern Alliance forces that
fought against the Taliban or the Iraqi resistance to
Saddam Hussein. He even suggested that it might be in the
international community's interest if PMCs were hired to
intervene in long-running conflicts in Sudan or topple
leaders like Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe. In short, he
proposed the overt shifting of significant foreign policy
objectives to mercenary companies ’Äì an idea that would
have been met with derision only a few years before ’Äì
yet he received a respectful hearing.
Joining the secret world
Spicer was never fully signed up to the old-boys
network that clusters in the confines of the Special
Forces Club ’Äì an elite private social organization in
central London whose membership is limited to serving and
former members of the Special Forces and intelligence
services from Britain, the United States and selected
Allies. He would not say whether he had been refused
membership. "I don't really discuss my personal life at
all," he responded.
In 1970, when he was 18, Spicer was in the United States,
bumming around Oklahoma, "fashionably anti-war" in long
hair and wearing a shirt made from the North Vietnamese
flag, as he described himself in his autobiography. He
later went home to England, abandoned attempts to get into
a university, started a college law course, and took his
first steps into the secret world, signing up as a
volunteer trooper with 21 Special Air Service (SAS).
The Special Air Service regiment, the brainchild of Col.
Sir David Stirling, was created to carry out commando
raids in World War II. The SAS regiment was disbanded
after the war, but then reborn after assiduous lobbying by
Stirling. The formal, full-time regiment is known as 22
SAS; Spicer volunteered for one of the two part-time
reserve "territorial" SAS regiments Britain maintains, 21
SAS. Its members work most of the year in civilian jobs.
The two reserve regiments, especially the Chelsea-based 21
SAS, have frequently served as a formal and informal
recruiting center for mercenary operations, both
officially sanctioned (but deniable) and otherwise.
Members of the volunteer SAS units may even be permitted
to join the so-called "R" (reserve) squadron of 22 SAS,
and to take part in active military operations while
holding down their civilian jobs.
Spicer flunked the law course, but was able to join 21
SAS on an exercise in Germany. In 1974, after failing to
pass the British Army officer's selection board, he
contemplated trying to enter the SAS world sideways by
enlisting for a still-secret operation against rebels in
Dhofar, Oman. The SAS had supported and protected Sultan
Qaboos, the ruler of Oman, after he mounted a coup in 1970
to depose his father. The Dhofar operation involved a
continual stream of British Army officers, especially from
the SAS, swapping in and out of their British uniforms to
take the Sultan's pay and exercise his command.
However, his military ambitions remained frustrated.
Spicer's 1999 autobiography describes how he spent the
1970s and 1980s far from involvement with the secret world
of special operations that he apparently desired to join.
In 1975, after passing the British officer's entry course
on his second attempt, he was posted to train at Britain's
equivalent of West Point, the Sandhurst Royal Military
Academy. After six months there, he reached the pinnacle
of an otherwise unremarkable 18-year military career,
winning the Academy's Sword of Honour for best cadet. He
was commissioned into the Scots Guards, an elite regiment
which shared the ceremonial duty of guarding the Queen in
London. But it was not until the last years of his
military career, which ended in 1995, that he was able to
get into the Special Forces world, concluding his military
career by working for a series of Special Forces
commanders.
In 1978, Peter de la Billiere, then a brigadier, became
director of the U.K. Special Forces. De la Billiere was
responsible for overseeing the SAS's most famous
operations of the decade, among them the recovery of
hostages from the Iranian Embassy siege in 1980, and for
commanding Special Forces operations in the 1982 war with
Argentina to recover the Falkland Islands. In 1990-1991,
as general, he commanded British forces in the Gulf War
against Iraq.
In April 1992, de la Billiere returned to London and
retired from his military career. He immediately took up a
new post as the British government's "Middle East
adviser." The job involved selling military services to
and obtaining or retaining British bridgeheads in the
Gulf. Spicer, who had spent the Gulf War as a lecturer at
the British Army's staff college, heard that de la
Billiere would need a military assistant. He applied for
and got the job, and finally entered the secret world of
the Special Forces. De la Billiere's office was in the
Duke of York's headquarters off of Sloane Square in
London, where the offices of the directorate of Special
Forces were also located. Soon after joining de la
Billiere, Spicer contacted fellow ex-Scots Guards officer
Simon Mann and "co-opted" him into the operation,
according to Spicer's autobiography. Mann, an
anti-terrorism and computer specialist, who had left the
SAS in 1985, later went on to found Executive Outcomes in
the United Kingdom in 1993.
According to Spicer, de la Billiere and Mann were
employed "as liaison with the rulers of the Gulf States."
According to a business associate of Mann's at the time,
who spoke on condition of anonymity, this story was
"absurd." British ambassadors were hired to do that job,
and given the staff and resources to do so. Mann's "real
job," according to the associate, was "to help Peter de la
Billiere market the training services of 22 SAS" and thus
gain new clients for Britain's official mercenaries.
Meanwhile, according to his autobiography, Spicer moved
"down the corridor" to work directly for the Director of
Special Forces on "highly classified" projects. Mann did
not comment on the nature of his work with de la Billiere.
The government's motive in employing de la Billiere and
Mann was not necessarily or even primarily to earn money.
By placing British appointees in key security or defense
posts, Britain could gain information, win influence,
influence policy, recruit informants and even agents. In
these sensitive operations, the enemy was not necessarily
the likes of Saddam Hussein, but rather political and
commercial rivals including France and the United States.
Toward the end of Spicer's stint in the Special Forces
directorate, Mann offered him a military contract in
Angola, which Spicer declined. Instead, he continued his
military career until early 1995, finally being employed
as spokesman for former SAS commander Gen. Michael Rose,
then head of the U.N. protection force in Bosnia.
Disappointed not to have been put in line for senior
military staff jobs, Spicer retired from the military and
followed de la Billiere, who had joined the merchant bank
Foreign and Colonial, in the City of London. But Spicer
was soon ill at ease with the new job. What happened next
was the train of events that Spicer calls "this PMC
project."
Unsettling outcomes
Like the offer of a military contract in Angola, the "PMC
project" was offered to Spicer by his former Scots Guard
colleague, Simon Mann. Mann was the scion of a wealthy
brewing family, and the fifth generation in his family to
attend Britain's top private school, Eton College. His
upbringing put him at the center of the British
establishment. He could not have been better endowed with
connections in the military, diplomatic, intelligence and
financial world.
After leaving the SAS in 1985, Mann's first commercial
venture was not as a mercenary, but in the new field of
computer security. Mann joined forces with a former
insurance broker who had pioneered computer insurance and
had been a manager for Control Risks, a large and
reputable risk assessment consultancy that was founded by
ex-SAS officers. They raised finance and founded a company
called Data Integrity. Mann's role was to sell new lines
of computer insurance policies against accidents and
hackers. The company did well, but not well enough for the
venture capitalists who had funded it. It began to drift,
and Mann began to lose interest.
As the company wound down during 1990, Mann's old-boy
network had put him in touch with oil entrepreneur Anthony
Buckingham. Buckingham, also ex-military, has been
described in some press accounts as a former member of
Britain's naval special forces, the Special Boat Service,
although the description has never been confirmed. After
working in the North Sea oil industry as a diver,
Buckingham moved into the oil industry, working initially
with Ranger Oil of Canada.
Plaza building at 535 King's Road (D. Campbell)
Buckingham later founded his own company, Heritage Oil,
which he ran from the modern, glass-fronted "Plaza"
building at 535 King's Road, Chelsea. A first floor suite
in the building provided offices for Buckingham's
management company, "Plaza 107" ’Äì named for the number
of his rented suite, 1.07. Inside, a single receptionist
handled incoming calls to more than 18 different
companies. From the Plaza suite, Buckingham, Mann and
others ran businesses that included oil, gold and diamond
mining, a chartered accountancy practice, and offshore
financial management services. To this, they would add
military ground and aviation companies. Buckingham could
not be reached for comment.
In May 1993, UNITA rebels opposing the Angolan government
of President Jose Eduardo dos Santos had seized Heritage's
oil installations in Soyo and shut down the oilfield.
After losing control of Soyo, the Angolan government asked
for more mercenary help. Their request was directed to
Ranger Oil, which ran Angola's offshore oilfields. The
approach led Buckingham to hire what had been up to that
time an exclusively South African mercenary group,
Executive Outcomes.
According to a classified 1995
British Defense Intelligence Staff (DIS) report,
Ranger then gave Buckingham and Mann a $30 million
contract to set up a defense force. On Sept. 7, 1993,
according to the intelligence report, Mann and Buckingham
registered Executive Outcomes as a U.K. company to run the
joint venture with the South African EO. The British
intelligence report on Executive Outcomes is classified
"Secret U.K. Eyes Alpha," a special security designation
indicating that it should not be given to or seen by U.S.
or any other friendly intelligence agencies. Sections of
the report are based on South African intelligence service
reports of the same era, which could have been obtained
through bilateral exchange or through secret operations.
The report stated that South African intelligence
suggested "so successful has EO [Executive Outcomes]
proved itself to be, the OAU [Organization of African
Unity] may be forced to ’Ķ perhaps offer EO a contract
for the management of peace-keeping continent-wide."
British intelligence's assessment of the situation also
described the rise of Executive Outcome's "widespread
activities" as a "cause for concern."
Information about the real owners of Executive Outcomes
(U.K.) does not appear on British company records.
According to these public records, the owners and
directors of EO were Eeben Barlow and his wife Sue. The
names of Buckingham and Mann are not listed. Barlow was a
former officer of the South African Defense Forces (SADF),
who helped found the original South African Executive
Outcomes in 1989. Barlow and his wife gave an address in
Alton, Hampshire, England. But Barlow's real location was
Pretoria from where, together with fellow ex-SADF officer
Lafras Luitingh, he directed his company's forces in their
battle against UNITA. He recruited 500 men, "mostly
ex-members of the SADF special forces," according to the
intelligence report. At least 24 SADF officers were also
persuaded to resign and join Executive Outcomes. Troops
were ferried to Angola from a small airport near
Johannesburg.
Eeben Barlow (Reuters)
Although the company's primary interests were in Angola
and Sierra Leone, the British Defense Intelligence Staff
suggested that Executive Outcomes also had "involvement,"
or at least had sought contracts, widely throughout the
continent, including in Zambia, Rwanda, Burundi and Zaire.
It also noted the new modus operandi, which Buckingham and
Mann had introduced on joining forces with EO. "It has
secured by military means key economic installations
(diamonds, oil and other mineral resources) [and] ’Ķ
secured for itself substantial profits and
disproportionate regional influence."
"It appears that the company and its associates are able
to barter their services for a large share of an employing
nation's natural resources and commodities," the report
said, concluding that, "On present showing, EO will become
ever richer and more potent, capable of exercising real
power even to the extent of keeping military regimes in
being ’Ķ. [I]ts influence in sub-Saharan Africa could
become crucial."
Like Executive Outcomes, the entrepreneurial Buckingham
had been gaining influence, but his area of interest was
the United Kingdom. He added corporate financial and
lobbying expertise to Plaza 107, which he had started in
1994. An experienced financier, Michael Grunberg, resigned
his partnership in a prominent management accountancy firm
and joined Buckingham's King's Road-based network. The
entrepreneur also persuaded the leader of Britain's
Liberal Party, David Steel, to become a director of
Heritage Oil and Gas. The one-time marine and diver ’Äì
the sort of man whom colleagues considered as quite ready
to lift his fists for a pub brawl ’Äì was gradually
securing influence and access at every level of the
British establishment that counts.
Buckingham also recruited a former British secret service
"friend" ’Äì that is, a former SIS intelligence officer
’Äì to support his activities that could embarrass those
establishment connections. Rupert Bowen, whose overt
career as a British diplomat in Europe and Namibia was
later identified as cover for Secret Intelligence Service
work, left his post in Namibia and joined Buckingham's
growing oil and military empire at the start of 1994.
Bowen at first worked alongside a public relations
company, GJW Government Relations, which supported
Buckingham's activities, and later took a post with his
Branch Energy group. He did not officially take part in EO
operations. GJW Government Relations denied that Bowen had
ever been an employee, but conceded that their founder
director Andrew Gifford was also at that time a director
of Buckingham's Heritage Oil. Bowen could not be reached
for comment.
In March 1995, Buckingham traveled to Baghdad to attend a
meeting with Safa Hadi Jawad, Iraq's oil minister. The
Iraqi government was seeking foreign partners to invest in
its oil industry once sanctions were lifted. They were
offering the inducement of stakes in some of the world's
biggest oil fields. Among the 200 oil executives who
smelled fresh money in the Baghdad air, there was no one
from the United States or the United Kingdom ’Äì except
Tony Buckingham. On their journey across the lobby of the
Al Rasheed Hotel, they tramped over a floor mosaic
depicting a snarling, feral image of former President
George Bush. Some stopped for photographs.
By 1995, the presence of the South African mercenaries in
Angola had made a significant impact on the war between
government and UNITA forces. Soyo and its oil
installations were recovered, and a peace protocol
negotiated. Meanwhile, Buckingham and Executive Outcomes
were moving in on Sierra Leone. In May 1995, the Freetown
government confidentially advised the British and American
ambassadors that the country had contracted for South
African military assistance. Subsequently, Bowen disclosed
that the government was hiring Executive Outcomes. Thus
began a two-year Executive Outcomes operation to "pacify"
Sierra Leone, which ended in February 1997.
Selling soldiers of fortune
The skies around Executive Outcomes had been darkening
for some time. Though buoyant with its military and
financial success, the company had engendered growing
hostility from South Africa's new government of national
unity and in the OAU. Facing international pressure,
President Nelson Mandela ordered the enterprise shut down.
Anti-mercenary laws were passed in South Africa in 1998.
Until 1995, there was no public awareness in Britain of
the range of Buckingham's business activities and methods,
or that he had arranged and helped finance Executive
Outcomes in Angola. Then a report in Britain's Observer
newspaper in September 1995 highlighted the links
between EO and Buckingham and pointed out that British
liberal politician David Steel was a non-executive
director of Buckingham's oil company. The event was the
start of trouble and publicity for the Heritage
principals, Simon Mann and Tony Buckingham. Buckingham's
deal with EO began to emerge, eventually prompting Steel
to resign from Heritage. Mann phoned Spicer, and asked him
to come to a meeting with him and Buckingham.
Italian restaurantLa Famiglia (D. Campbell)
In October 1996, the three men met for lunch in an
Italian restaurant just off King's Road in Chelsea.
According to Spicer, Buckingham and Mann told him that
they "felt it would be better to make a fresh start" in
the military business. "It was becoming clear that EO ’Ķ
carried a lot of political baggage," Spicer observed.
According to his autobiography, Spicer was asked to
consider taking on the project. "Tony asked me if I would
be interested in setting up the sort of organization that
has now become known as a private military company."
Buckingham and Mann's plan, as portrayed by Spicer in his
autobiography, was for Executive Outcomes was to be
rebranded, restyled, sanitized and relaunched. He does not
say explicitly that the Chelsea meeting planned to
manipulate public and political opinion by launching the
PMC concept. However, an exhaustive search of English
language publications shows that the phrase was never used
in the context of mercenary operations (and hardly used at
all) until three weeks after the King's Road lunch. Then,
after four EO soldiers were captured in Northern Angola by
UNITA forces in November 1995, an Agence France Press
report described them as working for the "private military
company Executive Outcomes."
As its activities became increasingly controversial in
the mid 1990s, EO blended into Sandline International. The
companies operated from the same glitzy, glass-fronted
offices Buckingham maintained in King's Road, Chelsea. The
military companies operated interchangeably, within the
premises operated by Heritage Oil and Gas, and Branch
Energy, the oil and mineral companies run by Buckingham.
The words "private military company" did not appear in
English language publications again until 1997, after
Spicer and Buckingham had begun a new contract to support
the Papua New Guinea government to fight dissidents on the
island of Bougainville and to re-open a lucrative copper
mine. The operation was not an auspicious start for the
re-branding operation.
Tim Spicer leaving court in Papua new Guinea
(Reuters)
Facing popular and local military hostility to the
operation, Spicer and his South African mercenary force
were arrested and jailed soon after they arrived. The
Royal Australian Air Force intercepted and grounded an
Antonov freighter intended by Sandline to ship helicopters
and weapons to the Sandline troops. Spicer was initially
arrested for illegally importing arms, and was detained on
charges of possessing an unlicensed pistol and 40 rounds
of ammunition. The charges were set aside after he agreed
to face questioning by a government commission of enquiry.
He was freed on March 27, 1997, to return to the United
Kingdom.
Turning to PR professionals
Faced with another imminent downturn in their image in
the wake of the debacle in Papua New Guinea, Buckingham
and his partners turned to a leading London public
relations consultant, Sara Pearson. Pearson, 49, runs Spa
Way, a public relations agency for upmarket British retail
and food stores. Her other clients include dental clinics,
fresh breath companies and hair stylists. She claims that
Spa Way is the only public relations consultancy in
Britain to "guarantee [the] pre-determined media coverage"
it will deliver, including "key messages" and angles that
journalists will take. If the tally of favorable items
does not reach the guaranteed level, the customer gets a
refund, Pearson says, noting by contrast that, "PR has, in
the past, been very wishy-washy and girly."
Pearson said that she was called in at the last moment to
assist Sandline International in "crisis management."
Spicer was already airborne, on a plane back home to
London. "I was approached by Michael Grunberg and asked if
I would manage the homecoming of Spicer," she says. Her
advice was to limit Spicer's comments and exposure to the
press as much as possible.
Asked where the term PMC had come from, Pearson replied,
"I am not entirely sure. It started to creep into the
vocabulary’Ķ. At the very beginning, in the Papua New
Guinea incident it was still dogs of war.' Then it became
mercenaries' and then subsequent to the Sierra Leone
business the words private military company' crept into
the vernacular." She had not invented it herself.
Peace and conflict researcher Owen Greene of Bradford
University in the United Kingdom recalls the phrase
gradually entering the nongovernmental organization (NGO)
vocabulary around 1997, although he had no idea where it
had first been used. "People came up with this as a brand
new idea," he said. "It was trying to find a word that
gave them some respectability ’Äì a cleaner term."
It was a convenient term, Pearson agreed. "It certainly
took a lot of emotion out of the situation." "I like it,"
Grunberg told ICIJ. "It sums it up quite neatly."
When asked by ICIJ, both Spicer and Grunberg at first
disavowed inventing the term. Spicer then said, "To be
honest I don't really care who coined it. It either came
from somebody or it came from us. It's a good term. I'm
happy to take the credit if you want to say I invented it.
I'm not saying not invented here.'" Grunberg also said the
PMC term "didn't come from within our organization [Sandline],"
but then added, "You can put it down to me if you like’ĶI'd
like to stand up and take credit for it."
By 1997, the PMC term was being used in discussions
within the African NGO and aid community, but had not
achieved wide currency. It appeared again in press reports
of hearings before the South African Parliamentary Defense
Committee, in which Executive Outcomes' chief executive
Nick van den Bergh argued against Mandela's plan to
criminalize their activities. Despite these initiatives,
when the London International Institute of Strategic
Studies held a conference on "private armies and military
intervention" on March 28, 1998, most speakers ’Äì except
Spicer ’Äì mainly used the language of "mercenary
companies," "private armies," "military companies" or
"foreign soldiers."
If Spicer and Executive Outcomes do not admit that they
hoped to change the English language at their Chelsea
meeting and the IISS conference, the trail is nevertheless
clear from then on. To the surprise of many attendees,
Spicer turned up and spoke at the conference. The same
day,
Sandline International
published a four-page "white paper" titled "Private
Military Companies ’Äì Independent or Regulated." In May
1998, Spicer used the term extensively in an opinion
column that was published in Britain's Daily Telegraph
under the headline, "Why we can help where governments
fear to tread." He told readers that Sandline and its like
were "part of a wholly new military phenomenon," modern
professionals who might even hand out "promotional
literature."
If nothing else, Spicer possessed abundant chutzpah.
He was attempting to polish the image of mercenaries while
at the very nadir of his reputation. Five days after his
IISS speech, his Chelsea home and King's Road offices were
raided by British Customs agents, looking for evidence of
his prohibited arms shipments to Sierra Leone. Six days
later, a documentary aired by the British network Channel
4 launched a devastating attack on Spicer and Buckingham's
operations, providing a different take on the "wholly new
military phenomenon" of Sandline.
The documentary described the "new kind of mercenary" as
"an advanced army for commercial interests wanting to
exploit the world's mineral resources." The program
reported that "several of their engagements have been
notable for the indiscriminate nature of their attacks, in
which many civilians have been wounded and killed,"
concluding that after the mercenaries went home, the
countries they had helped remained unstable and often
bitterly divided ’Äì and "an awful lot poorer."
Three days after the documentary aired, Sandline launched
its Internet site. The site included a corporate profile
and the "white paper" on PMCs. Four months later, a second
Sandline "white paper" was published, entitled "Should the
Activities of Private Military Companies be Transparent?"
The image-changing campaign continued. The "white papers"
were mainly drafted by Grunberg, Sandline's financial
controller.
With Grunberg and Sandline still footing the bill,
Pearson and Spa Way hired a ghost writer and published a
Spicer book to help remake his image for the new
millennium. The 1999 book, An Unorthodox Soldier,
presented Spicer as the "modern, legitimate version of the
new mercenaries." The objective of the campaign of which
it was part was to obliterate the unsavory history of
Executive Outcomes and Sandline International, and to help
fight off the multiple British government and
parliamentary inquiries that were then underway,
investigating whether he had been given government
approval to break the law and breach the U.N. embargo on
arms shipments to Sierra Leone. "It was an opportunity to
marshal the facts," according to Pearson, "and to put his
[Spicer's] side of the story." The book sets out a now
familiar line ’Äì that PMCs were "corporate bodies
specialising in the provision of military skills to
legitimate governments."
In May 1997, Kabbah, the democratically elected president
of Sierra Leone, and his government were overthrown in a
violent coup. Sandline International shipped 35 tons of
Bulgarian-made AK47 rifles, a helicopter and provided
logistical advice to help restore Kabbah's government. The
scandal erupted in the spring of 1998, when British
newspapers published photographs showing engineers from a
Royal Navy frigate docked in the capital Freetown, helping
to service Sandline's Russian-made helicopter.
Spicer claimed that Foreign Office officials and defense
intelligence staff were aware of his dealings, and that he
was given a go-ahead by the British government for the
arms shipment. Cook, the foreign secretary, denied that he
or his colleagues gave official approval. In 1998, the
House of Commons foreign affairs select committee launched
an investigation, as did the British Customs and Excise
service. Eventually, the parliamentary inquiry concluded
that Peter Penfold, Britain's High Commissioner to Sierra
Leone, had given the illegal arms shipment "a degree of
approval." The affair ultimately cost Penfold his job, and
he was shifted sideways to the Department of International
Development. For his part, Penfold acknowledged that he
was aware of the shipment but did not know it was banned
under the U.N. sanctions.
During the controversy, Spicer circulated an open letter
to newspapers and members of Parliament, offering to open
a dialogue between Sandline and governments and NGOs. The
open letter presented Spicer's latest and most facile
semantic contrast ’Äì between old-style "mercenary bands"
and modern PMCs. "Just as with ape and man, both species
now co-habit the [international military] environment," he
wrote in February 1999. Two years later and after a string
of sympathetic articles in the U.K. press, the PMC concept
was so well established that it did not occur to the
British Foreign Office to use any other term in proposing
to regulate such companies.
The phrase took longer to take root in the United States.
Although Spicer had visited Virginia as early as June 1997
for a private symposium organized by the U.S. Defense
Intelligence Agency on the "Privatization of National
Security Functions in Sub Saharan Africa," in conjunction
with Military Professional Resources Inc., an American PMC,
and other U.S. corporations, the term was only to be
adopted in the United States nearly a year after it had
achieved general currency in Britain.
When the U.S. Army War College published a thoughtful
study of "The New Mercenaries and the Privatization of
Conflict" in summer 1999, the author, former U.S. Lt. Col.
Thomas K. Adams, paid no attention to Spicer's version of
political correctness. Mercenaries, he wrote, should be
called by their name ’Äì "individuals or organizations
that sell their military skills outside their country of
origin and as an entrepreneur rather than as a member of a
recognized military force."
The inquiries provoked by the Papua New Guinea and Sierra
Leone episodes ’Äì and the documents they uncovered ’Äì
showed decisively that Spicer's "wholly new military
phenomenon" had the resolutely traditional purpose of
securing access to Third World resources for first world
principals. What was new was the spin and the
self-confidence with which it was presented.
Internal Sandline documents that were made public were
inconsistent with statements Spicer made to judges,
journalists, the public and the British Parliament about
Sandline International, Executive Outcomes and their
operations. For example, although he claimed otherwise
during his public relations campaign to burnish his
industry's image, private correspondence to and from
Spicer showed that he was personally active in trying to
secure mining concessions for his principals as the price
of providing military support. As he put it in a May 1996
letter enticing Papua-New Guinea Defense Minister Mathias
Ijape with an offer to raise private finance for the
mission to put down local opposition in Bougainville,
"funds could come from private sources and it may be
possible to raise them against oil and mineral concessions
and production rights.
"Why not," he asked in the letter, "pay [for mercenaries]
by assigning [a] mine and making a top-up cash payment?"
Spicer refused to discuss individual letters he had
written but said, "I don't think there is anything wrong
in [governments] coming to a deal with someone who is
interested in minerals and that money being used for [PMC]
services."
Wherever Sandline troops headed, it was the natural
resources of the third world ’Äì whether diamonds, gold,
oil or copper ’Äì on which they set their sights.
Spicer's intervention in Sierra Leone was preceded by a
March 1997 offer to Canadian diamond businessman Rakesh
Saxena to plan a "mission" into Sierra Leone to secure
Saxena's diamond mines from local disruption "in an
effective timely manner with minimum collateral damage."
Saxena is currently detained in Canada, contesting
extradition proceedings to face trial for unrelated fraud
charges in Thailand.
Repackaging Spicer
After the 1997 Papua-New Guinea scandal and the 1998
Sierra Leone debacle, the reputation of Sandline went into
a nosedive. Spicer's response was to seek to re-brand
himself and his profession once again.
Spicer resigned from Sandline International at the end of
1999, but was back in the business within six months. A
week before the British-based Executive Outcomes dissolved
on May 16, 2000, Spicer created Crisis and Risk Management
Ltd. In April 2001, he changed its name to
Strategic Consulting International (SCI) Ltd.
He also launched a Sandline follow-on company, Sandline
Consultancy Ltd, believing that Sandline was a "good name"
with "brand recognition." But the company never did
business. The same year, he launched a third new venture,
Trident Maritime. Trident describes itself as "an
international maritime safety and security company," and
as a subsidiary of SCI.
London office of Trident (D. Campbell)
Announcing the launch of Trident to Britain's
Financial Times in March 2001, Spicer claimed that
Crisis and Risk Management Ltd. had already advised the
government of a developing country battling against a
rebel movement. Press reports later suggested that
Spicer's new job was in Nepal, training government troops
engaged against Maoist guerrillas operating in the
Himalayas. If true, it would be highly ironic since the
British army has employed Nepalese Ghurkhas ’Äì renowned
for the high quality of their combat skills ’Äì as part of
its formal military structure for 50 years. However, the
military attachˆ© at the Nepalese embassy in London, whom
the embassy identified only as Col. Rana, said, "We do not
know anything about that."
Strategic Consulting International is registered in
Britain at the suburban offices of the financial advisers
for Pearson's public relations agency, Spa Way. According
to the records, Spicer was not even a director of SCI;
instead, the company's only director was Pearson; its
secretary was David Hawkins, one of her financial
advisers. Soon after SCI was set up (under its original
name) on June 15, 2000, the new Sandline ’Äì Sandline
Consultancy Ltd. ’Äì was formed with the same directors at
the same address. Spicer and Pearson each owned shares in
SCI. The company's personnel and operations, however, are
as obscure as Sandline's.
Spicer's other new company, Trident, is less obscure,
listing him as a director and its operating address next
door to his home in Cheval Place, Kensington and Chelsea.
Spicer is listed as a director of Trident, together with
Gilmer Blankenship, a University of Maryland electrical
engineering professor. None of the three new companies
have as yet filed legally due accounts with Britain's
Companies House, a violation for which directors could
face criminal charges. The new Sandline Consultancy Ltd
has already been dissolved because of the violation.
Pearson told ICIJ that she agreed that the failure to
file company records in time had breached British law. She
also said that the shareholdings and directorships in SCI
were incorrectly registered. "It was a shock to discover
we hadn't properly organized [our company records]," she
said. Asked if papers would be filed, she said that
accounts for the two remaining companies are "very
imminent." But she refused to say what financial revenue
figures would be released.
Shortly after ICIJ interviewed Pearson, Spicer's PMC
group underwent significant changes. Pearson resigned as a
director of both companies and transferred her
shareholdings to Spicer, leaving him as the sole director.
Spicer claimed in an Oct. 8, 2002, interview that his
annual accounts for SCI, which had been due in February
2002, were filed. "If they are due, they've been filed,"
he said. He claimed that SCI had 12 full-time employees
engaged in government or defense work around the world,
and had reported revenues of "one to two million [pounds;
about U.S. $1.6 million to $3.3 million]." In fact, no
accounts have been filed since the company started up two
and half years ago.
Contacted by ICIJ, Hawkins, the secretary for SCI, said
he was unable to explain why the filings were late. "I am
in no way involved in the day-to-day running of the
company's affairs," he wrote. "I am not responsible for
the filing of the company accounts which is the
responsibility of the directors, and [I] have not received
any communications regarding the outstanding accounts."
Ivan Sopher, the company's accountant, did not respond to
a request for comment.
The business school PMC
Trident Maritime, which specialized in maritime risk
assessment, claimed on its Web site to have offices and a
"command center" in Washington, with plans for a "global
operational presence" through command centers in London
and Singapore. The company specializes in maritime risk
assessment. Trident's Web site offers an impressive range
of sophisticated and customized maritime safety and
security packages labeled Nautilus, Poseidon, Juno, and
Neptune, all designed to curb and counter piracy. Each
combines risk assessment and insurance policies with
electronic tracking and security systems provided by
another Maryland-based corporation, Techno-Sciences Inc.,
run by Blankenship.
Scratch the surface of Trident's publicity, however, and
a less convincing picture emerges. Spicer, its managing
director and chief executive officer, has no naval or
maritime experience or qualifications. Trident's vice
president of marketing ’Äì according to a personnel list
published by Trident ’Äì is Pearson, Spicer's public
relations adviser.
Pearson also has not served in the Royal Navy or any
other maritime organization. Trident's vice president of
business development, Jared Feit, graduated from the
University of Maryland with a business undergraduate
degree in 2001. Feit and the Trident team, including
Spicer, competed in the university's March 2002 "Best
Business Plan" award. Spicer "came to the meeting and
stood on the stage, but he didn't do anything," according
to Blankenship. "We lost ’Äì that was really depressing."
To judge from the University of Maryland presentation of
its business, Trident might appear to be little more than
an academic exercise devised by Blankenship and his
students. Asked if the Maryland plan was the actual
business plan for Trident, Pearson said, "No, no. We never
saw it. It was something that [Blankenship] was doing with
some students."
Blankenship confirmed the comment about the business
plan. "I didn't pay attention to it," he explained. The
names of the Trident "vice presidents" presented with
Spicer and Pearson were "all [students] that Jared put on
the form."
But beneath the graduate students and the public
relations professional, Trident has yet another, very
different cast of characters ’Äì the traditional personnel
and patterns of the underworld of British intelligence,
special forces, and covert operations, linked by an
umbilical cord to the clubby, wealthy world of the
entrepreneurs, bankers and brokers of the City of London,
the traditional milieu of mercenary and mercantile
comrades in arms.
In 2001, after the Tamil Tiger terrorist attacks nearly
destroyed the Bandaranaike International Airport in
Colombo, underwriters for Lloyd's of London recommended
that Sri Lankan government hire Trident to conduct a full
security review of its airport and seaports, and implement
its recommendations. It was one of only two contracts that
Trident won, according to Blankenship. Spicer's proposal
for the security survey, submitted to Colombo in August
2001, showed what his end of Trident consisted of.
Excluding Spicer and a professional photographer, the
majority of the 15 names on his personnel list were
retired British Special Forces and intelligence officers.
The most prominent among them was Harry Ditmus, described
as the British government's "former co-ordinator of
transport security." A fuller profile would have
identified "Hal" Doyne-Ditmus, CB (Commander of the Bath)
as a senior career intelligence officer with Britain's
ultra-secretive internal Security Service, conventionally
known as MI5. After serving as assistant director of MI5,
Doyne-Ditmus was posted to Belfast, Northern Ireland in
the mid 1980s to serve as the U.K. government's director
and coordinator of intelligence at the height of its
20-year battle with the Irish Republican Army.
Two were specifically identified as covert intelligence
operators: John Wilson, QGM (Queen's Gallantry Medal), as
a "methods of entry expert" and Tom Lockhart, QGM, QCVS
(Queens Commendation for Valuable Service) as a "U.K.
Special Forces surveillance and technical surveillance
expert." Four of the team were described as having had
more than 30 years service with Special Forces.
Also on Spicer's list was Mike Coldrick, a highly
decorated army and police bomb disposal expert, and a
one-time official of the Special Forces Club, the
exclusive private club for British and Allied intelligence
and special forces operatives and veterans. The names,
said Spicer, were drawn from his database run by SCI. They
were "a network of ’Ķ. people who are recommended by word
of mouth."
"You tend to know who's who," he said, "there is an
informal network of people who know each other and have
worked with you [or] have served together in the armed
forces." The Trident list did not include students or
staff from the University of Maryland.
After an initial survey of Sri Lankan ports in 2001,
Spicer and members of his Trident team returned to Colombo
on Jan. 21, 2002, to check on security enhancements ’Äì
part of a long-term program aimed at "gradually phasing
out the war risk premium." Although the Sri Lankan
government seemed unaware of his checkered past, British
diplomats had not forgotten that his Sierra Leone
sanctions-busting episode had cost Penfold, the British
representative to Sierra Leone, his career.
Coincidentally, as Spicer arrived that January Monday
morning, a British diplomatic party was also present at
the airport to meet a visiting official. Spicer appeared
embarrassed. According to one of the British officials,
who spoke on condition of anonymity, Spicer "hid behind a
pillar" in the forlorn hope of not being seen.
Six weeks later, Spicer seemed less reticent when he
spoke to reporters for Lloyd's List, the daily newspaper
of the insurance industry. The paper was told that the
London War Risks Committee were "set to lift a war-risk
surcharge on vessels trading to Sri Lanka, following a
security audit of the country's ports by a leading British
private military company ’Ķ the new measures to ensure
port and airport safety have been drawn up by security
firm Trident, led by Lt. Col. Tim Spicer, the man at the
center of the so-called arms to Africa' affair. ’Ķ
"Lt. Col. Spicer said the review, which involved the
efforts of about 20 people, took several months to
complete and act upon, although the work was delayed by a
general election and subsequent change of government," the
paper reported.
"I would say (Sri Lanka) is now as safe as anywhere in
the region, and safer than some," Spicer boasted to the
paper.
The Spicer-inspired report neglected to mention that in
late in February 2002, a Norwegian-led peace initiative
had resulted in the first ceasefire in eight years between
the Tamil Tigers and the Colombo government. On March 1,
2002, Sri Lanka's prime minister told a press conference
that the ceasefire had led Lloyd's to agree to drop the
surcharges.
Out in the open
The press release and onboard PR adviser have become
tools of the PMCs, as have public relations generally.
SCI, Trident and Sandline, like many of their U.S. and
British counterparts, no longer operate in total darkness.
Each company has established elaborate, even flashy
Internet sites. The sites are long on capabilities and
moral principles, short on details of their failed
operations. Sandline International's Web site stipulates
"the company only accepts projects which ’Ķ would improve
the state of security, stability and general conditions in
client countries." To this end, Sandline added, "the
company will only undertake projects which are for
internationally recognised governments" ’Äì governments
that are "preferably democratically elected."
Prospective clients are told in brochures and
presentations that "Sandline policy is to only work with
internationally recognised governments or legitimate
international bodies such as the U.N." This was a key
"operating principle" for the new age mercenaries. In an
article for Britain's Daily Telegraph in May 1998 Spicer
wrote, "At Sandline, we maintain a strict, self-imposed
code of conduct. We will only work for legitimate
governments, those recognised by the U.N. We then apply
our own moral template."
The template was firm. "The real problem comes when you
get to a country where the insurgents are in the right. We
can't work for them because if we did we would be helping
to overthrow recognized governments," he wrote.
Spicer's position appears now to have changed. On
publicizing his new companies in 2001, Spicer told the
Financial Times that SCI "would look carefully on a
case-by-case basis at working for liberation movements in
overseas countries," the paper reported. Asked at a
conference in 2002 on "Europe and America ’Äì a New
Strategic Partnership ’Äì Future Defense and Industrial
Relations," sponsored by the prestigious Royal Institute
of International Affairs, how he would resolve his
contradictory pronouncements, Spicer replied:
"I don't think anyone would object if a private military
company, American, British or whatever ’Äì was to become
involved at the behest of the international community with
the Iraqi resistance. I don't think people would have
objected if a PMC was working with the Northern Alliance.
Other countries, it's more complicated. Sudan is a
complicated issue. I suppose the question of Zimbabwe has
been raised, but it's not at that stage yet. So I would
duck that particular question at the moment."
Asked how he reconciled this with his 1998 position that
he could not work for a resistance movement even in "a
country where the insurgents are in the right," Spicer did
not answer.
Plainly, there was business to be had in supporting the
right sort of rebels, as seen from Washington or London.
Other British companies employing former SAS members were
hired in Afghanistan to assist the mujaheedin in the
1980s, and in the 1990s were contracted to train members
of the Kosovo Liberation Army, which opposed Serbian
forces in the troubled Yugoslav province of Kosovo.
Spicer's post-Sierra Leone public relations campaign has
also loudly beat the drum for "total transparency" of
mercenary companies, in the hope of seeing the United
Kingdom and Europe introduce licensing regimes that might
allow them official recognition. Spicer told the Financial
Times in 2001 that SCI was to be a different sort of
business. "One that is totally transparent, registered in
the U.K. with nothing to hide overseas."
But Spicer's commitment to "total transparency" is
unconvincing. During the Papua New Guinea judicial inquiry
into the Bougainville affair, for example, Judge Warwick
Andrew commented that Spicer's claim that Sandline
Holdings, set up for the Papua New Guinea operation, was
entirely separate from Executive Outcomes "cannot be true,
but the exact nature of their relationship seems clouded
behind a web of interlocking companies whose ownership is
difficult to trace." Further, Andrew made no distinction
between the South African and British incarnations of
Executive Outcomes.
From the beginning, Spicer offered inaccurate statements
about what Sandline was, who had created and backed it,
and whether it was linked to Executive Outcomes. He told
journalists, judges and parliamentarians that "we [Sandline
and Executive Outcomes] are completely separate
organizations who operate our own businesses ’Ķ We don't
have a corporate relationship." He and Buckingham made
similar statements when asked about the links between the
mercenary companies and the associated Heritage Oil,
Branch Energy and DiamondWorks companies, in all of which
Buckingham has a substantial interest. He told the British
parliamentary inquiry that he didn't know who owned the
company (Sandline International) for which he was prepared
to risk his life.
Andrew dismissed some statements by Spicer as evasions.
"The controllers of Sandline International are obviously
Mr. Buckingham, Mr. Grunberg" ’Äì a director, as is
Buckingham, of Canadian company DiamondWorks ’Äì "and at
least to some extent Mr. Spicer. There is a strong
inference that Sandline Holdings Limited may be something
of a joint venture between the interests of Mr. Buckingham
and the interests of Mr. Barlow and Executive Outcomes."
Internal documents from the King's Road offices and
documents inspected during inquiries into Sandline
confirmed the judge's observations. A
July 1996 memo
circulated inside King's Road about a BBC news broadcast
on Sierra Leone referred to "SL/EO" as a single entity.
The note was sent to Buckingham, Mann, Spicer and others,
on the notepaper of Buckingham's umbrella company, Plaza
107. An
August 1996 letter
sent by Spicer to Rilwanu Lukamn, the general secretary of
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, records
a meeting with Spicer accompanied by "my colleagues from
Heritage Oil." A brochure accompanying the letter
identified Sandline as "part of a group of companies which
includes Heritage Oil and Gas and Branch Minerals."
A
November 1996 memorandum
from Buckingham announced the appointment of retired U.S.
Special Forces Col. Bernie McCabe as director for the
Americas. His task was "to develop Sandline business, and
exploit opportunities for other group companies where
appropriate in North, Central, and South America. He is
also to develop our image/contacts with U.S. government
agencies." The memorandum was copied to Spicer, Mann and
Grunberg of Sandline, and also to Barlow, Luitingh and van
den Bergh, the South African contingent of Executive
Outcomes.
Documents found by the Papua New Guinea commission of
inquiry unearthed a similar pattern. The commission
located a Hong Kong bank account in the name of Sandline
Holdings. The signatories were Mann, Buckingham, Luitingh
and Barlow.
Sandline International still exists, its Web site was
updated as recently as August 2002 with new information
and reports on the campaign to license PMCs. Buckingham
has moved his network to new offices a short distance away
at Harbour Yard, Chelsea Harbour. His modern, glass
fronted and terraced suite offices overlook a yacht basin
and marina.
The true owners and directors of Sandline International
remain hidden. But the key players remain the same. At a
British conference held in June to discuss possible new
laws affecting PMCs, Sandline International's delegates
were two of the original South African Executive Outcomes
leaders, van den Bergh and Luitingh. The third was
Buckingham's financial director, Grunberg. Spicer, who has
not been part of the Executive Outcomes/Sandline
International operation since 1999, attended separately.
Buckingham's new office at Harbour Yard (D.
Campbell)
Their presence confirmed that the core of the old
Executive Outcomes was still in being. Under new names,
the group is still believed to be involved in protecting
Buckingham's diamond, mineral and oil assets in Sierra
Leone and Angola.
Sandline International continues to employ South African
and other mercenaries in a range of African countries.
Although the company dislikes discussing current clients,
Grunberg, the Sandline financial adviser, told ICIJ that
the company had considered new business in the Ivory
Coast, Sudan and Liberia. Meanwhile, the larger business
of private intervention in wars appears to have died down.
Although Spicer has continued to lobby for his companies'
stake in the new age of PMCs, inquiries suggest that most
of the work now available in Britain is being taken by his
less controversial but larger rivals, ArmorGroup Services
(formerly Defence Systems Ltd) and Saladin Security
network. According to some sources, in an ironic post-Cold
War spin on events, the British ex-SAS companies have been
contracted to provide perimeter security defenses for
vulnerable Russian nuclear weapons sites.
A successful outcome?
The public relations campaign may have finally paid
off. In February 2002, the British Foreign Office
published a long-delayed response to parliamentary
criticism of Spicer and the mercenary trade. The
conclusion of the British government's "green" paper ’Äì
essentially, a proposal for legislation ’Äì on
"Private Military Companies: Options for Regulation"
was almost all that Spicer had wanted. The government
opined that PMCs should be legalized and licensed. Spicer
told his business colleague Professor Blankenship
(inaccurately) that "the British government has changed
the law on private military companies," calling it "a
significant event," according to Blankenship.
Spicer's record of sanctions-busting and political
embarrassment seemed to have been forgotten. He had
welcomed television appearances since leaving Sandline.
"But only serious comment [shows]," his PR adviser,
Pearson said. Spicer appeared again on a BBC current
affairs show in February 2002 to discuss the green paper
on private soldiers, looking pleased and dubbing himself
the "proper end of the spectrum." A week later, speaking
on Feb. 19 at the Royal Institute of International Affairs
conference at Chatham House, Spicer told the international
audience that he welcomed the government's proposal to
license private military companies.
Jack Straw (Reuters)
Britain's Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, whose immediate
predecessor, Robin Cook, had been humiliated by Spicer's
conduct, was now toeing the PMC line. Straw announced
"states and international organizations are turning to the
private sector as a cost effective way of procuring
services which would once have been the exclusive preserve
of the military."
Straw prophesied that "the demand for private military
services is likely to increase. ’Ķ The cost of employing
private military companies for certain functions in U.N.
operations could be much lower than that of national armed
forces." But he added, "clearly there are many pitfalls."
There were pitfalls in such proposals ’Äì and the British
Foreign Office's green paper had ignored nearly all of
them. The conclusions the foreign secretary so readily
endorsed drew nothing from British diplomatic expertise or
private knowledge of (or involvement with) mercenary
companies. Instead, it relied on such unofficial sources
as a recently published book, Mercenaries: an African
Security Dilemma, edited by Abdel-Fatau Musah and J'Kayode
Fayemi. The British government paper also failed to
mention that the Foreign Office, itself, had hired
bodyguards for more than 20 years from companies that also
promoted and provided mercenary activities around the
world. Nor did it say that some of these companies had
been and were being employed by U.S. and British
intelligence agencies for secret operations in Nicaragua,
Afghanistan and Kosovo ’Äì or that the explicit political
purpose of doing so was official deniability.
But to Spicer, it must have seemed that his
transformation to respectability was complete. Within two
years of his book, his image had been transformed from
law-breaking buccaneer to respectable commentator, a minor
celebrity to include in chat shows and TV quizzes. Less
than five years after the debacles in Africa and the South
Pacific, while speaking to a conference on military
cooperation, Spicer seemed confident that the British
establishment had been won over. He enthusiastically
endorsed the future role of mercenary companies and stated
that the world was waiting for "the speed and flexibility
with which they [PMCs] can deploy ’Äì rather than wait for
the U.N. to form a force."
But just as his PR initiatives for PMCs seemed to have
succeeded, Spicer's new PMCs set up since he left Sandline
faltered or fell. Sandline Consultancy Ltd. was dissolved
by official order on March 26, 2002, having failed to file
documents. Spicer's second new company Strategic
Consulting has withdrawn almost all of its Web site,
replacing it with a single message "for further details
contact SCI," giving phone and fax numbers, but no
address. His co-director and fellow shareholder Pearson
has sold out and left the company.
His third new company, Trident Maritime, which continues
to boast on its Web site of its network of global command
centers, has also "failed," according to co-director
Blankenship. "It has closed," the University of Maryland
professor said, "we've had to stop the operation just in
the last couple of weeks ’Ķ [Trident] is essentially out
of business." Spicer said that his U.S. partners in
Trident have, like Pearson, disinvested in the company,
and have turned their shares over to him. He claimed that
he was "restructuring the company" and planned to carry on
in the maritime security business.
"It wasn't managed particularly well ’Äì that's pretty
much why the company failed," Blankenship said of
Trident's troubles. "All we ever really did was install
some recording equipment on two ships ’Äì in effect
prototypes. We did training for some ship companies, but
nothing interesting, [and] security audits of ports in two
countries. That's the sum total."
Questioned in the summer of 2002 by members of the
parliamentary Foreign Affairs Committee about the private
military companies used by the British government, the
government refused to provide information, even about
security guards, on the basis that records were "managed
locally and details are not held centrally." The committee
found this excuse "unacceptable" and asked the government
to "take immediate steps to collect such information and
to update it regularly."
The moral dilemma of addressing what to do about
mercenaries in a democracy when they have been integral to
secret and unaccountable foreign policy activities was one
the British government was unwilling even to acknowledge.
These difficulties were set aside in favor of debating the
superficial merits of the PMC campaign for legal
recognition that Spicer and Sandline International had
promulgated, and which had focused almost entirely on
reviewing the Papua-New Guinea, Sierra Leone and Angola
engagements.
United Nations workers and the NGO community do not feel
so enthusiastic about the work of Executive Outcomes or
PMCs as the British government or Spicer. In October 1999,
the British government's Department for International
Development backed a high-level conference to discuss the
issues. Sandline and its supporters were excluded.
Speaking particularly about Sierra Leone, Lord Judd, head
of the aid organization International Alert told
attendees, "From our perspective, the presence of external
actors, who were able to sell their military wares to the
warring factions, was one of the main stumbling blocks in
forwarding the peace process. ’Ä [T]hose that fight for
financial gain are an anathema to much of what we strive
for."
Keep up with the Center!
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Updated:
Sunday, November 14, 2004
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