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      The Role of Private Military Companies in US-Africa Policy

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            Abstract

            This article discusses the increasing use of private military companies (PMCs) in United States’ security policy in Africa, and examines this phenomenon in relation to the US’ various military training programmes on the continent. We argue that the increasing use of PMCs in US security policy has evolved due to two critical and mutually dependent developments; African state weakness and resource stringency on the one hand, and the US's overwhelming security commitments around the world, combined with military downsizing, on the other. The article further argues that the involvement of PMCs is to a large extent informed by US concerns about access to African resources, especially oil, in the face of stiff competition from China. We conclude that the increasing US engagement in Africa is highly militaristic and state-centric, and that it is primarily conditioned by US strategic interests and does not necessarily reflect African security concerns: human security for development.

            Main article text

            In discussions of military privatisation in Africa, the mercenary activities of Executive Outcomes (EO), Sandline International, and the likes of Simon Mann continue to figure prominently (see Avant, 2005; Singer, 2003; Ndlovu-Gatsheni, 2007; Foaleng, 2007). Hardly any analysis of private security on the continent is considered complete without dwelling on the role of EO in Sierra Leone and Angola, the links between EO and resource exploitation, or the implications of mercenary involvement for state consolidation (Aning, 2001). These are undoubtedly important issues, politically, economically, and ethically. It is, however, crucial to recognise that there is more to military privatisation in Africa than this focus might suggest, and that the contemporary role of private military actors on the continent differs significantly from that of the late 1990s. While the ‘rogue’ individual soldier, or the company willing to fight for anyone that pays, can still be found, the dominant image of the private military on the continent is considerably different. Today's private military companies (PMCs) tend to be hired by donor governments to perform training of African state militaries, or to participate in peacekeeping activities or post-conflict reconstruction. More often than not, they are embedded in the military and administrative structures of both the donor and recipient states, and exercise their power and authority within these structures. While this does not necessarily change the political impact of private military actors, it does fundamentally alter the manner in which they need to be analysed. Rather than focusing narrowly on the economic interests of the companies or individual mercenaries, we need to take account of how these companies have become part of broader structures and agendas and how they facilitate the pursuit of foreign policy by key states.

            This article explores these issues in relation to US foreign policy in Africa. While the new ‘scramble’ for Africa's resources, as well as the increased militarisation of US-Africa relations following the attacks of September 11, 2001, is frequently commented upon (see Abrahamovici, 2004; Lubeck, Watts & Lipschutz, 2007), the role of PMCs in US-Africa policy merits further investigation. In this article, our particular focus is on the role of PMCs in the delivery of US military support to Africa. Military assistance has become a key feature of US-Africa relations in recent years, and PMCs occupied a central place in the various programmes of the African Crisis Response Initiative (ACRI), African Contingency Operations Training and Assistance (ACOTA) and the Global Peace Operations Initiative (GPOI). Their roles in the peacebuilding and peacekeeping processes in Liberia and Darfur respectively are critically examined. We also examine the nexus between US strategic interests in Africa and the employment of PMCs, using Nigeria and Equatorial Guinea as examples. In the light of the above, it is important to stress that one cannot easily separate US employment of PMCs from the pursuit of its overall strategic interests in Africa; it constitutes an integral part of it. This relationship has serious implications for stability in Africa because of its strong links with the scramble for resources and the ‘war on terror’. As will be argued later in this paper, the history of the Cold War period provides examples where Africa suffered because of similar objectives. While recognising that several PMCs operate in Africa, this article focuses primarily on two PMCs – Military Professional Resource Incorporated (MPRI) and DynCorp International – which play a significant role in US security policy in Africa.

            This paper is divided into five parts. Part one reviews ACRI as the first expression of US security policy towards Africa after the Cold War. Part two focuses on ACOTA and GPOI programmes that succeeded ACRI. The third part examines the objectives of AFRICOM and speculates about the possible role of PMCs in executing its mandate. The fourth part discusses the roles of PMCs in the peace support operations in Darfur and the peacebuilding process in Liberia after the 2003 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA). We conclude that PMCs will continue to play a role in delivering US military support to Africa for some time largely because of the relationship between their employment and the pursuit of US strategic interests. US experience in Somalia, its security commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the downsizing of its army are further reasons for the continuation of this type of engagement. We also argue that there is nothing altruistic about US involvement in Africa. On the contrary, the three factors shaping US-Africa relations are the ‘war on terror’, interests in African oil, and finally, competition with China.

            From ‘Black Hawk Down’ to ‘African Solutions’

            In the early 1990s, US responded to the humanitarian crisis in Somalia by deploying one of the largest forces in Africa (Bah & Aning, 2008:119). In 1992, President G. W. Bush launched Operation Restore Hope which was made up of 25,000 troops. Also known as Unified Task Force (UNITAF), Operation Restore Hope comprised 24 countries with a mandate to restore security, undertake humanitarian activities and to help relieve the suffering of the civilian population (Ibid.). In place of UNITAF, in 1993, the UN Security Council approved the establishment of the United Nations Operations in Somalia II (UNOSOM II) which consisted of approximately 28,000 military and police personnel. Led by the US, UNOSOM II's mandate was to restore peace through disarmament and reconciliation of the various parties to the conflict. However, after the ill-fated attempt to capture General Mohamed Farah Aideed, which resulted in the death of 18 US Rangers, its troops were withdrawn, and subsequently, UNOSOM II was terminated in 1995 (Ibid.).

            Since the failed US mission in Somalia and the genocide in Rwanda, US policy towards Africa has been centered increasingly on developing the capacities of African countries to undertake peace operations under the guise of ‘African solutions to African problems’ – a notion that some viewed as a convenient alibi for US inaction. Despite its renewed interest in the continent in the post-9/11, 2001 era, the US remains reluctant to deploy ground troops to Africa (Bah & Aning, 2008).

            United States engagement in Africa since the 1990s has therefore centered on bilateral training programmes such as the African Crisis Response Initiative (ACRI) and the African Contingency Operations Training and Assistance (ACOTA) to build the capacity of individual African countries to participate in multilateral peace operations, particularly in Africa. The Global Peace Operations Initiative (GPOI) also has similar objectives of helping to improve the capacity of sub-regional and regional organisations to take part in peace support operations, especially in Africa. Again, the new Africa Command (AFRICOM) launched last year has among its objectives to offer technical assistance to ACOTA and GPOI and partner African states in security sector reform (McFate, 2008:11).

            Thus, the increased use of PMCs has to be understood in the context of US reluctance to get embroiled in African conflicts. Some observers would also argue that the policy on the use of PMCs in Africa is linked with the Global War on Terror (GWOT) and US grand strategy to secure access to African natural resources (Ploch, 2007:11). Other important factors include the reduction in the strength of the US army. For instance, in 2003 the US reduced the size of its combined armed forces from 2.1 million in 1990 to 1.4 million (Krane, 2003:1ff). There is also the issue of an overstretched army, as US troops are currently involved in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as peacekeeping operations in Bosnia and Kosovo (Aning, 2007). Under these multiple demand-driven conditions, the US military has become over-tasked in its involvement in global military affairs and its ability to position adequate troops in theatres of operation around the world has been severely challenged (Ibid.). This is perhaps particularly the case in relation to African conflicts, traditionally regarded as of little strategic relevance by the US. Consequently, in order to address this security deficit, it has become forced to hire the support services of PMCs to provide military training to foreign states. That such an approach in the pursuit of its foreign policy towards Africa has become indispensable to the United States cannot be over-emphasised (Schrader, 2002). In the words of Theresa Whelan, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for African Affairs:

            we wanted to support [peace] operations [in Africa], however we realized that our forces were tied down elsewhere around the globe and they might not be available for the long-term deployments … Consequently, contractors began to play a larger and larger role particularly in the logistical support of sub-regional peace operations (Whelan, 2003:2ff).

            In recent years, PMCs such as DynCorp, the MPRI, and the Pacific Architects Engineers (PAE) have frequently been hired to deliver different forms of US foreign military support including training under ACRI, ACOTA and GPOI programmes. These companies are involved in a varied and differentiated set of activities including but not limited to the post-conflict peacebuilding process in Liberia and the provision of logistics support to the African Union Mission in the Sudan (AMIS) and the conflict in Darfur with strong emphasis on military security issues. Accordingly, the US Department of State grants such companies contracts to provide services ranging from the training of militaries, provision of logistics to peace support operations and restructuring of national armies. Previously, such functions were the exclusive reserve of the US army. The outsourcing of such programmes to private PMCs is certainly in keeping with US administration's avowed commitment to the dictates of neo-liberalism and the emphasis on privatisation, ideas which are increasingly also being applied in states where such companies perform (see Abrahamsen & Williams, 2007).

            The contracting of PMCs to conduct military training and carry out other security related activities on behalf of the United States raises two fundamental questions. First, what does the involvement of PMCs allow the US to do in Africa, and secondly, does the involvement of PMCs change US-Africa relations from the perspective of African states and peoples? In other words, what does this mean for Africa?

            In the following sections we explore these questions in relation to the main training programmes for African militaries conducted by the US since the late 1990s.

            The US, PMCs & African Security Provision: Initiating a New Partnership?

            ACRI

            During the first half of the 1990s, violent conflicts broke out in Liberia (1990), Somalia (1991), Sierra Leone (1991) and Rwanda (1994) among others. These, as well as subsequent conflicts did not only generate global attention and concern, but addressing them posed a challenge to the international community of states. The most telling case was the massacre in Rwanda in 1994 in which more than 800,000 people lost their lives largely because of the failure of the international community to intervene in the conflict on time. In the face of such challenges, it became imperative to find new, effective and more responsive measures for preventing and resolving conflicts. It is in line with this that the need to build the capacity of African militaries to intervene in such conflicts was examined and stressed. Thus, capacity-building support for African peacekeepers became one of the measures adopted by the US to deal with African conflicts.

            Accordingly, the African Crisis Response Force (ACRF) constituted the first initiative by the United States to build and strengthen the capacity of African militaries to participate in peacekeeping in their own backyard. This initiative was launched immediately after the Rwandan genocide in 1994 with the aim that it would provide capacity training and when deployed, it would be made up of African troops primarily providing security for civilians (Bah & Aning, 2008:120). Despite the stated humanitarian objectives of this initiative, it was opposed by some African leaders, among them, the former President of South Africa, Nelson Mandela, who viewed ACRF as a knee-jerk reaction by the Clinton administration after its failure to intervene in the Rwandan crisis and feared that it could be used as an excuse to establish a foothold in Africa. In response to these criticisms and concerns, and due to a change in the political climate in Washington, DC, in 1996 the US created ACRI to provide training to selected African countries for peacekeeping and the delivery of humanitarian aid. It was initially designed to operate on a bi-lateral basis, with the possibility of direct military assistance to sub-regional bodies such as the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), which was involved in peace operations at the time (Ibid. p.121).

            During the six years of the implementation of the ACRI, about 9,000 African troops were trained (Berman, 2002:37). Between July 1997 and May 2000, training programmes were organised for soldiers in Senegal, Uganda, Malawi, Mali, Ghana, Benin and Ivory Coast. In order to ensure that soldiers trained under ACRI were well equipped, the US provided some 8,000 soldiers with light equipment, electric generators, vehicles, mine detectors, night-vision gear, and communication gadgets (Abrahamvocivi, 2004).

            In spite of the positive sides of ACRI, it had a number of problems. One of the problems was that it was conceived and designed based on a Cold War peacekeeping doctrine, which suited inter-state conflicts. What Africa faced were intra-state conflicts, in which non-state actors such as rebels or insurgents played a crucial role; their utter disregard for international humanitarian law posed a particular challenge in terms of subjecting them to such laws. Importantly, in some cases, the change from inter- to intra-state wars required a doctrinal shift that required a more robust Chapter VII-type peace enforcement doctrine, a challenge that all peacekeeping operations were confronted with (Bah & Aning, 2008:120).

            Despite this, several countries embraced ACRI, including Uganda, Ethiopia and Senegal at the initial stages. Others, such as Nigeria and South Africa – the two regional powers – remained opposed to what they viewed as a foreign initiative that did not necessarily address African concerns (Ibid.). An observer of US policy in Africa noted that ‘ACRI had more to do with what the US felt it could provide than what African countries necessarily needed’ (Berman, 2004:134). Worse still, no African country was consulted about the contents of the programme. Such behaviour is tantamount to a medical doctor prescribing drugs even before they can see the patient. One would have thought that US support to Africa would be based on consultation with the beneficiaries but the reverse has been the case.

            The programme also failed to provide adequate logistics and military hardware, which were of greater importance to African states than the training of troops. With an annual budget of US$15 million, it was difficult to see how ACRI could address the serious capacity issues facing African countries (Bah & Aning, 2008:121). The limited nature of the programme also made it difficult to see a clear cause-and-effect relationship between the training offered and the overall performance of troops in the field. Nonetheless, troops from Ghana, Senegal, Uganda and Tanzania trained under this initiative served in Liberia as part of the ‘expanded’ Economic Community of West African States Monitoring Group (ECOMOG) (Ibid.). However, in Liberia, the equipment provided was managed by PAE and thus ECOMOG commanders had to go through the process of signing documents before it could be utilised.

            Although training exercises under ACRI were conducted by US Special Forces, it also involved PMCs which provided logistical support, including equipment or specialist civil personnel, as well as military training. The main company was MPRI, which incorporated in 1987, has nearly 3,000 employees in the US and in 40 countries overseas. The company considers itself as

            a training, simulation and government services company of highly skilled and experienced military, law enforcement, diplomatic and private sector leaders with uncompromising professionalism who apply integrity, innovative ideas and integrated solutions to defense and national security challenges (www.mpri.org 2008).

            The company is comprised of five operational groups: the National, International, Alexandria, Simulations and Technology groups:

            • 1.

              The National Group provides expertise and support to the US Department of Defense and a wide range of overnmental agencies, and the corporate sector;

            • 2.

              The International Group provides services to US forces overseas and to foreign governments on behalf of the US government or under license by the US Department of State;

            • 3.

              The Alexandria Group provides education, training, and organisational expertise to law enforcement agencies and corporations worldwide;

            • 4.

              The Simulations Group is considered as a global leader in the supply of driver simulators and maritime simulation products and services as well as critical incident management and emergency response solutions;

            • 5.

              Finally the Training Technology Group provides the patented BEAMHIT Laser Marksmanship Training System (LMTS) to military, law enforcement, and commercial organisations worldwide (Ibid.).

            The MPRI has undertaken contracts in Iraq, Colombia and Serbia. For example, in April 2003, MPRI was awarded two contracts by the US Department of Defense to work in Iraq for a total of $2.5 million. Before this contract, MPRI was hired by the Department of Defense in 2000 to assist the government of Colombia in developing long range plans for the war on drugs. The $4.3 million contract was paid largely from the $1.3 billion aid package Congress had approved for Plan Colombia (see Singer, 2003).

            In Africa, most of MPRI's operations fall under the democracy and good governance programme and the Department of State and Defense contracts to provide training under US military training programmes such as ACRI and ACOTA (Volman, 2005). Outside ACOTA and ACRI, MPRI has been involved in military training programmes and what the company considers as ‘democracy promotion’ activities in Guinea Bissau and Nigeria.

            The most controversial aspect of MPRI's projects in Nigeria was the $8 million project aimed at professionalising the Nigerian army. Under the contract the Nigerian army was to be downsized from 100,000 to 50,000. However, this drew protest from senior members of the Nigerian army, among them, the former Chief of Staff, General Victor Malu. In the ensuing political struggles, General Malu lost his post, allegedly as a result of his opposition to the MPRI project (Dare, 2002:4ff). The departure of Malu reflects the fact that the role of PMCs in African security matters remains contentious. Furthermore, if a strong African state like Nigeria can be dictated to on such matters, then what about the weaker ones? Malu's departure from office illustrates that US interests are likely to prevail over the interests of the countries they choose to support militarily. Later, in 2007, General Malu stated in an interview granted to the Daily Trust that he had opposed the presence of the US military in Nigeria on the grounds that they were there to gather intelligence on the Nigerian army and not to train them for peacekeeping. He argued that the Nigerian army has a good track record in peacekeeping and did not need the US army [and MPRI] to train them for peacekeeping.1

            Questions also rise as to whether PMCs can be reliable promoters of democracy and good governance, and whether democracy and good governance activities should be privatised? For instance, MPRI boasts that it has been able to improve human rights records in Equatorial Guinea (www.mpri.org 2008). However, the US State Department's Country Reports on Human Rights Practices 2007 paints a totally different picture. It indicates that gross human rights violations still persist in Equatorial Guinea (US State Department, 2008). The role of PMCs in the promotion of democracy and good governance raises concerns since most of them have poor human rights record. Instances of human rights abuse involving PMCs abound in Iraq, Bosnia and Afghanistan. For example, in Bosnia, employees of DynCorp were found to be operating a sex-slave ring of young women (Wayne, 2002). Also, concerns have to be raised with regard to the reason why the US government sub-lets the ‘promotion of democracy’ to private actors, a function that is performed by the United State Agency for International Development (USAID) in most developing countries.

            ACOTA/GPOI

            In 2004, ACRI was replaced by ACOTA, an initiative of the administration of President George W. Bush. ACOTA, like its predecessor, is based on bilateral agreements between the US and recipient states. It also provides support to regional and sub-regional organisations. The ACOTA programme has five main pillars: (1) train and equip African militaries to respond to peace support and complex humanitarian emergencies; (2) build and enhance sustainable African peace support training capacity; (3) build effective command and control; (4) promote community and interoperability; and (5) enhance international, regional and subregional peace support capacity in Africa.2

            The Global Peace Operations Initiative (GPOI) was launched in 2005 by the United States, and aims to improve the supply of personnel for peace operations. Its central objective is to train at least 75,000 personnel globally (with a strong focus on Africa in the initial stages), and to enhance the ability of countries and regional and subregional organisations to train, plan, manage, conduct, and learn from previous peace operations. This is done through the provision of technical assistance, training and material support to enhance institutional knowledge at headquarters.3 The programme also aims to develop the capacities of regional and sub-regional institutions to ensure ‘sustainability and self-sustainment’. Under GPOI, support is provided to various centres of excellence for peace support operations such as the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Center in Ghana, the Peace Support Training Center in Karen, Kenya, and the Peacekeeping School in Koulikoro, Mali. Moreover, support is provided for the efforts to operationalise the African Standby Force (ASF) and regional and sub-regional logistics depots (Bah & Aning, 2008:123).

            Again, private military actors are an intrinsic part of the programme. ACOTA is linked to training centres known as Joint Combined Armed Training System (JCATS) run by MPRI. The JCATS are based on the use of sophisticated computer simulation software that mimics battlefield conditions and are used to train military officers in war exercises. According to Colonel Victor Nelson, former US military attaché to Nigeria, the JCATS are considered to be cost effective because they do not rely on vehicles, ammunition or fuel. The first centre for JCATS was opened in Nigeria on 25 November 2003 (Abramovici, 2004:5ff). Similar to the role it played under ACRI, MPRI claims that it works with the Department of State under the ACOTA and GPOI to inculcate ‘human rights standards into African armed forces and peacekeeping missions’, and that it delivers rapid response services as part of the contract (www.mpri.org 2008).

            In 2007, the US Department of State selected MRPI, Blackwater USA and Northrop Grumman4 for the implementation of GPOI. Under contracts with the Department of State, the three PMCs will provide training to militaries and peacekeeping forces worldwide. The contract has a potential value of $200 million, collectively, over five years.5

            In addition, in February 2008, ACOTA in collaboration with the ECOWAS Standby Force (ESF) organised a training programme intended to develop African capacity to meet the peacekeeping needs on the continent in a professional and timely manner.6 Similar to other ACOTA training programmes, the training programme held at the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC) in Accra, Ghana involved about seven employees of MPRI.7 One of the contributions of the ACOTA programme is that it has provided training for offensive military operations as well as the provision of weaponry to undertake these operations. With an annual budget of $15 million, training and non-lethal equipment (communications packages, uniforms, boots, generators, mine detectors, field medical equipment and water purification equipment) has been provided to more than 20,000 peacekeepers from thirteen African nations by the beginning of 2006. The countries are Benin, Botswana, Ethiopia, Gabon, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, and Zambia.8

            Certainly, the role of PMCs in ACOTA demonstrates that US military involvement in Africa will largely be pursued through such companies. It does not only suit their strategic interests but creates an enabling environment for the role of these organisations to be accepted and legitimised for employment by African governments. Moreover, the emphasis on military support not only militarises US-Africa relations; it also Americanises African security issues.

            AFRICOM

            As if the limitations of the above programmes were not enough, the US administration has now embarked upon the idea of establishing an Africa Command (AFRICOM). On 6 February 2007, President George W. Bush announced the establishment of AFRICOM, which according to the President will strengthen US security cooperation with Africa (McFate, 2008:10). The decision to create AFRICOM was more than an administrative change within the Department of Defense. It was the direct result of Africa's increasing strategic importance to the US and represents official recognition that the US can no longer address the region's security concerns by splitting responsibility among three independent combatant commands (Schaefer & Eaglen, 2008). AFRICOM is projected to become fully operational in October 2008.

            As defined by the US Department of Defense, AFRICOM's mission will be to promote US strategic interest by working with African states and regional organisations to help strengthen stability and security through improved security capability, professionalisation and good governance (Ploch, 2007:2). As with other combatant commands, AFRICOM will conduct military operations to address US security priorities or respond to crises. Based upon the experiences of the past US military programmes in Africa, it is suggested that to be effective, AFRICOM must be adequately funded and robustly staffed. This view is held by Brett Schaefer and Mackenzie Eaglen who argue that in order to achieve its objectives, AFRICOM would need to

            find qualified personnel to implement the new Command's broader mission. The Command will need to increase staff levels from the current 320 to about 1,200, including a significant number of civilian personnel (Schaefer & Eaglen, 2008:2ff).

            As important as this may be for the pursuit of US strategic interest in Africa, the effectiveness of such a programme is certainly not the issue. On the contrary, some would argue that AFRICOM is likely to generate more problems than it solves. On the basis of the experiences of the Cold War, there is every reason to believe that this could turn Africa into another theatre of war between the US and the states and non-state actors that are opposed to its interests and policies. Africans do not want to become pawns in proxy wars and this type of relationship only promotes dependency on external powers on security matters. As some observers would argue, AFRICOM and the role of the PMCs could undermine democracy and peace because it is easy for the US to take side on issues occurring inside sovereign states. For example, in Somalia, communications between US PMCs, particularly Select Armour, indicated that the CIA knew about a plot to run a covert military operation inside Somalia with possible involvement of British security firms. These groups were supposed to carry out an operation in support of President Abdullahi Yusuf's Transitional Federal Government against the Supreme Islamic Courts Council, which is a radical Muslim militia ( Barnett & Smith, 2006). Previously, US support to Mobutu Sese Sekou, Siad Barre, Samuel Doe and other dictators provide examples of situations where anti-democratic practices were tolerated and promoted because of strategic interests.

            One interesting issue that does not feature in the debates on AFRICOM is the potential role of PMCs. We contend that given the recent history of the role of PMCs in the pursuit of US foreign policy under ACRI, ACOTA, and GPOI, their continued involvement in AFRICOM seems inevitable (see also McFate, this issue). Like the other programmes discussed above, the US Department of State and Department of Defense can justify the use of PMCs in AFRICOM when deemed necessary.

            Contrary to the objectives outlined for the creation of AFRICOM, critics of the project argue that it is part of US grand strategy to achieve three inter-connected objectives: ensure US access to African oil, ward off Chinese economic expansionism, and serve the war against terrorism. These are very dear to US national security interests. It is difficult to accept that the US military would be involved in the development of Africa as the apostles of AFRICOM would have us believe. There are also growing fears about African communities being victimised in the Global War On Terror, and that the anti-Muslim sentiments that the ‘war on terror’ generates may lead to inter-African hostilities. Thus, Muslim and Christian communities that once lived in harmony with each other could easily get drawn into conflict against each other. Like the Cold War period, ‘when two [or more] bulls fight, it is the grass that suffers’ (Wapingapo fahali wawili, ziumiazo ni nyasi).

            Resources

            To reinforce a point made earlier, on the surface, it seems as if US bilateral military engagement in Africa is aimed at serving the benevolent purpose of making African states stable, secure and developed. It is an effort aimed at saving Africa from itself. However, behind such professed security benevolence, deeper US national security interests are at stake. Accordingly, the ‘war on terror’ constitutes a real security concern in US–Africa relations, as illustrated by its role in Somalia and the commitment to the Trans-Sahara Counter-Terrorism Partnership (see Keenan, 2004 20 17 172007). Importantly, it has also become apparent that as part of the US grand strategy towards the continent and in response to the scramble and pluder of African resources by the major powers, especially China, successive US administrations are making efforts to ensure that Africa is given the capability to protect and secure itself as a means of serving as a strategic partner to the US Again, PMCs have a crucial role to play here.

            Since the incidents of 9/11, 2001, and the ongoing crisis in the Gulf and Middle East, US national security interests have been closely tied in with African oil, which contributes about 15 per cent of overall US oil consumption. The economy relies on oil and about 55 per cent of the oil consumed by Americans originates from outside the US. This partly explains the need for African oil resources (Authers, 2007; CIA, 2000).

            Thus, US military support to Africa through PMCs has strong links with its overall strategic calculations to acquire unlimited access to African oil resources. US engagement with two oil producing African states, namely Nigeria and Equatorial Guinea, illustrates the link between its resource interest and the activities of PMCs. In these two countries, MPRI operates outside the official US military training programme, ACOTA.

            In line with the US strategic interest in African oil resources, not long after President George Bush took office in 2001, the National Energy Policy Development Group headed by Vice President Dick Cheney, argued that the United States should look to the West African ‘Oil Triangle’ as a future source of reliable oil supply (Lubeck et al. 2007:3). The West African ‘Oil Triangle’ supplies about 15 per cent of oil imports to the US and there are plans to increase this to 25 per cent by 2015 (Ibid. p.4).

            The argument can be clearly illustrated with reference to Nigeria, the most attractive oil energy giant in the oil triangle. It has Africa's largest proven oil deposits and the fifth largest supplier of oil to the United States. However, political instability and the general fragility of Nigerian democracy threaten US energy interest (Ploch, 2007:12). US strategy to secure Nigerian oil therefore falls within its overall strategy of partnering with African governments in order to strengthen fragile and failing states. The involvement of MPRI in the training of the Nigerian army should therefore be seen as part of the US government's policy to use PMCs to further her interest in Africa.

            The United States sees a stable and democratic Nigeria as necessary for the continued flow of Nigerian oil to the US market. However, it is questionable whether US democracy promotion can stabilise and democratise African states like Nigeria for one basic reason. Historically, US democracy promotion in Africa has been limited to the procedural aspects of democracy; it has been about elections or ‘quadrennial bonanzas’ to borrow Noam Chomsky's words. As Steve Smith argues, ‘US democracy promotion was aimed at putting in place a form of democracy that would suit US economic interests’ (Smith, 2000:78). Because US domestic and foreign policies have always required certain international structures, geo-economic interests have dominated its geopolitics (Ibid. p. 67). Hence, if there is any interest in a democratic Nigeria, the purpose has not been to deepen democracy to include the responsibility of the state to its people. Unfortunately, if the state does not provide for the broader security needs of the people; if you do not address the challenges of poverty, unemployment, and lack of access to education and health care, then no amount of military build up can prevent conflicts. At least, this is what the history of conflicts in West Africa has taught us, that all conflict is rooted in underdevelopment.

            Equatorial Guinea is another country whose oil resource is of interest to the United States. The US government is ready to support the government of Equatorial Guinea through PMCs. In 2001, MPRI gained permission from the US Department of State to do business in Equatorial Guinea, a country whose President, Retired Brig. Gen. Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, the Department of State described as ‘holding power through torture and fraud’ (Wayne, 2002). The contract allowed MPRI to advise the President on ‘building a coast guard to protect the oil rich waters being explored by Exxon Mobile off the coast’ of the country (Ibid.). However, in a further twist to this saga, the Department of State rejected another contract application from MPRI to rebuild the police and military forces of Equatorial Guinea for fear that the forces to be trained by MPRI may be used against the opponents of the government as well as the ‘war on terror’.

            Thus, on one hand the US sanctioned the training of the ‘Coast Guard’ but on the other hand, rejected the training of the country's army and police force. Clearly, such a move has to do with the need to protect the country's off-shore oil, in which the US has substantial interest. The fact that the US is expanding its naval presence off the coast of Africa, particularly in the oil-rich Gulf of Guinea region verifies this assumption (Volman & Tuckey, 2008). In conclusion therefore, it is clear that PMCs are playing a crucial role in securing US access to oil resources in Africa. Thus, the role of PMCs should be understood and explained within the context of growing US interests in African resources, competition with China in the ‘new scramble’, as well as well as ‘the war on terror’.

            PMCs, Peacekeeping & Peacebuilding: Liberia & Darfur

            PMCs have also become involved in African security issues through peacekeeping and peacebuilding. In the past, PMCs such as Lifeguard provided security for the staff of humanitarian agencies during the Sierra Leonean conflict, while PAE and International Charter Incorporated of Oregon (ICI Oregon) provided logistics support for ECOWAS and the United Nations Missions in Liberia (UNMIL) and Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL) (McIntyre, 2004:102). Currently, US PMCs are involved in the peacebuilding process in Liberia and the ongoing United Nations/African Union Mission (UNAMID) in the Darfur region of western Sudan.

            We begin with US involvement in Liberia. Historically, US engagement with Liberia dates back to the very creation of the state by black Americans in 1847. However, the current engagement was triggered by fourteen years of war and plunder. In the effort to bring the war to an end, the stakeholders to the conflict signed the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) on 18 August 2003 in Accra, Ghana. An important component of the CPA was the restructuring of the Armed Forces of Liberia (AFL). To this end, article VII (1)(b) of the CPA, ‘requested that the US play a lead role in [the] restructuring programme [the disbandment of irregular forces, reforming and restructuring of the Liberian Armed Forces]’. To a large extent, this role has been discharged by the US government through the Security Sector Reform (SSR) programme. The objective of the SSR programme is to train a total planned force of 2,000 men and women for the Armed Forces of Liberia (AFL) by 2010 (Malan & Teff, 2007). The two PMCs – DynCorp and PAE – are involved in the SSR programme under contract from the US Department of State. DynCorp's contract requires it to provide basic facilities and basic training for the AFL. The company also designed and manages the recruitment and vetting programme for entry into the AFL (see McFate, this issue). PAE on its part, won the contract for building a base, for forming and building the AFL and its component units and for providing specialised and advanced training, including mentoring the AFL's officers. For the first six months of 2007 alone, the combined expenses of DynCorp and PAE totaled about $18 million (Ibid.).

            Similarly, PMCs are also involved in the provision of logistics and security in the Darfur crisis. Just as in other African conflicts, US foreign policy in Darfur has been to contract PMCs to perform its military tasks. Consequently, in 2004, the US pledged more than $200 million in the form of private contracts to support the African Union Mission in Darfur (AMIS). The contract was awarded to DynCorp and PAE, in which the two companies would provide housing, office equipment, and transport and communication equipment in support of AMIS. The State Department awarded the contract in Darfur to DynCorp and PAE ignoring the accusation that the employees of DynCorp exhibited ‘aggressive behaviour’ in Afghanistan while PAE has been accused of ‘allegedly overcharging the United Nations in the Democratic Republic of Congo’ (Chatterjee, 2004). The contract also allows the Department of State to use the two companies anywhere in Africa. In the specific case of Darfur, Sudanese oil and the role of China seem to be dictating US interests in the area. PAE, DynCorp and Medical Solutions Services have also worked for humanitarian agencies in Darfur (Leander & Munster, 2006:2). Moreover, private contractors are taking on roles that were formerly the exclusive reserve of civilian organisations. For instance, the Department of State has contracted PAE to provide staff for its Civilian Protection Monitoring Team to monitor human rights in Darfur (Chatterjee, 2004).

            One of the disturbing things about the role of PMCs in Africa is the lack of transparency and accountability to the host countries. Because they are contracted by the US government, they are answerable only to them and not the host government. African states can only deal with them through US diplomatic missions. The activities of PAE and DynCorp in Liberia provide an interesting case study of the problem of transparency and accountability of PMCs. The two companies have been accused of expending over $172 million meant for the training of the army without input from the Government of Liberia. This situation, according the Liberian Minister of Defense, had arisen because the allocation of funds for the project was not done in consultation with the Government of Liberia (Malan & Teff, 2006). This means that the Liberian government may have little influence on how the training of its own military is conducted. This situation will need to change to ensure national ownership of such training programmes no matter the company contracted to undertake it. As of 31 August 2008, DynCorp had completed the training of 2,000 soldiers.

            In situations where African countries are kept in the dark over the training of their militaries, there is every reason to be worried over the future of such armies. Not only may it become extremely difficult for African states to control and influence their armies; they may even be trained in such a way that their interests and perceptions of threats are similar to that of the US rather than their own countries and peoples. Moreover, the type of training they receive may not enable them to deal with the real security threats facing their respective countries, but may instead be more geared towards protecting US geo-strategic interests.

            Conclusion

            Given the number of African troops trained under the United States’ military training programmes, it can be said that these programmes have contributed to building the capacity of the troops of the participating countries and improved their readiness for peace support operations in Africa or elsewhere. While this is encouraging, the limited nature of these programmes makes it difficult to see a clear cause and effect relationship between the training offered and the actual performance of troops trained under them in the field. Also, Africa's training needs far outstrips the capabilities of these programmes to fill the capacity gap in Africa for the delivery of peacekeeping needs. This calls for the need to widen the scope of such programmes to involve all African countries in order for it to gain a rapid impact on African peacekeeping. Another drawback of US security policy in Africa is its lack of sustained policy engagement with African countries that should be the primary beneficiaries of such programmes. As such, these programmes are viewed as serving the interest of the United States rather than Africa. Thus, it is unclear as to how US security policy imperatives converge with the security concerns of the people of Africa. The concerns of the African people as set out in various policy documents by individual governments, as well as sub-regional and regional organisations such as the African Union, centre on human security issues. Poverty, high levels of unemployment, access to clean water and the HIV/AIDs pandemic are among human security needs of Africans. An important consideration for the US therefore is how to reconcile its interest with that of the African people.

            As we have shown, private military actors have become central to US military training initiatives and US military training of African personnel is largely outsourced to private contractors. As such, contemporary private military involvement on the African continent is substantially different from the late 1990s, when companies such as Executive Outcomes were hired by weak or failing African states to defeat their internal enemies in civil wars. The contemporary situation as described above raises a series of important political questions, most notably as regards the relationship between the stated US objective of training and democratising African militaries and the pursuit of US foreign policy objectives on the African continent. While the two are not always and necessarily mutually exclusive, the relationship merits careful and critical analysis. Undoubtedly, many African militaries are in need of professionalisation, and similarly, much is to be gained by strengthening their respect for human rights, civilian oversight and democracy. The ability of African militaries to conduct peacekeeping operations is also of crucial importance.

            However, the extent to which private military companies are the best or most suitable teachers of democracy and the values of human rights cannot be passed over in silence. This is because most PMCs do not have good human rights records. More importantly, perhaps, is the lack of transparency that accompanies the use of private contractors, which can make it difficult for African states and for civil society actors to gain information about their activities and contracts, and hence to challenge their operations. There is also the problem of accountability as most PMCs are accountable to the US government instead of the host government. The increased presence of PMCs in US military assistance to the continent thus poses a series of challenges, and as this article demonstrates, is best understood in the context of the United States’ geo-political interests.

            Notes

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            Footnotes

            For more details, see ‘Nigeria: Why US Wants to Establish Military Base in the Country – Malu'Daily Trust at http://allafrica.com/stories/200711240118.html, accessed 21 April 2008.

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            Interview with Lt. Col Todd Coker, Course Director, Department of Peacekeeping Studies at the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Centre, 26 February 2008.

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            Author and article information

            Journal
            crea20
            CREA
            Review of African Political Economy
            Review of African Political Economy
            0305-6244
            1740-1720
            December 2008
            : 35
            : 118
            : 613-628
            Affiliations
            a Conflict Prevention, Management and Resolution, Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre E-mail: kwesianing2002@ 123456yahoo.com
            b Conflict Prevention, Management and Resolution, Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre E-mail: Thomas.Jaye@ 123456kaiptc.org
            c Conflict Prevention, Management and Resolution, Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre E-mail: Samuel.atuobi@ 123456kaiptc.org
            Article
            357098 Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 35, No. 118, December 2008, pp. 613–628
            10.1080/03056240802569300
            958e5bf2-3100-4741-89ad-5044cc80a278

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            Sociology,Economic development,Political science,Labor & Demographic economics,Political economics,Africa

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