Type | Working Paper |
Title | ‘Pirates’ in the Sea: Private Military and Security Company Activities in Southeast Asia and the Philippines Case |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2010 |
URL | http://docshare01.docshare.tips/files/4872/48726750.pdf |
Abstract | According to a retired Colonel and Director of Security Support in Fiji, Sakiusa Ravioce, who runs the biggest of the six mercenary employment agencies in Fiji, `private armies became a viable commercial enterprise the moment America invaded Iraq' (The Warrior Lawyer, 2008). The privatisation of warfare (or security for that matter) in Iraq and Afghanistan refers to the hiring of private military/security companies (PMSCs) by the United States government, through its state agencies, to undertake functions that were traditionally performed exclusively by members of its armed forces. The hiring of such companies is not a new phenomenon, nor is its development specic to the U.S. The practice of tapping guns or mercenaries for hire has long been in existence even before Machiavelli described them as one type of army in his work The Prince.1 Outsourcing of military services may not be a new phenomenon, but PMSCs have evolved only in the past 15 years, proliferating rapidly since the end of the Cold War. This diversication can be attributed to the changing nature of conict after 1989 (Singer, 2005). The downsizing of major armies left an abundance of well-trained and experienced soldiers available to set up and be employed by PMSCs. The reduction in the size of the military at a time when numerous conicts emerged in dierent parts of the world, led the U.S. government to increase military outsourcing in order to respond to these conicts (Avant, 2004), and to manage the growing unpopularity of its war on terror on the domestic front. The privatisation of security may be a global development, but the operations of private military and security companies have dierent impacts across regions. This paper looks at private military and security companies in Asia, particularly in Southeast Asia and how these companies have conducted their operations in the region. The sources used are articles, books, ocial documents, and documents available on the internet. This paper aims to consolidate data on what has been written about private military and security groups operating in the region and the activities that they are involved in, such as the provision of security to private entities (i.e., corporate oces, business establishments, and mostly non-government clientele), training for government law enforcement personnel or a segment of the armed forces, maritime security activities, and recruitment. PMCs + PSCs = PMSCs What does the term private military security or private security corporations encompass? The terms are used interchangeably. Private military companies (PMCs) are generally corporate entities that provide armed oensive services designed to have military impact in a given situation that are generally contracted by governments. PMCs are usually perceived to oer traditional military services, majority of which oer passive kinds of services such as training and logistical support, while private security companies (PSCs) tend to oer a more active kind of service, i.e. providing protective security (Richards and Smith, 2007, p. 4). Thus, PSCs are corporate entities that provide defensive services to protect persons and property, which are frequently used by multinational companies in the extractive sector, humanitarian agencies, and individuals in situations of conict or instability (Lilly, 2001, p. 4). Collectively however, PSCs and PMCs are also referred to as private military and security companies or PMSCs. The Montreux Document2 , which contains rules and good practices relating to private military and security companies operating in armed conict, provides a useful denition. It states that, regardless of how they describe themselves, PMSCs are private entities that provide military and security services. Military and security services include armed guarding and protection of persons and objects, such as convoys, buildings, oces, and other places. Maintenance and operation of weapons systems, prisoner detention, and advice to or training of local forces and security personnel are also part of the services oered by PMSCs (Montreaux Document, 2009, p. 9). In the Philippines, the denition of PMSCs also covers private security agencies (PSAs). These are private entities that provide security services, particularly armed guarding and protection, such as private detectives, watchmen or security guards/agencies.3 However, there are groups in existence in the Philippines, which behave like, but are not really PMSCs. Other private security groups are those armed auxiliaries used by the State against rebel groups. These are citizens who are armed by the State or by private interests (i.e., local warlords) and legitimized by their participation in campaigns against the enemies of the state. |
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