 On the campaign trail, Senator Barack Obama  offered an insight into his conceptual understanding of security contractors  and their relationship with the state. Although to people new to private  military affairs he scored well, to a more advanced audience he sounded  amateurish.
 On the campaign trail, Senator Barack Obama  offered an insight into his conceptual understanding of security contractors  and their relationship with the state. Although to people new to private  military affairs he scored well, to a more advanced audience he sounded  amateurish.
                                          Senator Obama was asked by the editorial  board of Military Times about his thoughts on economic efficiency of security  contractors compared to the military. [The question was actually formulated  with Blackwater Worldwide in mind]
                                          Obama’s answer was, “I am not arguing that  there are never going to be uses for private contractors in some circumstances.  What I am saying is if you start building a military premised on the use of  private contractors and you start making decisions on armed engagement based on  the availability of private contractors to fill holes and gaps that over time  you are, I believe, eroding the core of our military’s relationship to the  nation and how accountability is structured. I think you are privatizing  something that is what essentially sets a nation-state apart, which is a  monopoly on violence. And to set those kinds of precedents, I think, will lead  us over the long term into some troubled waters.”
                                          Firstly, “a military premised on the use of  private contractors” has been the forward trend since the early 1990s. He is a  senator and should know it. If he was keen on history, he would further discuss  current policies in the context that civilian support has accompanied the military  ever since the United    States became an  independent country. The practice has enhanced US military  standing rather than undermine it. For instance, deployment logistics under the  LOGCAP contract is the envy of the military world. Therefore, for Obama to note  casually that there might be “uses for private contractors” in the future is just  another sign of his unwarranted magnanimity.
                                          Secondly, Obama reminded us the monopoly of  violence is a distinctive feature of the state (broadly, not just the “nation-state”  senator). To certain blogger, Obama came across as very clever because he appeared  to corroborate what he/she learned while on “Political Science 101”. Yet dear  blogger, when one moves from Political Science 101 to 202, one discovers the  101 notion was simply an introduction to a broader and more complex problem:  the monopoly is an evolving principle based upon the control of the means of  coercion and not necessarily their ownership. In this light, Obama approaches security  contractors, besides ahistorically, through a narrow 101 understanding of the  monopoly. We sincerely hope this blogger progresses to the 202 grade. Obama, on  the other hand, should be on 505 already and discussing policy.
                                          Thirdly, Obama’s view of the monopoly of  violence leads to an equally problematic understanding of privatization. With  the aim of building a leaner and more specialized military for the 21st  century, non-essential functions (e.g. clerical, logistical, and protection  services) have been indeed outsourced to the private sector. However, these “holes  and gaps”, using his terminology, have been actually engineered by successive  Democrat and Republican administrations and remain under governmental jurisdiction.  The challenge is to enact flexible modes of control that evolve alongside  military renewal. Obama does not seem to offer a way forward by simply qualifying  it as the erosion of “how accountability is structured”. 
                                          Obama’s role as presidential contender has  long ceased to be about simply pointing out what he sees  the wrongs of the  military and defense are. On the other hand, it is not possible to discuss his  policy proposals with respect to the use of private contractors in areas of  defense and homeland security because so far the record is empty. For a start,  maybe talking to “small town folk who get bitter and cling to guns” could  assist him to understand that force can be controlled without owning the gun or  firing the trigger.
                                          
                                            
                                              | Obama picks Joseph R. Biden Jr. of Delaware as  running mate 
                                                  Senator Biden believes in “a larger military,  better equipped, and trained for the fight.” To build it, he stresses making “sure  that we do not contract out our security.” However, his defense doctrine implicitly  embeds the need of contractors, e.g. for the deployment of the larger force, the  supply and maintenance of military hardware, and specialized training. Analysts  agree these areas require robust private sector input. It is therefore ambiguous  to discern how he would get around expanding the military without contracting with  the private sector. Nevertheless, his solid understanding of international  affairs is likely to add substance to Obama’s rhetoric. | 
                                          
                                          August 23, 2008