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Soldiers fuel economy
SINCE the 1970s, Fiji has positioned
itself as a discount-soldier surplus store. Its best customer has been
the United Nations’ peacekeeping operations. Today, on the post-Sept 11
battlefield, Fiji is marketing for hire its 3,500 active soldiers,
15,000 reservists and more than 20,000 unemployed former troops.
“Private armies became a viable commercial enterprise the moment America
invaded Iraq,” Sakiusa Raivoce, a retired Fijian colonel and director of
Security Support, the biggest of the country’s six mercenary employment
agencies, said. “The time is right, and our price is right.”
Raivoce’s cash-and-carry slogan is no corruption of paradise. Fiji is a
martial culture with no problem in fashioning a gross domestic product
that includes mangoes and mercenaries. Fiji’s rulers unleashed their
dogs of war shortly after independence from Britain in 1970 to reduce
chronically-high unemployment.
The former civilian government of President Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara
increased the military from 200 to more than 2,000 to protect a tourist
destination with a population of 918,000 and no enemy other than
sunburn.
Fiji, which has undergone four coups in the past 19 years, has the
biggest military force among Pacific island nations and sends officers
to study at war colleges abroad, including China, Malaysia and South
Korea.
“We made a conscious decision to create an army bigger than we need to
generate foreign currency,” Lt-Col Mosese Tikoitoga, 46, senior officer
in the junta led by Commodore Voreqe Bainimarama, a former UN
peacekeeper, said. “Our economy has no choice but to build armies, and
it’s a good business. There are few other foreign investments. If we
didn’t do this, our people would be in the street creating havoc.”
Fiji’s unemployment rate is about 8%. Its gross domestic product is US$6
billion. Sugar is an important part of the economy, accounting for 20%
of its exports, constituting 5-6% of GDP and employing 12% of the work
force.
A 2007 report by the UN Working Group on the Use of Mercenaries
recognised “the important contributions of remittances from Fijian
migrant workers in the field of security to the economy of the country”.
Those wages from returning soldiers, money from the UN for leasing
peacekeepers – an estimated US$300 million over almost 30 years – and
fees from private security firms that hire active soldiers have helped
the anemic economy, according to junta leaders.
Pulling a pen from the pocket of a lime-green shirt embroidered with
banyan leaves, Col Tikoitoga makes some quick calculations: Since 1978,
Fiji has outsourced more than 25,000 troops to the UN, the British army
and independent mercenary contractors. In 2003, the mercenaries brought
home about US$9 million in wages.
Doug Brooks, president of the Washington-based International Peace
Operations Association, a lobbying group for security companies that
employ mercenaries, said “Fiji is a vital part of the industry” – which
he prefers to brand as “the peace and stability operations industry”.
Col Tikoitoga said more than 1,000 Fijians were stationed throughout the
Middle East for private armies under the corporate command of Global
Strategies, Triple Canopy, ArmorGroup International, DynCorp
International, Control Solutions and Sandline International.
More than 3,000 Fijians serve in the British army. Some of those
mercenaries were active members of the Fijian army. The government
allows soldiers, particularly officers, to end their military service to
join private security firms, which in turn pay it a fee.
Raivoce, a 58-year-old decorated veteran of numerous UN peacekeeping
campaigns, is no snake-oil hustler. He can ship a Special Forces-trained
Fijian soldier to a private army like Blackwater USA in Moyock, North
Carolina, or the London-based Global Strategies Group for a salary of
about US$1,700 a month.
That is about 3% of the US$50,000 a month those same companies will pay
for a retired and similarly seasoned US or British combat trooper.
The UN’s Department of Peacekeeping Operations, the multinational force
with an annual budget of US$5.5 billion and about 100,000 personnel
serving in 18 security actions globally, has 243 Fijian troops deployed
in the Middle East, Africa and Southeast Asia.
It sees Fijian soldiers as a cut-rate blessing. – International Tribune
As US lawmakers continue to investigate the Sept 16 shooting incident in
Iraq involving the state department security contractor Blackwater that
left at least 11 people dead, Raivoce says he does not turn out
“cowboys”.
“My boys know when to shoot and who to shoot,” he said of the men
available to security consulting companies like as Killology Research
Group in Jonesboro, Arkansas, and Instinctive Shooting International in
Israel.
The UN’s Department of Peacekeeping Operations, the multinational force
with an annual budget of US$5.5 billion and about 100,000 personnel
serving in 18 security actions globally, has 243 Fijian troops deployed
in the Middle East, Africa and Southeast Asia.
It sees Fijian soldiers as a cut-rate blessing. – International
Tribune
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