Sunday, October 23, 2016

Live from Erbil, Iraq, Week 8 Blog

What a fascinating moment in my life to be getting into these readings. Saturday was the first time we’ve been allowed to get out of the compound here for some leisure time, so I took my reading to a hotel to sit on their patio and read. As I ordered a cup of coffee and looked around me, I realized that it was likely that at least half of the people sitting around me were private security people. On my flight into Iraq last week, it was easy to tell who was flying in to do humanitarian aid work like me and who was flying in for some security reasons. The hulking figures, military tattoos, and tactical gear bags were a dead giveaway for the security types. (You could tell the aid workers by their grubby cargo pants, a hilarious stereotype come to life on that flight). So, reading the readings, particularly the Abramson and Williams article, I was reading them through the lens of the Mosul operation and the humanitarian response I’m involved in here.

I appreciated the nuance of Abramson and Williams to the role that non-state security actors/PSCs can play. The traditional IR approach to the emergence of these PSCs, assumes the zero sum relationship between the growth of non-state security actors and the shrinking legitimacy of the state. I went into the reading assuming this would be the approach of the authors. But, using theory and the African examples, this is not the approach they take. Rather, the authors talk about the ways that PSCs often support governmental powers. They support the goals of the state, reinforce the idea of the public good, and seem to be working inside traditional ideas about the purpose and legitimacy of security operations.

In exploring the Sierra Leone example, the authors say, “the authority and goals of the state are routinely exercised and negotiated with those of private security providers and their clients” (p. 8). I see this so clearly in the Mosul operation right now. A range of private and allied powers are assisting the Iraqi government to oust ISIS. PSCs are here to add value, complete specific tactical operations, and ultimately support state security. Even in a case where the state is quite weak and sovereignty easily eroded, all the actors come together citing public good and state security.

My experience of something like the Mosul operation is different than many of those in the class may have. In the case of a war, organizations like mine deal with the humanitarian fall out, focusing particularly on the immediate needs of children who are fleeing the war. Even as we aren’t involved in the military operations, we are central to a holistic care of the public safety of individuals impacted by conflict. And we ourselves have PSC actors which support our work. Aid workers aren’t armed, nor do we/can we travel with armed security, but we have staff with military experience tasked to assess risk, make recommendations, and get us the hell out of situations when they go sideways. There are UN coordination meetings where PSCs recommend how and where to set up new camps for those fleeing Mosul. PSCs assist the government actors here screening people fleeing Mosul.


The vast array of what PSCs do in the IR space goes far beyond groups like Blackwater. Their functions are numerous, and don’t necessarily lead to the erosion of the state. The state may be being remade in some ways and rearticulated, but many PSCs function within the traditional perspective of states having the ultimate authority within their territories. Rather than delegitimizing the state, PSCs are part of a shifting definition. 

4 comments:

  1. Erica, wow, I am so thankful that you are able to share some of your thoughts with us as you experience this situation in Iraq. I cannot imagine what it feels like to be an aid worker surrounded by violence and coercive force. You mention that your organization has a number of PSC actors that support your work to assess conflict as well as get you out of there if problems arise. Can you tell us a little bit more about what indicators are used to access the risk and by what methods they'll protect you if the situation goes sideways. Do you think PSCs supporting aid workers utilize different indicators and have different reactions that those not supporting aid workers?

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    1. Katherine,

      Sorry for the delay here! There is a whole range of areas that PSC, or in house security experts, use to assess risk to aid workers when we're in the field. Access to medical facilities, disease risk, food and water, rabies, those sorts of health risks, are assessed. Risks associated to crime and robbery, protests, terrorism/conflict, transportation (most common way for an aid worker to die is a car accident), natural hazards, and cultural issues. We'll have people on staff locally who are the security focal point that liaises with official and unofficial groups to assess the risks, as well as rely on PSCs.

      There are limitations on PSCs who work with aid workers. For instance, we never travel with weapons. No matter what, Afghanistan, Somalia, if it's an NGO car, you can't have arms. In some places, that means we travel with the UN peacekeepers who have arms. But mostly, we rely on good on the ground knowledge and our work to keep us safe, and travel without weapons. Major limitation for PSC staff who served in the military or who get to use arms with other clients!!

      As far as what happens when things go sideways, it all depends. My organization works with PSCs to train staff going to high risk places on how to deal with what could happen (simulations where we get taken hostage for a few days, where a food distribution is over run by terrorists, etc.) The idea is here that preparation is the best way to keep us safe. I don't think an aid agency would ever contract an armed PSC to get aid workers released or to protect us. In most situations, the host government or, for example, the US military, will be called in to get people out of bad situations.

      So much to talk about here! Hope that's helpful and interesting :)

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  2. Erica,

    Thank you for sharing your experience in Iraq. How do you personally feel about the PSCs there? It sounds like they are doing a great job.

    You make a good point in your last paragraph and I think that it really depends on the situation. Some PSCs are doing a great job and really help a weak government like Iraq to improve security.

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    1. Christine,

      Thanks for your comment! I'm not sure that I know enough about what's happening militarily in Mosul to know about how well the PSCs are doing there. I agree with you, it seems like they are doing a good job, and certainly liberating a city from IS is a good thing, even if the "what comes next" question is a serious one. My feelings about them are mostly that what they do is so different than what I do, and they way the approach the work seems so different. Humility and listening is so critical for good aid work. Confidence, force, and decisiveness seem to be important to PSCs. Such a different way to approach situations, I'm always intrigued when I observe PSC staff on planes, at the expat hang outs, etc.

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