Blackwater Pay Insults the Military

October 4, 2007 RSS Feed Print

Among the more amazing things to emerge from the House government oversight committee hearing on private security contracting in Iraq was the amount of money paid to Blackwater USA private forces. A memo released at the hearing  shows that some of the paid militia were making as much as $1,200 per day. Compare that with what the Washington Post reports American servicepersons make risking their lives for this nation:

An unmarried sergeant given Iraq pay and relief from U.S. taxes makes about $83 to $85 a day, given time in service. A married sergeant with children makes about double that, $170 a day. Army Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Baghdad overseeing more than 160,000 U.S. troops, makes roughly $180,000 a year, or about $493 a day. That comes out to less than half the fee charged by Blackwater for its senior manager of a 34-man security team.

Twelve hundred dollars per day comes out to $6,000 per week, or almost $300,000 per year. How in the world can that be justified by a supposedly promilitary president? I recently had dinner with a friend who works for the Veterans Affairs Department. This person told me that a 45-year-old relative who is on active duty in the Army is being sent back for a third tour in Iraq. This relative has retired military friends in their 50s who've been asked to return to service. As this person put it, the Pentagon is "digging very, very deep" to find Americans willing to serve in Iraq.

Meanwhile, Blackwater seems to have no trouble recruiting young men. It seems to me an insult to everyone on active duty that the Bush administration can let profiteers earn these huge sums while troops' families use food stamps back home. What is wrong with this picture?

Tags:
Blackwater USA,
Iraq

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Fight for the country? How is he not fighting for his country by working with a company that assist the U.S. Government you ungreatfull swine. Yeah, hey the minus the combat is kind of a big deal for those who have to be in it. You just typed out of your ass dude, think a little.

Mike of IL 4:54PM June 11, 2011

Apparently your 'education' didn't teach you grammar. but then again you are from Kentucky, where 'education pays.' What a joke. And if you were a green beret, or seal, or whatever, you should have stayed in and fought for your country, not for a private company that cares about money as much as, apparently, you do. Stop bitching about 'blue collars' bitching as they work their tails off day in and day out(just as hard as our military, minus the combat. But hey, not everyone can be in (or believes in being in) the military. Meanwhile the blue collar class is taxed a large portion of their income, which is being taxed more and more each year, to pay for these exuberant private military contracts.

steve of VA 11:14PM October 20, 2010

My father was in the US Army for 20 years a majority of that time was spent in 11B (Infantry), he did attend R.I.P (Ranger Indoctrination Program) and received his Ranger TAB. He had a family of 4 and retired when he was 39 and a Master Sergent, after retiring do you know where my dad went to work? Cintas that's a cleaning company, a 20 Veteran was put cleaning. I learned from my dad's mistake and he told me, "Son I don't care what you do in life, I just want you to promise me when you do something just do it to the best of your ability." And I thank god everyday I listened to my dad. I was going to be a hybrid mechanic making 50-90 dollars and hour but my dad didn't have the money to send me to school. After getting 10 Years in the army and getting them to pay for my education, I decided to submit my application to Xe. And they accepted it, i'm now working as a senior Armor Technician. Do you know why PMC's make so much money compared to a regular soldier? Because we're expendable, if we die another young man will step up in our place. But this young man isn't an average young man, it's another that worked his ass of trying to make a good amount of money. Something I don't get about blue collars is that you will sit there and criticize people that work hard and make money, and if it's not one that's criticizing a PMC it's one that's criticizing the government. You guys just want something to bitch about, all I can say is if you do something just do it to the best of your ability if you want to get anywhere in life.

Josh of KY 1:01AM July 28, 2010

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report and hosts PBS's weekly news analysis program, To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbe. She also writes a weekly syndicated newspaper column for Scripps Howard News Service.

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