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New
Contracts Reflect Continued Presence in Iraq
By Walter Pincus
Washington Post
June 2, 2008
The depth of U.S. involvement in Iraq and the difficulty the next
president will face in pulling personnel out of the country are
illustrated by a handful of new contract proposals made public in
May.
The contracts call for new
spending, from supplying mentors to officials with Iraq's Defense
and Interior ministries to establishing a U.S.-marshal-type system
to protect Iraqi courts. Contractors would provide more than 100
linguists with secret clearances and deliver food to Iraqi detainees
at a new, U.S.-run prison.
The proposals reflect
multiyear commitments. The mentor contract notes that the
U.S. military "desires for
both Ministry of Interior and Ministry of Defense to become mostly
self-sufficient within two years," a time outside some proposals for
U.S. combat troop withdrawal. The mentors sought would "advise,
train [and] assist . . . particular Iraqi officials" who work in the
Ministry of Defense, which runs the Iraqi army, or the Ministry of
Interior, which runs the police and other security units.
The mentors will assist an
U.S. military group that previously began to implement what are
described as "core processes and systems," such as procurement,
contracting, force development, management and budgeting, and public
affairs.
Mentors would have to make
a one-year commitment, with options for two one-year contracts after
that. As a reminder of what they are getting into, the mentors must
supply their helmets, protective body armor and gas masks, according
to the announcement.
The marshals service would
be organized by the
State Department's bureau
responsible for developing rule of law programs in Iraq. It "has
plans to create an Iraqi service to be known as the Judicial
Protection Service (JPS), modeled to some degree after the
U.S. Marshals Service, that
will ensure the safe conduct of judicial proceedings and protect
judges, witnesses, court staff, and court facilities," a notice
published last month said.
State's plan is to hire a
contractor as a judicial security program manager, who would work
out details of how such a service could be put together for the
Iraqis. That person or group would develop not only the mission,
size and structure of an Iraqi JPS service, but also the personnel,
budgeting and training materials necessary, plus "all other aspects
of creating the new organization so that the project can be
contracted out."
In short, State wants a
contractor to put together all the elements so the department can
contract the project to another contractor.
State also is looking to
hire a contractor to provide "100 plus linguists" who would work for
a year each, with as many as four one-year options to follow.
Arabic and Kurdish
translators are sought. "Native or near native capability in the
foreign language and an excellent command of the English language
are required," according to the notice. They will work not only at
State's Baghdad embassy, but also at regional offices and with
Provincial Reconstruction Teams.
Another contract noticed
last week previews the opening, apparently in September, of a
U.S.-run prison, now labeled a Theater Internment Facility
Reconciliation Center, which is to be located at Camp Taji, 12 miles
north of Baghdad. The new contract calls for providing food for "up
to 5,000 detainees" and will also cover 150 Iraqi nationals, who
apparently will work at the facility. The contract is to run for one
year, with an option year to follow.
The U.S. holds about 20,000
Iraqis at two facilities today, mostly in Camp Bucca in southern
Iraq and the rest at
Camp Cropper near Baghdad.
Along with the facility at Camp Taji, which is expected to hold
Iraqis detained in Baghdad, another new reconciliation center,
mainly for Sunnis, is being built at Ramadi in Anbar province, where
many of these detainees were captured.
In March, Marine Maj. Gen.
Douglas Stone, who runs the detainee program, told reporters that,
on average. Iraqi detainees remain in a U.S. facility for 11 months.
But that might not be the
case for the roughly 9,000 Iraqis whom he described as having "a
very rigorous view of an ideology that we would broadly categorize
as
al-Qaeda." They are headed
to the new reconciliation centers for what could be longer stays.
National security and
intelligence reporter Walter Pincus pores over the speeches,
reports, transcripts and other documents that flood Washington and
every week uncovers the fine print that rarely makes headlines --
but should. If you have any items that fit the bill, please send
them to fineprint@washpost.com.
One new contract calls for
a detention center to be built to augment Camp Bucca, the largest
U.S.-run prison in Iraq. (By Steve Fainaru -- The Washington Post)
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