Last week, El Salvador President Elias
Antonio Saca stood at the country's international airport, welcoming
home a unit of soldiers returning from service in Iraq. He called them
"heroes" and passed on President Bush's personal thanks. School
children waiting on the tarmac waved American and Salvadoran flags.
Police Sgt. Roberto Arturo Lopez is heading to Iraq soon, but he
expects no such attention — when he leaves or returns. That's because
he, like a growing number of Salvadorans, will play a different sort of
role in Iraq: that of a hired U.S. hand. El Salvador, the only Latin
American country to maintain troops in the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq,
has 338 soldiers on the ground. But there are about twice as many more
Salvadorans there working for private contracting companies, doing
everything from the dishes and the driving to guarding oil
installations, embassies, and senior personnel. Private security firms
contracted with the Pentagon and the State Department are dipping into
experienced pools of trained fighters throughout Central and South
America for their new recruits. With better pay than what they can earn
at home, some 1,000 Latin Americans are working in Iraq today,
estimates the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA). These recruits
are joined by thousands of others — from the U.S. and Britain, as well
as from Fiji, the Philippines, India and beyond. Close to 20,000 armed
personnel employed by private contractors are estimated to be operating
in Iraq, making up the second largest foreign armed force in the
country, after the US "It's not illegal — but it's not celebrated
either," says Jorge Giammattei, a political adviser at El Salvador's
Interior Ministry, giving voice to the moral ambivalence felt here and
elsewhere toward the growing reliance on private citizens to fill roles
once held by the U.S. military. [more]