Hired Guns
Views About Armed Contractors in Operation Iraqi Freedom
Download Url(s)
https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7249/MG987SRFAuthor(s)
Cotton, Sarah K.
Petersohn, Ulrich
Dunigan, Molly
Burkhart, Q
Zander-Cotugno, Megan
Language
EnglishAbstract
This study reports the results of a systematic, empirically based survey of opinions of U.S. military and State Department personnel with Iraq war experience to shed light on the costs and benefits of using private security contractors (PSCs) in the Iraq war. For the most part, respondents did not believe that PSCs were "running wild" in Iraq, but they held mixed views on PSCs' contribution to the U.S. military operation and U.S. foreign policy objectives.
Keywords
Political ScienceDOI
10.7249/MG987SRFISBN
9780833050755, 9780833049827Publisher
RAND CorporationPublication date and place
2010Classification
International relations
Diplomacy
Public international law: treaties and other sources