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Table of Contents
About The Book
Thirty years ago there were no private military and security companies (PMSCs); there were only mercenaries. Now the PMSCs are a bona-fide industry, an indispensable part of American foreign and military policy. PMSCs, such as the former Blackwater, assist US forces in combat operations and replace them after the military withdraws from combat zones; they guard our embassies; they play key roles in US counterterrorism strategies; and Homeland Security depends on them. Their services include maritime security, police training, drone operations, cyber security, and intelligence analysis (as Edward Snowden has famously revealed). Even the United Nations employs them.
When did this happen? The turning point came when the US found itself in a prolonged war with Iraq, but without adequate forces. So the Bush Administration turned to the PMSCs to fill the gap. Private contractors and subcontractors eventually exceeded the traditional troops. The industry has never scaled back.
PMSCs are an industry as essential as they are ubiquitous. Ann Hagedorn penetrates the mystery surrounding them, and her account will inspire a national dialogue about a little-known international industry on which our security rests. “The strength of The Invisible Soldiers is the impressive depth of Hagedorn’s reporting: copious interviews, generous use of sources, and a compelling narrative…The Invisible Soldiers also reports on the people behind these private companies, some of whom are seemingly the stuff of fiction” (Los Angeles Times).
Product Details
- Publisher: Simon & Schuster (July 28, 2015)
- Length: 320 pages
- ISBN13: 9781416598817
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Raves and Reviews
“Why did America’s war in Iraq end in failure? One big reason was the decision to outsource so much of the war’s conduct to private security firms. Who ‘won’ the Iraq War? Those very same firms. Flooding the war zone with mercenaries, they walked away with vast riches, while leaving behind a legacy of corruption and ineptitude. Ann Hagedorn’s coolly devastating book exposes the causes and assesses the consequences of this travesty.”
– Andrew J. Bacevich, author of Breach of Trust: How Americans Failed Their Soldiers and Their Country
"Well-reported and eye-opening. . . . This thoughtful book should kick-start a long-overdue debate."
– Alan Cate, The Plain Dealer
“The strength of Invisible Soldiers is the impressive depth of Hagedorn's reporting: copious interviews, generous use of sources, and a compelling narrative. . . . Invisible Soldiers also reports on the people behind these private companies, some of whom are seemingly the stuff of fiction.”
– Tony Perry, The Los Angeles Times
“Ann Hagedorn has given us a powerful and urgent analysis of our new military and security reality—the hiring of private warriors by governments and corporations for profit and plunder worldwide. As wars explode on every continent, and as these security companies operate in secrecy, shielded from public scrutiny or accountability, this brilliantly researched and vividly written book is essential reading.”
– Blanche Wiesen Cook, Distinguished Professor of History and Women's Studies at John Jay College and The Graduate Center, CUNY and author of ELEANOR ROOSEVELT
“A critique of the United States’ fateful turn toward private military and security contractors as a consequence of the Iraq War. . . . A brisk, disturbing account that adds to the sense that liberties taken in the war on terror have created long-term liabilities for American society.”
– Kirkus Reviews
“Hagedorn lucidly describes the long-range challenges to democracy caused by the privatization of security.”
– Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“The story of how private military security companies came to play a pivotal role in wartime operations is an important one, and Ann Hagedorn, a former reporter for the Journal, was right to take it on.”
– Linda Robinson, The Wall Street Journal
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High Resolution Images
- Book Cover Image (jpg): The Invisible Soldiers Trade Paperback 9781416598817
- Author Photo (jpg): Ann Hagedorn Photograph by Pat Williamsen(0.1 MB)
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