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2024: Private Military

2024: Private Military

 PARIS (MARCH 30th, 2024), BY J. LANNES FOR EUGNEWSCORPS.

Tomorrow will mark the fifth anniversary of the infamous “Shanghai Crash“, a fateful day which have changed the lives of most of us. We may actually be suffering more from its consequences today than we did in its immediate aftermath, back in 2019.

Global Crisis

What economists in the late 2010’s had called the “Great Recession of 2008” was just the beginning of the worst global economic decline observed since 1929. The Asian markets first bore the brunt from the crisis, quickly followed by a weakened Eurozone, and North America came down in their wake.

The first to be hit where those countries already struggling by the financial and sovereign debt crisis. Eurozone was shattered, with only a small core of countries left. Government after government declared their country in a state of default, unable to pay back their debt.

Privatization of War

The bankrupted States couldn’t afford social or public spending anymore, military budgets were especially victims of the crisis. That is, when armies were not disbanded in favour of a limited National Guard force.

It left tens of thousands of disbanded soldiers without any prospect, nor pay, anymore, while huge volumes of now useless military equipment appeared on the second-hand market. Both were quickly taken in the care of major private military companies (PMC). By a cynical twist of fate, those same States unable to afford a standing army have since then been the PMCs’ main clients, contracting them to  supplement their limited troops every time a crisis or terrorist threat arose.

The Advent of the PMC

Over the last five years, such PMCs have flourished all over the world. Some, like Weyland Defense Corporation, are working exclusively for the US Army, providing R&D, testing, maintenance, …

Others, like the California-based Damocles, the South-African Skild or the Russian URB are established worldwide, controlling foreign subsidiaries and working for dozen of governments and private employers.

Yet we still have the old “soldier of fortune” types, more mercenary band than company. One such example can be found in the Balkans, where the Belyie Volki, a band of unemployed veterans from the Transnistria War, who are lending their military experience, against payment, to any belligerent whatsoever. And thus often switching sides from one contract to the other.

2024: Private Military
2024: Private Military

 

 

2024: Private Military

Private armies are now gradually taking over more and more of the regular armies’ prerogatives, if not all of them in some countries. To such extent that we might have to get used to the notion of having, in a future not so far away, our security depending entirely on men whose sole reason for protecting us is money. 

[EUG]MadMat

4 Comments

  • Jozor
    July 1, 2015 at 3:47 pm

    I do hope ‘Weyland Defense Corporation’ is a British company, otherwise why call it Weyland?
    So why is it purely working for the US Army? Or is the UK Military non-existent thanks to the Conservatives? XD
    Or maybe it’s just the US subsidiary of ‘Weyland Defense Systems’? 😛
    As with a British sci-fi name like Weyland, it would be the equivalent of BAE Systems, probably by 2024 BAE Systems Inc. (US Subsidiary) will have bought a lot more of their competition in the US..

    • Edraii
      July 1, 2015 at 4:33 pm

      Isn’t that an Aliens reference?

      Space monsters confirmed!!

      • QShadow
        July 2, 2015 at 9:38 pm

        Thats what I thought too.

  • Kurwa
    July 2, 2015 at 11:42 am

    “21 août 2014”

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