Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers | |
Director: | Robert Greenwald |
Producer: | Robert Greenwald Sarah Feeley Jim Gilliam Devin Smith |
Starring: | Bud Conyers Janis Karpinski James Logsdon Bill Peterson Shane Ratliff Edward Sanchez |
Music: | Tree Adams |
Cinematography: | Nick Higgins |
Editing: | Carla Gutierrez Sally Rubin |
Distributor: | Brave New Films |
Runtime: | 75 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers is a 2006 documentary film made by Robert Greenwald and Brave New Films. Produced while the Iraq War was in full swing, the film deals with the alleged war profiteering and negligence of private contractors and consultants who went to Iraq as part of the US war effort.[1]
Specifically, the film claims four major contractors - Blackwater, K.B.R.-Halliburton, CACI and Titan - were over-billing the U.S. government and doing substandard work while endangering the lives of American soldiers, Iraqi civilians, and their own employees.[1] These corporations were tasked with “virtually everything except the actual killing,”[2] including food, laundry, housing, security, intelligence gathering and interrogation.[3]
The film starts with the events of March 2004 in Fallujah, where four Blackwater contractors were ambushed, set afire, their burned corpses dragged through the streets and then finally displayed hanging from a bridge.[4] In interviews, two of the contractors’ families contend that Blackwater, in search of higher profit, neglected to provide proper support and protection to their employees,[4] including maps, decent translators, an armored vehicle, and sufficient security personnel (their convoy was short a machine gunner).[4] [5] The families contend that with such support, their loved ones might be alive today.[5]
Iraq for Sale then takes contractors Titan and CACI to task for providing “interrogation support” for the notorious Abu Ghraib prison. These civilian contractors were outside the chain of military command, and were never held accountable for the amply documented, unsupervised torture they initiated.[2]
According to interviews with survivors, Halliburton subsidiary KBR was responsible for the 2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush deaths of six drivers who the corporation irresponsibly put into dangerous zones - zones which were supposed to be off limits to civilians.[6] Also, in interviews, Halliburton’s former employees charge that while the company had a sole contract to provide purified water for US troops, they actually distributed contaminated drinking water.[4]
Greenwald and Brave New Films document that at the time of production, the corporations in question had made more than tens of billions of dollars from their contracts in Iraq.[5] In part this was because the companies were working under “cost-plus” contracts, which reimbursed whatever they spent in expenses, plus extra, for profit.[2] This means that they actually made more money when they destroyed expensive equipment and machinery, rather than repairing it.[1] The film features footage of a burning $80,000 truck (whose only problem was a blown tire) that Halliburton had set afire on the side of the road rather than replacing the tire.[2]
Some of the other allegations brought up in the film include:
This was the first film to raise substantial production funds from small donations online: $267,892 from 3,000 people in 10 days.[7] The film had a limited theatrical release.[5] It was simultaneously released on DVD and shown nationwide at thousands of Brave New Films’ hallmark “house parties.”[2]
Iraq for Sale is among the best-reviewed of Brave New Films’ filmography, earning 100% approval from critics aggregated by Rotten Tomatoes.[8] The New York Times called it “a horrifying catalog of greed, corruption and incompetence among private contractors in Iraq,”[9] adding the film is “extremely effective.”[9] Salon says it was “dogged and impressive investigative reporting,”[2] and the Village Voice called it “a much needed reminder of the criminal negligence of those who lead the troops into this mess and those who have gotten rich off of it.”[10]
Greenwald attempted to interview representatives of the companies in question for the film, to no avail.[2] Halliburton contends the film is "yet another rehash of inaccurate, recycled information."[11] Eric Prince, founder of Blackwater, dismissed the film as “election year left-wing politics.”[12] On their website’s FAQ, CACI says it would be a “maliciously false accusation” to call them war profiteers.[13]