Private Contractors and Violations of the Law in Iraq and Afghanistan Private contractors (also known as private military or security contractors) provide a range of services for and on behalf of the US armed forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. Contractors prepare meals for soldiers, drive supply trucks, provide military training, and provide security for US civilian officials. Contractors – serving as interrogators and translators – have been linked to abuses at Abu Ghraib prison; and security contractors have been involved in numerous firefights in which there have been civilian casualties. Although the military use of contractors in the field dates back to the Revolutionary War, the US military in recent years has greatly increased its deployment of private contractors. As many as 180,000 contractors are currently believed to be in Iraq, and thousands more in Afghanistan. Several hundred have lost their lives.
Recent reports of alleged abuses by private US contractors raise a number of questions about how contractors can be held to account for abuse.
Can US contractors be prosecuted under domestic law in Iraq?
International law places legal obligations on states in areas under their jurisdiction or control to provide effective legal remedies for persons who have suffered violations of their fundamental rights. This includes state responsibility to investigate and prosecute serious human rights violations and violations of the laws of war by private persons and entities as well as by government officials and military personnel.
In June 2004, two days before the official end of the US military occupation of Iraq, the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) under Paul Bremer revised CPA Order 17 to provide immunity to foreign contractors from prosecution under Iraqi law. CPA Order 17 states: “Contractors shall be immune from Iraqi legal process with respect to acts performed by them pursuant to the terms and conditions of a Contract or any sub-contract thereto.” Contractors are defined as “non-Iraqi legal entities or individuals not normally resident in Iraq, including their non-Iraqi employees.”
Through this immunity provision, the United States effectively accepted responsibility for investigating and prosecuting criminal acts by foreign private contractors in Iraq. There are various legal options available to the United States to prosecute private contractors.
Although the CPA was dissolved in June 2004 with the transfer of governing authority to the Iraqis, several orders – including CPA Order 17 – continue to operate as the law of Iraq unless and until they are rescinded or superseded. Should the US continue to fail to ensure the legal protection of the civilian population from criminal acts by private contractors, Iraq would remain obligated to take necessary steps to fulfill its international legal responsibility to ensure remedies for criminal offenses.
Many foreign contractors are from countries besides the United States. CPA Order 17 allows contractors’ home states to waive their immunity from Iraqi prosecution. Human Rights Watch is unaware of any home states having waived immunity.1
Can US contractors be prosecuted under domestic law in Afghanistan?
The United States reportedly has an agreement with the Afghan government immunizing US contractors from prosecution by Afghanistan. As discussed above, however, international law obliges states to ensure that serious human rights violations and violations of the laws of war that take place in their jurisdiction are investigated and prosecuted. When the United States fails to effectively investigate and prosecute criminal acts by private contractors in Afghanistan, Afghanistan is obliged to take the necessary steps to fulfill its international legal responsibility to ensure remedies for criminal offenses.
Human Rights Watch is not aware of any similar agreements between other countries and Afghanistan that would protect third-party nationals working for US contractors from being prosecuted under Afghan law. In practice, however, it is difficult for the Afghan government to investigate and prosecute crimes carried out by third party nationals because of the immunity enjoyed by the employing company. Human Rights Watch is not aware of any instance in which a US company has cooperated with the Afghan government to facilitate the prosecution of a third party national under Afghan law.
What US laws could be used to prosecute private contractors who commit criminal acts?
To date, very few private contractors, including private security personnel, have been prosecuted for criminal offenses in Iraq, although allegations of criminal acts are widespread. There are a number of laws that could be used by US officials, depending on the offense and where it occurred, to prosecute private contractors.
Both the US War Crimes Act and the federal anti-torture statute permit the prosecution of crimes committed either by or against US nationals abroad.











