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Winning contractors

U.S. contractors reap the windfalls of post-war reconstruction

Winning contractors – An update

By Daniel Politi

As the number of contracts rises, problems continue to plague the contracting process

Contractors write the rules

By Jonathan Werve

Army policy governing use of contractors omits intelligence restrictions
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Private contractors

As early as December 2000 the Army was aware of the risks of calling on the private sector for intelligence work

Cutting through the fog of war

By Daniel Politi

Open records law offers flawed glimpse of government contracting

Privatizing combat, the new world order

By Laura Peterson

In 1998, the U.S. had a military presence in a remote African war that drew little attention from the media
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Marketing the new 'Dogs of War'

By Duncan Campbell

Sri Lankans hire Tim Spicer, a man already involved in global mercenary activities

Top 100 Contractors in Iraq, Afghanistan

By The Center for Public Integrity

Findings from the Center's second installment of 'Windfalls of War'

Baghdad bonanza

By Bill Buzenberg

The top 100 private defense contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan from 2004-2006

Windfalls of war: Pentagon's no-bid contracts triple in 10 years of war

By Sharon Weinberger

Since 9/11, Pentagon's no-bid military contracts have tripled -- to $140 billion

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