Type | Public company |
---|---|
Founded | 2002 |
Founder(s) | Lt Col Tim Spicer, Mark Bullough, Jeffrey Day, Dominic Armstrong[1] |
Headquarters | England |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Nicholas Soames (chairman) |
Products | defence services |
Services | military services |
Website | www.aegisworld.com |
Aegis Defence Services is a British private military company with overseas offices in Afghanistan, Bahrain, Iraq, Kenya, Nepal and the United States. It was founded in 2002 by Tim Spicer, who was previously director of the controversial private military company Sandline International.[2]
In 2004 the International Peace Operations Association, an industry body, asked Aegis to apply for membership, but the application was rejected by a British competitor.[citation needed] It is a founding member of the British Association of Private Security Companies (BAPSC), a body lobbying for the regulation of the British PSC sector.[3] It is also a member of the Private Security Company Association of Iraq.
Since 27 July 2010 AEGIS Group Holdings AG[4] in Basel, Switzerland is holding 1,125,000 ordinary shares of Aegis Defence Services Limited, London.
Aegis in Iraq[]
In Iraq, Aegis is under contract (worth $293 million over three years) to the U.S. Department of Defense to provide security support services to the Project and Contracting Office (PCO), responsible for managing the reconstruction program. These services include:
- providing static and mobile security details for the PCO and United States Army Corps of Engineers;
- maintaining situational awareness of logistical movement and reconstruction security operations;
- facilitating intelligence–sharing between security forces and reconstruction contractors; and,
- providing continuous information on the viability of road movement throughout the country.
Through its charitable foundation Aegis conducts a self-funded civil affairs programme to facilitate reconstruction in areas where there are gaps in mainstream projects. It also provides expatriate–led and Iraqi–manned Reconstruction Liaison Teams to monitor the progress of reconstruction work subcontracted to Iraqi building companies. In separate contracts, Aegis is engaged in providing security protection to the inquiry into alleged corruption in the Oil for Food program. It provided security support to the UN Electoral Assistance Division (UNEAD) and the Independent High Electoral Commission (IECI) facilitating both the constitutional referendum to proceed in October 2005 and the general election in December 2005.
In May 2011, it was announced that U.S. Military is to pull out of Baghdad, in the air and ground, and to be replaced by eight companies including Aegis and DynCorp International to take over in the air.[5]
Trophy videos[]
On 27 October 2005 a number of "trophy" videos showing private military contractors in Baghdad firing upon civilian vehicles with no clear reason discernible from the footage itself sparked two investigations after they were posted on the internet. The videos were linked unofficially to Aegis Defence Services. Both the US Army and Aegis conducted investigations into the video; while the Aegis report is closed for client confidentiality reasons, the US Army enquiry concluded that the contractors involved were operating within the rules for the use of force. More 4 News broadcast extracts of the videos in March 2006.The video showed Matthew Elkin (former U.S. Army Ranger and lead security contractor) denouncing the contractors and ordering a cease fire.
On 6 April 2006 More4 News, reporter Nima Elbagir, identified disaffected former Aegis contractor, Rod Stoner, as responsible for posting the videos on the website. Aegis would not confirm that its contractors were involved in the incidents shown in the videos, but obtained a High Court injunction to have Stoner's website closed down. In the same More4 program, Labour MP Jeremy Corbyn insisted that the Pentagon's contract with Aegis Defence Services should be suspended until the matter had been properly investigated and fully reported upon.
Acquisition[]
On 28 October 2005 Aegis acquired Rubicon International Services Ltd, a longstanding provider of corporate and otherwise executive private security services. The public announcement was made on 4 November 2005. John Davidson, managing director of Rubicon, joined the Aegis board and became director of operations. Aegis chief executive is former Major General Graham Binns, who served in the Prince of Wales's Own Regiment of Yorkshire, which became the 1st battalion of the Yorkshire Regiment, in 2006, and is currently the Colonel of the Yorkshire Regiment. The chairman of the Aegis board of directors is former Defence minister, Nicholas Soames MP.[6]
References[]
- ↑ http://www.aegisworld.com/index.php/history-2
- ↑ Norton-Taylor, Richard (23 April 2009). "Foreign Office to propose self-regulation for private military firms". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/apr/24/private-military-firms-government. Retrieved 2 January 2012.
- ↑ Phinney, David. "From Mercenaries to Peacemakers?: Scandals Confront Military Security Industry". CorpWatch, 29 November 2005
- ↑ Handelsregister des Kantons Basel-Stadt
- ↑ "As U.S. Military Exits Iraq, Contractors To Enter : NPR". npr.org. 2011 [last update]. Archived from the original on 19 May 2011. http://web.archive.org/web/20110519022831/http://www.npr.org/2011/05/17/136357821/as-u-s-military-exits-iraq-contractors-to-enter. Retrieved 29 June 2011.
- ↑ Aegis Defence Services website - Management
External links[]
- Pelton, Robert Young. Licensed to Kill, Hired Guns in the War on Terror. Crown. Sept 1, 2006. ISBN 1-4000-9781-9
- Aegis corporate website
- British Association of Private Security Companies website
- Rubicon Acquisition in Adobe PDF
- 'Trophy' video exposes private security contractors shooting up Iraqi drivers
- More 4 TV exposé
- Aegis close down website
- http://www.rainews24.it/ran24/rainews24_2007/inchieste/19042007_affari_guerra/default_eng.asp
- 'Trophy' video showing private security contractors shooting up Iraqi drivers
The original article can be found at Aegis Defence Services and the edit history here.