Since the cessation of major military operations in Iraq, approximately 120 people, either contract workers or privatised soldiers, have been abducted, with one-third being executed. The largest contingent of these workers has been provided by the Philippines. Through a specific, though not exclusive, focus on the Philippines connection, this book considers the myriad ways in which transnational labour migration intersects with the Iraqi occupation, as well as the US' relationships with SE Asia (and Japan in particular) and their neoliberal remaking of the Middle East. It places the war of terror within the practices of neoliberalism, but also links this with migration issues and argues that it is all part of a larger 'business' of conflict.