Blackwater mercenaries
resume patrols in wake of Baghdad civilian killings
| BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- The State
Department's initial report of last month's
incident in which Blackwater guards were accused
of killing Iraqi civilians was written by a
Blackwater contractor working in the embassy
security detail, according to government and
industry sources. 
In this September 24 photo, an Iraqi looks at
a car that was destroyed during the September 16
incident.
A source involved in diplomatic security at
the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad said a Blackwater
contractor, Darren Hanner, drafted the two-page
"spot report" on the letterhead of the
Bureau of Diplomatic Security for the embassy's
Tactical Operations Center.
That office -- which tracks and monitors all
incidents and movements involving diplomatic
security missions -- has outsourced positions to
Blackwater and another private firm, the embassy
source said.
A highly placed industry source said that
Hanner, who was listed on the report as the TOC
watch officer, was working for Blackwater at the
time the report was written, just after the
September 16 incident occurred. He was to rotate
out of Iraq this past week, the source said.
The man who approved the report was Ricardo
Colon, whom the embassy source identified as the
embassy's deputy regional security officer. A
State Department source confirmed a Ricardo Colon
Cifredo works for the State Department in Iraq.
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The deadly incident produced an outcry in Iraq
and raised questions about the accountability of
foreign security contractors in Iraq, who, under
an order laid down by the U.S.-led occupation
government, are not subject to Iraqi law for
actions taken within their contracts.
Anne Tyrrell, a spokeswoman for Blackwater,
emphasized that the State Department is doing its
own investigation into the incident.
The FBI is sending a team of agents to assist
the U.S. investigation at the State Department's
request, FBI spokesman Richard Kolko said Monday.
Blackwater -- which provides security to U.S.
diplomats -- says its employees responded
properly to an insurgent attack on a convoy. The
State Department "spot report"
underscores that scenario and doesn't mention
civilian casualties.
However, those accounts are at odds with what
the Iraqis are saying.
A senior Iraqi National Police official
participating in the Iraqi governmental probe of
the shooting said the Blackwater gunfire was
unprovoked and the guards fired randomly, killing
several civilians and wounding others. Watch Iraqi police video of
the incident aftermath »
Tom Casey, deputy State Department spokesman,
noted that a spot report "is a first-blush
account of those on the scene" and that the
"report has no standing whatsoever."
"It was not intended to be used as an
analysis, investigation, review or any detailed
assessment of the situation," Casey said.
"To assert that (it is) is untrue,"
Casey said.
The embassy source said after the spot report
was completed and approved, a State Department
agent took sworn statements from the participants
in the shooting.
The senior Iraqi police officer said that
Blackwater team members were questioned by Iraqi
police immediately after the incident and
initially said they opened fire in response to a
mortar attack. However, he said, they then
changed their story at least twice during the 90
minutes they were held.
Erik Prince, the CEO of Blackwater, was to
testify Tuesday before the House Oversight and
Government Reform Committee.
|
| "Employees of Blackwater USA have
engaged in nearly 200 shootings in Iraq since
2005, in a vast majority of cases firing their
weapons from moving vehicles without stopping to
count the dead or assist the wounded, according
to a new report from Congress. In at least two
cases, Blackwater paid victims family
members who complained, and sought to cover up
other episodes, the Congressional report said. It
said State Department officials approved the
payments in the hope of keeping the shootings
quiet. In one case last year, the department
helped Blackwater spirit an employee out of Iraq
less than 36 hours after the employee, while
drunk, killed a bodyguard for one of Iraqs
two vice presidents on Christmas Eve."
www.AngryArab.blogspot.com
|
Kate Randall, WSWS
24 September 2007
aegis
a UK group similar to Blackwater
Building up a surrogate military force, along the
lines of the French Foreign Legion or the Gurkhas, has
been the ambition of conservatives for many years. The
thinking is that future wars will be characterized by
"low-intensity," or guerrilla, warfare. If the
fighting is done by a force of irregular surrogates,
people won't question their casualties as they would
those of regular military personnel. The contras in
Nicaragua were an example of what a surrogate fighting
force might look like, and special ops types from South
Africas former apartheid regime have long been
involved in fighting in southern Africa. J Ridgeway
Armed guards of Blackwater USA have resumed escorting
American officials in Baghdad less than a week after the
security company shot and killed at least 11 Iraqi
civilians and wounded at least 13 others.
The decision by the US embassy to send the mercenaries
back onto the streets of the Iraqi capital came despite
calls by Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki that the US
State Department sack the company, and a demand by the
Iraqi government that security personnel from Blackwater
and other security firms be stripped of their immunity
from prosecution.
The redeployment of the Blackwater patrols flies in the
face of Bush administration claims that it is building a
"sovereign" Iraq government, and that the US
occupation is making progress in its mission to bring
"democracy" to the beleaguered country.
The US has dismissed the preliminary findings of an Iraqi
government review, carried out by the Interior, National
Security and Defense ministries, which found that the
Blackwater guards had fired on Iraqi civilians September
16 without provocation. The US embassy to date has
released no findings from a separate investigation it is
conducting into last Sundays events. In its only
statement on the incident, Blackwater USA has said the
convoy was responding to an ambush.
The state minister for national security affairs, Shirwan
al-Waili, said the Iraqi investigation was nearly
complete and that he believed the findings were
definitive. "The shots fired on the Iraqis were
unjustifiable," he told the New York Times, "It
was harsh and horrible." The Iraq government is also
investigating six other violent episodes involving
Blackwater this year that left at least 10 Iraqis dead
and 15 wounded.
On Saturday, the Iraqi government also said it expects to
refer criminal charges related to the incident to its
courts. The Iraqi governments preliminary report
stated that "the murder of citizens in cold blood in
the Nisour area by Blackwater is considered a terrorist
action against civilians just like any other terrorist
operation. The criminals will be referred to the Iraqi
court system."
It is unlikely this bluster will come to anything. Under
a provision known as Order 17 enacted under the Iraq
Provisional Authority in the early days of the
occupation, the US military and foreign contractors are
granted immunity from prosecution under Iraqi law. No
Western contractors are known to have been convicted in
Iraq of any crimes in the four and a half years of the
war.
The preliminary findings of the Iraqi
investigationas well as the accounts of
eyewitnesses to the incidentdepict a colonial
occupier operating with contempt for the lives of a
subject people. The Iraqi report concludes, "The
Blackwater company is considered 100 percent guilty
through this investigation." Iraqi investigators
reportedly have a videotape showing the security
companys guards firing on civilians.
According to the Interior Ministrys account, the
events of last Sunday began when a bomb exploded shortly
before noon about a mile north of Baghdads Nisour
Square, near the Rahman mosque, which is under
construction. According to the Times, whose reporter
viewed a copy of the report, US Embassy officials say the
convoy was responding to the explosion, although "it
is still unclear whether it was carrying officials away
from the bomb scene, driving towards it to pick someone
up or simply providing support."
The Blackwater convoy of at least four SUVs drove into
the square just after noon and took positions blocking
the flow of traffic in three directions. A car
approaching from the south apparently did not stop, and
the Blackwater guards opened fired, killing the driver,
according to the ministry account.
An Iraqi official told the Times, "The woman next to
the driver had a baby in her arms. She started to scream.
They shot her." The baby was also killed. He said
the guards then fired what appeared to be grenades or
pump guns into the car. "The car kept rolling, so
they burned it," the official said.
Traffic officer Ali Khalaf, who was on the scene,
provided the following chilling account to Agence
France-Presse:
"The American convoy arrived...and as usual I
stopped the traffic to allow them to pass," he said.
Then the guards hurled water bottles at cars, their
apparent custom, to stop traffic as the convoy drove
though.
"Then without reason, they opened fire. Four shots
in the air, aiming just above the cars," Khalaf told
AFP. "But one of the bullets struck a man in his
car. I went to his aid but he was already dead, his body
was slumped on the dashboard. His wife was then killed
before my eyes by a bullet that hit her in the
head."
He said he ran to take shelter as the gunfight ensued.
The car with the dead couple and baby "continued to
move, with its doors open and the bodies insidelike
a phantom vehicle.
"The Americans fired at everything that moved, with
a machine gun and even with a grenade launcher. There was
panic. Everyone tried to flee. Vehicles tried to make
U-turns to escape."
Khalaf said people then got out of their cars and tried
to flee, some struck down as they ran. "A car was
hit by two grenades and burst into fire, engulfing its
occupants in flames," AFP reports.
"There were dead bodies and wounded people
everywhere, the road was full of blood. A bus was also
hit and several of its occupants were wounded," the
traffic officer recounted. He added that two small black
helicoptersthe type that always accompany
Blackwater convoysalso swept down and sprayed the
scene with machine-gun fire.
In the wake of the atrocity, the Iraqi government is also
investigating other incidents this year involving
Blackwater. These include a February 4 shooting that
killed an Iraqi journalist near the Foreign Ministry; the
killing of three guards at the Iraqi state television
station on February 7; February 14, when Blackwater
employees allegedly smashed windshields; a shooting in
May near the Interior Ministry that left one person dead;
the September 9 shooting deaths of five people near a
Baghdad city government building; and a September 12
shooting in eastern Baghdad that wounded five people.
Last December 24, a Blackwater guard allegedly shot and
killed a bodyguard for Iraqi Vice President Adel Adbul
Mahdi inside Baghdads Green Zone. The Blackwater
employee quickly left Iraq after the incident, and no
charges have been filed in the case.
These violent episodes, combined with the omnipresence of
Blackwaters convoys and overhead patrols, have
earned the hatred of Iraqis. Armed with M-16 rifles and
grenade launchers, the firms armed guards speed
armored vehicles or SUVs mounted with machine guns
through the streets, accompanied by their own
helicopters, with gunners armed with automatic weapons
leaning out the sides.
The Iraqi governments awareness of the
populations seething anger in relation to the
actions of Blackwater and other contractors no doubt
played a part in the very public denunciations of the
security company following last Sundays massacre.
The Blackwater mercenaries are widely referred to as
"Mossad," the Israeli security service despised
across the Arab world. "They kill innocent people in
the street," Hameed Hussein, a pensioner in West
Baghdad, told AFP. "Where else in the world does
this happen? These are not security forces but rather
forces to kill Iraqis. They are frenzied dogs."
Mohammed Abdullah, 32, an engineer living in the western
Mansour district, commented, "They behave just like
the US soldiers. They are part of the occupation forces,
which is why they behave this way."
A traffic policeman in central Baghdad recounted,
"Two weeks ago, guards of a convoy opened fire
randomly that led to the killing of two policeman.... I
swear they are Mossad."
Before last Sundays episode that claimed at least
11 lives, senior Iraqi officials had repeatedly
complained to US authorities about Blackwaters
involvement in the killing of Iraqis, but were rebuffed
time and again. Blackwater also refused to answer any
questions about the reported incidents.
The US response exposes the brutality of the US war and
the contempt the occupiers have for the population, as
well as the utter fraud of Iraqi government
"sovereignty." The US invokes this supposed
sovereignty when it suits its intereststo accuse
Iran or Syria of "meddling" and to justify US
military operations and mass repression in the name of
fighting Al Qaeda.
However, when it comes to a clash between the puppet
government and its mastersin the streets of
Baghdad, the capital citythe pretense of
sovereignty is dropped and the US dictates the course of
action. The evidence uncovered by the Iraqi government
investigation is written off and there are to be no
consequences for the murder of Iraqi civilians by a gang
of hired mercenaries.
According to the US Embassy and State Department, what
becomes of Blackwater hinges on the results of a US-led
investigation, and not that of the Iraqi authorities.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on Friday that
she had ordered a "full and complete review" of
procedures for providing security to US diplomats, and
that this review would examine their "rules of
engagement."
At the same time, she openly defended Blackwaters
services, "We have needed and received the
protection of Blackwater for a number of years now, and
they have lost their own people in protecting our own
peopleand that needs to be saidin extremely
dangerous circumstances."
It is estimated that 20,000 to as many as 48,000
operatives from at least 25 private security companies
are currently operating in Iraq. Blackwater USA has an
estimated 1,000 employees in Iraq and government
contracts totaling at least $800 million, providing
security to US Ambassador Ryan Crocker and other
diplomats.
These security contactors form an integral part of the US
military operation and function according to the
"rules of engagement" set down by the US
occupiers. Removing these mercenaries from Iraq would be
a logistical and security disaster, and it is for this
reason that they will remain. The US has no intention of
abiding by the orders of the Iraqi Interior Ministry to
revoke their license or expel them from the country.
To perpetuate and secure the occupation, the Iraqi
population is subjected to a reign of mass terror and
intimidation, including the gunning down of innocent
civilians. The perpetrators of such crimeseither US
military troops or contractorsare immune from
prosecution and the top military and government officials
ultimately responsible are not held accountable for the
crimes.
In the case of Blackwater, there is another insidious
component. The company has close ties to the Bush
administration and the Republican Party and the US
intelligence apparatus. Cofer Black, vice chairman of
Blackwater USA, worked in the Directorate of Operations
at the CIA for 28 years, serving as director of the
CIAs Counterterrorist Center in 1999. He also
served as the State Department coordinator for
counterterrorism.
Blackwater is only one of the network of corporations
with close connections to the Bush administration that
have profited from the destruction of Iraqi society, to
the tune of billions of dollars. The civilians gunned
down near Baghdads Nisour Square last Sunday are
the latest casualties to be sacrificed in this
imperialist pursuit.:: Article nr. 36597 sent
on 24-sep-2007 15:52 ECT
www.uruknet.info?p=36597
Corporations and
Conflict Mercenary Trophy Videos There
have been hundreds of accounts of personnel from private
military and security firms committing abuses in Iraq.
These videos demonstrate how the mercenaries from Aegis,
a UK based security firm and Blackwater, a US based
private military contractor go about their 'work'.
www.waronwant.org/?lid=13260&tmpl=printversion

The main problem with these
guys is that they are armed and under nothing
like military control. In fact they have been
given immunity from prosecution under
Iraqi law! Thats right, tens of thousands
of American Rambos are running around with guns,
with no fear of criminal prosecution, in a
country where the local population is regarded as
little more than terrorist towel heads. Think
these guys are winning any hearts and minds?
Anyone remember the video a few enterprising ones
made a few years ago, where they drove around
shooting people at random to the sound of heavy
metal music? You can bet the Iraqis do.
Even worse, these guys are all
ex-military and have now been hired back at a
huge increase over their military salaries.
Thats right, the USA spends piles amounts
of money to train these guys, then they get to
retire with pensions and get hired back
at vastly increased salaries. There is a
word for this. Corruption. And what really annoys
me is that the military claims
contractors cut costs while allowing
troops to focus on fighting wars rather than on
other tasks. Let me get this straight, we
are hiring private companies and people to
perform tasks at a vastly higher salary than the
military pays, plus huge corporate profits are
being made in the bargain
and this is going
to cut costs? Theres a word for
this too. Lies.
Yeah, a stopgap measure that
has lasted longer than World War Two. One last
thing that concerns me. Do we want private
American armies in the USA? The above
picture of Blackwater Mercenaries was taken in
New Orleans. www.unitedcats.wordpress.com
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