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User Name: Noman
Full Name: Noman Zafar
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Other Killings By Blackwater Staff Detailed

State Dept. Papers Tell of Coverup

Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, October 2, 2007; Page A01
Blackwater security contractors in Iraq have been involved in at least 195 'escalation of force' incidents since early 2005, including several previously unreported killings of Iraqi civilians, according to a new congressional account of State Department and company documents.
In one of the killings, according to a State Department document, Blackwater personnel tried to cover up what had occurred and provided a false report. In another case, involving a Blackwater convoy's collision with 18 civilian vehicles, the firm accused its own personnel of lying about the event.
 
The State Department made little effort to hold Blackwater personnel accountable beyond pressing the company to pay financial compensation to the families of the dead, the documents indicate. In a case involving a drunken Blackwater employee who killed a security guard to one of Iraq's vice presidents last Christmas Eve, U.S. government personnel helped negotiate a financial settlement and allowed the employee to depart Iraq.
Details of these and other incidents were released yesterday by the chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.), after the committee's staff examined hundreds of internal Blackwater and State Department documents. Erik Prince, Blackwater's chairman, and David M. Satterfield, the State Department's Iraq coordinator, are scheduled to testify today at a hearing before the committee.
On the eve of the hearing, the FBI announced that it is sending a team of agents to assist the State Department in investigating the alleged killing of at least 11 Iraqi civilians by Blackwater
personnel on Sept. 16.
That incident sparked controversy in Washington and caused the Iraqi Interior Ministry to demand that Blackwater cease operations and turn over those responsible for trial. The ministry was then overruled by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who accepted a joint U.S.-Iraqi government investigation. The FBI is to participate in a separate inquiry being conducted by the State Department's Diplomatic Security Service.
Waxman and other critics have said the State Department, which has paid Blackwater nearly $1 billion for security work in Iraq, allowed the company to operate with impunity. 'There is no evidence in the documents that the Committee has reviewed,' a memorandum released by Democrats said, 'that the State Department sought to restrain Blackwater's actions, raised concerns about the number of
shooting incidents involving Blackwater or the company's high rate of shooting first, or detained Blackwater contractors for investigation. '
In total, the documents indicate, Blackwater has terminated 122 employees under its State Department contract. According to Prince, the company currently has about 1,000 employees in Iraq.
 
The company, in a statement released yesterday evening, said it promised full cooperation with the FBI investigation into the Sept. 16 incident. 'Blackwater USA has always supported strong contractor accountability and this latest step is a positive move,' it said.
In his prepared testimony, Prince said Blackwater operates under 'dangerous and challenging' circumstances and its work ensures that 'more American service members are available to fight the enemy.' He
said the company 'complies with all relevant contractual terms and conditions' and applicable laws, and has been the subject of 'negative and baseless allegations reported as truth.'
Committee Republicans unsuccessfully petitioned Waxman to postpone today's hearing until the investigations are complete. In their own memo yesterday, they accused him of 'a rush to pre-judge and lay blame before the facts are known.' While they acknowledged the 'problems that arise from the use of private military contractors, ' they cautioned against attempts to label the Sept. 16 incident 'the Department of State's Abu Ghraib.'
Based on more than 437 Blackwater documents and 'a limited number of incident reports and documents from the State Department,' the Democratic staff memo said, Blackwater personnel had participated in 195 incidents in
which they discharged firearms, with Blackwater firing first in more than 80 percent of them. At least 16 Iraqi casualties resulted.
 
State Department officials said yesterday that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice asked for FBI involvement to ensure that there is no appearance of 'institutional bias' in the department investigating its own actions. They portrayed Rice as determined to get to the bottom of the Sept. 16 incident and to ensure that the department, which employs Blackwater and two other private security companies in Iraq, can protect U.S. diplomats while the companies comply strictly with the rules of their contracts.
In a June 24, 2005, incident -- reported in a U.S. Embassy memo that was cited by the committee and obtained by The Washington Post -- a Blackwater security detail in the city of Hilla, south of Baghdad, shot a civilian man standing at the side of the street as the contractors drove by. 'This is the case involving the PSD [personal security detail] who failed to report the shooting, covered it up, and subsequently were removed' from the city, an embassy security officer wrote in a July 1, 2005, report.
 
The officer, who met the victim's family, suggested that '$3,000 is the usual amount paid by the U.S. military civil affairs' in
accidental deaths, 'and an additional $2,000 is appropriate given the nature of the incident -- as it is the random death of an innocent Iraqi citizen.'
In an Oct. 24, 2005, incident in the northern city of Mosul described in the company's documents, Blackwater personnel fired on a vehicle that appeared to be turning into their path. One of the bullets passed through the car and hit a bystander in the head. Blackwater reported the 'shooting and probab[le] killing' but reported no attempt to aid the victim or his family.
A Nov. 28, 2005, Blackwater document reported that the company 'terminated' two of its employees after a motorcade they were guarding 'collided with or came in contact with approximately 18 vehicles -- six vehicles enroute' to the Iraqi Oil Ministry 'and 12 vehicles en route back.' Blackwater deemed the collisions
'acts of random negligence' and said written statements by the two men were 'invalid, inaccurate and, at best, dishonest reporting.'
On Sept. 23, 2006, a Blackwater convoy escorting a diplomatic limousine was traveling on the wrong side of the road, and a civilian driver lost control of his vehicle while trying to get out of the way. The civilian car plowed into the limousine and crashed into a pole at the side of the road. The Blackwater team evacuated the limousine, disabled its radio equipment with gunfire and drove away.
'Team 46 would have rendered aid to the LN [local national] vehicle,' Blackwater wrote in an after-action report, 'however, the vehicle was in a ball of flames immediately. '
An incident report by a different U.S.-contracted security firm, Triple Canopy, described the Blackwater employee's killing of the vice president's security aide as 'murder.' In its own assessment, Blackwater cited its employee for violating
rules against handling weapons while drinking. Assessing his punishment, the company determined that 'given the egregious nature of his violation, he should be prohibited from further affiliation with Blackwater and petition be made for the revocation of his security clearance.'
In its own preliminary report, the embassy noted that the 'regional security officer . . . authorized the release of Mr. [name deleted] to Blackwater USA.'
Although a senior embassy official first suggested that the company pay between $100,000 and $250,000 to the victim's family, the committee memo reported, a diplomatic security official called those sums 'crazy' and suggested that they could cause Iraqis to 'try to get killed so as to set up their family financially. ' Blackwater eventually paid $15,000, which the State Department helped deliver to the family.
 Reply:   Another example of How cheap b
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (6/Oct/2007)
Rice issues new rules for Blackwater , instead of banning the company, only rules have been modified.
WASHINGTON - The State Department has issued new guidelines to rein in and monitor Blackwater USA, the private contractor that provides heavily armed security for U.S. diplomats serving in Baghdad.

Under orders issued by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, video cameras will be mounted in Blackwater vehicles and federal agents will ride with the security contractors who escort diplomatic convoys.

The reforms announced Friday are aimed at "putting in place more robust assets to make sure that the management, reporting and accountability function works as best as it possibly can," said State Department spokesman Sean McCormack.

The State Department will also deploy dozens of additional in-house Diplomatic Security agents to accompany Blackwater guards.

The measures, which also include recording radio traffic between the embassy and diplomatic convoys and improving communications between those vehicles and U.S. military units in the vicinity, were implemented amid intense criticism of the department's security practices in Iraq and Blackwater's role. Security forces employed by the company are accused of killing 13 Iraqi civilians in a violent incident in central Baghdad last month.

The changes also come as Iraqis and U.S. lawmakers are clamoring for clarification of the now nebulous jurisdiction and authority under which the State Department's private security guards work.

On Thursday, the House passed legislation that would place all private government contractors in Iraq under U.S. criminal statutes. The Bush administration has expressed concerns about the proposed amendments but has pledged to work with Congress on improvements before the Senate takes up the bill in coming weeks.

The bill's sponsor, Rep. David Price, D-N.C., said Friday that Rice's move was welcome but overdue.

"It goes without saying that contract personnel who are armed and authorized to use deadly force ought to be closely monitored," he said in a statement. "The secretary still needs to address the essential question of accountability: How will rogue individuals who commit criminal acts be brought to justice?"

In ordering changes, Rice accepted preliminary recommendations from an internal review board she created after the Sept. 16 incident in which Blackwater guards are accused of opening fire on Iraqi civilians in a main square in Baghdad.

Blackwater contends its employees came under fire first, but the Iraqi government and witnesses have disputed that, saying the guards opened fire without provocation.

McCormack did not say that previous practices lacked proper safeguards to ensure accountability, but said the practices could be enhanced for all the department's private security contractors, including Blackwater. The company, with about 1,000 employees in Iraq, is the largest of three private firms that guard U.S. diplomats in the country.

The new rules initially will apply only to Blackwater details because the initial recommendations cover just Baghdad, where the company operates. This could be expanded to include the other two firms, Dyncorp and Triple Canopy, which work in the north and south of Iraq, McCormack said.

The United States has not made conclusive findings about the incident, though there are multiple investigations under way to determine what happened. The FBI on Thursday took control of what had been a State Department probe, in part to prepare for the possibility the incident may be referred to the Justice Department for prosecutions.

The orders issued Friday were recommended by a separate commission Rice created to look into the Baghdad embassy's overall security practices. McCormack maintained they are not intended to imply that the other investigations have determined Blackwater employees may have violated procedures.

The panel is being led by Patrick Kennedy, one of the most senior management experts in the U.S. foreign service. Rice also brought in outside experts, including retired Gen. George Joulwan, a former NATO commander in Europe; Stapleton Roy, a retired veteran diplomat; and Eric Boswell, a former State Department and intelligence official.

Kennedy has been in Baghdad for nearly a week. Rice had asked for a preliminary review by Friday.

McCormack noted that not all members of Kennedy's team were in Baghdad yet and stressed that Rice's decision to implement changes did not preclude further revisions to security policies.

Before Rice's orders, Diplomatic Security agents only accompanied U.S. convoys on an "ad hoc" basis, according to McCormack. Now, at least one agent will be in every convoy, he said.

It was not immediately clear how many more agents that would require, but McCormack said it would number in the "dozens." Department officials have refused to say how many Diplomatic Security agents are in Iraq, citing security concerns.

In addition, video cameras had not previously been mounted in convoy vehicles as a matter of policy and radio traffic had been monitored but not recorded by the embassy, McCormack said. Rice's orders also mandate that convoys have direct contact with tactical U.S. military teams in their vicinity, he said.

"In case there is an incident, we will have an improved capability to ensure that we have all the possible information we can collect to determine exactly what happened," McCormack said. "And, we want to make sure that we have full connectivity, up and down the chain, with the military operating in the area."

The State Department has counted 56 shooting incidents involving Blackwater guards in Iraq this year. All were being reviewed as part of the comprehensive inquiry Rice ordered.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071006/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/blackwater_rice
 
 Reply:   Blackwater started hiring in P
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (5/Oct/2007)
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