Being Blackwater means never having to say you’re sorry…Condi will do that for you…

blackwateronpatrol.jpg

Blackwater Security (shown here on one of their typical helicopter patrols in Iraq), who was involved in a shootout Sunday that updated reports now say left over 20 Iraqi unarmed civilians dead, has yet to offer an apology for the attack. They continue to state that they fired in defense against a perceived threat.

Of course, they don’t have to say they’re sorry. They have The US Secretary of State to do that for them.

Condoleezza Rice has apologized both personally and on behalf of the United States government for the shootings. She has done so, it is reported, to forestall Blackwater’s expulsion from Iraq.

iraqvictimsblackwater.jpg Given the heinous nature of the reports of Blackwater’s actions (shooting unarmed Iraqis who were felling the scene in the back), the operative question becomes why? Why defend such lawless, vicious behavior? Here’s a possible explanation:

Diplomats, engineers and other westerners in Iraq rely heavily on protection by Blackwater. The Iraqi decision created confusion on the ground, with uncertainty over whether protection was still available and whether Blackwater staff should leave the country immediately.

Add to that new reports that the US has now restricted the movements of diplomats and others since the Blackwater shootout, and it becomes plain enough: the US can’t operate in Iraq without Blackwater’s protection. After all, the troops are being used for more important work – pursuing the oil interests of the US. So duties normally assigned to troops – providing protection to senior officers, diplomats, and important corporate interests (like oil business executives) have to be contracted out. Since Blackwater is a primary security provider for these people, the American presence in Iraq, and hence, Bush administration foreign policy, is captive to the likes of Blackwater.

So we get double-talk like this from a State Dept. deputy press secretary:

We’re in conversations with the Iraqis on how we can find some mechanisms for looking at this issue in a joint way. There have been a number of questions that have been raised and we want to make sure that both we and the Iraqis have a common set of facts that we’re working from and also that we can hopefully come to some common conclusions on how to proceed. – Tom Casey, State Dept. deputy press secretary

What will those conclusions be? Given that the Iraqi government has thrown down a gauntlet with this expulsion of such a powerful administration corporate partner, one would assume that one conclusion will be that Blackwater will only temporarily be expelled from the country. Distasteful as that is for both the US and Iraq governments politically (as well as horrifying for the Iraqi civilian population), it might be safer than the alternative. At least it will continue to give Blackwater somewhere far away from our shores to use their troops, planes, and ships without an invented “crisis” here at home that might allow The Decider to use them here in the US.

Update: The NY Times has an article that explores the complexities of holding civilian security firms like Blackwater to a legal standard.  (Thanks to Scrogue Brian Angliss for the heads up.)

5 Responses

  1. Jim, in your original post on Blackwater having it’s license yanked, I commented that the Iraqi government should update the Iraqi laws granting these mercenaries legal immunity.

    If the Iraqi government can’t do this one thing, we know it’s as useless as most people (and pretty much all Iraqis) think it is, and it’s time to replace it – again. But if it can, then Bush will be forced to deal with a government that has realized it truly is sovereign and either overthrow it in full view of the rest of the world or back down.

    Well, I’m happy to report that this is happening. Check out this NYTimes article. A key quote is

    Publicly, the Bush administration has not said how it would respond if the Maliki government tries to carry out its threat to evict Blackwater, but administration officials and executives in the security contracting industry both said Wednesday that they believed that the White House and the State Department would seek to block any move by Iraq to force the company out.

    The issue is already leading to sharp tensions between the governments, and any effort by the United States to force Iraq to keep Blackwater could make the Maliki government appear to be a weak puppet.

    And if anyone dislikes my use of the word “mercenaries,” check out this quote from the same article:

    …the most extensive use of private contractors on the battlefield since Renaissance princes hired private armies to fight their battles.

    Back in the Renaissance, those private armies were known as mercenaries, and even Machiavelli wrote of the danger mercenaries pose to a government in The Prince:

    Mercenaries and auxiliaries are useless and dangerous; and if one holds his state based on these arms, he will stand neither firm nor safe; for they are disunited, ambitious and without discipline, unfaithful, valiant before friends, cowardly before enemies; they have neither the fear of God nor fidelity to men, and destruction is deferred only so long as the attack is; for in peace one is robbed by them, and in war by the enemy.

    And:

    The mercenary captains are either capable men or they are not; if they are, you cannot trust them, because they always aspire to their own greatness, either by oppressing you, who are their master, or others contrary to your intentions; but if the captain is not skillful, you are ruined in the usual way.

  2. There is, of course, no excuse for Blackwater. Nor is there any excuse for the DoD hiring Blackwater to do its job.

    They do it so that they can hide the numbers of troops over there (by counting only military, not mercenaries). This, though, gives the mercenaries legal cover.

    If Iraq is, in fact, a sovereign nation as our President says it is, then we should respect their laws. If they want Blackwater out because they don’t trust it, it should go.

    I’m not holding my breath.

  3. [...] an unrelated note, though – I don’t see an exclusion in the FAIR Act of 1998 for the protection of State Department officials by Blackwater mercenaries. Last I heard security wasn’t a “ministerial and [...]

  4. [...] revoke their contractor license and expel them from the country. They just kept their own counsel, had Condi Rice apologize for them, and now they’re back doing what they do best – running amok in Iraq while being paid [...]

  5. [...] it is with that misunderstood force for security and protection, Blackwater, USA. Just because a private company gets over one billion dollars in non-competitive [...]

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.