Notice: Trying to get property of non-object in /data1/atlanticfreepress.com/includes/router.php on line 819

Mon

17

Sep

2007

The Iraq Blackwater Test
Written by Larry C. Johnson   
Monday, 17 September 2007 20:09
by Larry C. Johnson
Yesterday’s incident involved an insurgent attack on a State Department convoy in the Sunni neighborhood of Mansour in western Baghdad. Blackwater personnel guarding the motorcade returned fire — “to defend themselves,” according to a State Department official quoted by The Washington Post. A Post reporter on the scene in Mansour witnessed Blackwater’s Little Bird helicopters “firing into the streets.” Almost immediately, an Interior Ministry spokesman said the company’s license to operate in Iraq would be revoked.
First problem. Blackwater does not have a license to operate in Iraq and does not need one. They have a U.S. State Department contract through Diplomatic Security. Instead of using Diplomatic Security officers or hiring new Security officers or relying on U.S. military personnel, the Bush Administration has contracted with firms like Blackwater, Triple Canopy, and others for people capable of conducting personnel security details. State Department is not about to curtail the contract with Blackwater, who is tightly wired into Washington. Plus, State Department simply does not have the bodies available to carry out the security mission.Second problem. The Iraqi government has zero power to enforce a decision to oust a firm like Blackwater. For starters, Blackwater has a bigger air force and more armored vehicles then the Iraqi Army and police put together. As Spencer Ackerman reported, Blackwater’s little bird helicopter (an aircraft normally used by U.S. special operations forces) that was firing mini guns at Iraqi targets on the ground this past weekend. I can only imagine how Americans would react if there were Russian, Chinese, Mexican, or French security firms running around the United States and getting into firefights in tough neighborhoods, such as South Central Los Angeles. We would just shrug our shoulders and say nothing. Right?

Yeah, that’s what I thought. This incident will enrage Iraqis and their subsequent realization that they are impotent to do anything about it will do little to support the fantasy that the surge is working. There are some Iraqis who genuinely want to run their own country. But we are not about to give them the keys to the car. Blackwater is staying.

Quote this article on your site

To create link towards this article on your website,
copy and paste the text below in your page.




Preview :


Powered by QuoteThis © 2008
Comments (2)add comment

a guest said:

0
blackwater there to protect black oil
I agree, Blackwater ( or US troops ) won't leave till Bush & his Cronies has an invulnerable oil pipeline from Iraq to Texas
 
September 17, 2007
Votes: +0

a guest said:

0
Iraqis will take law into their own hands
Under Maliki, ordinary Iraqis may not have a lot of power but one thing they do have is guns. There is a real possibility that Iraqis will take the law into their own hands.

 
September 18, 2007
Votes: +0

Write comment
smaller | bigger

security image
Write the displayed characters


busy
Last Updated ( Thursday, 10 July 2008 14:54 )