For once I take no joy in saying it, but I told you so. In a post titled, Criminal, Unaccountable, and Tax Financed, I wrote, "...In this war, in our time, there are more than soldiers on the ground in Iraq. Private contractors, who aren't governed by the Uniform Code of Military Justice and who, according to the Associated Press, "are exempt from prosecution by Iraqis for crimes committed there," also exist there. The only real check on these people are the fact that they can be fired. Technically, they're supposed to provide security, but they act as far more than rent-a-cops. They are a collection of private armies."
One of those private armies was caught doing what they do best -- running amuck and acting like the lawless paramilitary thugs they are. After a car bombing, Blackwater USA employees shot and killed eight iraqi civilians. It's not extremely surprising. Blackwater's mission is to protect diplomats and, by extension, themselves. Where the US military is required to use force judiciously (at least, in theory), Blackwater uses it as a first resort. Columnist Johann Hari gives us two examples in a piece in the Independent:
Yas Ali Mohammed Yassiri was a peaceful 19-year-old Iraqi trying to get on with an ordinary life in a deeply unordinary Baghdad when he boarded a taxi on his street in the Masbah neighbourhood. The mercenaries guarding the US embassy spokesman in Baghdad drove around the corner, so Ali's taxi slowed down - but the convoy opened fire anyway, to clear their path. Ali was hit in the throat and died immediately. Although the US embassy now admits the convoy "opened fire prematurely", the mercenaries were merely sent home; they are free, happy men.
[...]
In April 2004, mercenaries working for a private militia named Blackwater were guarding US occupation headquarters in Najaf when a protest by Shia Iraqi civilians began to stir outside. According to the Washington Post and eyewitnesses, Blackwater opened fire on the protesters, unleashing so many rounds so rapidly they had to pause every 15 minutes to allow their gun barrels to cool down. A video of this attack made it on to the Web, where a mercenary can be seen describing the Iraqis they are gunning down as "fuckin' niggers".
The thing that gets me is that these stories aren't all that hard to find. I didn't go out looking for the very worst examples, Hari's were just the first from a reliable source I came across. I don't have time to post every incident I could find -- there are just too many. Needless to say, the latest Blackwater crime was not an isolated incident, but it was just the last straw. Iraqis have had it with them. And it's one of many, many reasons why we've lost the war for iraqi hearts and minds. Firms like Blackwater are a big part of the reason that we're making more enemies than friends.
Agence France-Presse:
Powerful Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr on Tuesday demanded the ouster of all "criminal" foreign security companies from Iraq after private contractors gunned down civilians in a Baghdad square.
[...]
"We say the Iraqi government should cancel the licence of this company and all other criminal companies," Sadr said in a statement issued from his headquarters in the holy city of Najaf.
"Most of (Blackwater's) members are criminals and those who have left American jails," the statement said.
OK, I call BS on that last part, but it's Moqtada al-Sadr we're talking about here -- what do you expect? And, from the iraqi perspective, it sure would be easy to believe...
[CLICK TO READ FULL POST]