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Maliki and the Timetable: It's All About Blackwater
On July 7th the Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki in an Address before the Arab Ambassadors stated that his Government was looking at the necessity of terminating foreign presence on Iraqi land and restoring full sovereignty. The U.S. public diplomacy machinery began operating in full swing after the statement was released and has emerged with a self justifying explanation: the remarks of the Iraqi Prime Minister are reflective of the confidence in the stability and democratic progress of Iraq facilitated through the efforts of the Coalition Forces. The venue and timing of the comments are being considered crucial. The regional concerns over Iraq's stability were expected to be put at rest, while convincing the local population of the independence of the Iraqi regime ahead of elections in autumn.
The more serious considerations behind the demand to begun negotiations for a withdrawal strategy and date have evaded popular attention.
In September 2007, 17 Iraqis died as a result of unjustified and unprovoked shooting at the Nisour Square. Personnel of Blackwater Worldwide, a private agency contracted by the U.S. to operate in Iraq, were involved in the shooting. A week later the Iraqi Government revoked the license of Blackwater to operate in the country. In the last week of September, Blackwater received a contract worth up to $92 million from the U.S. State Department. In April 2008 the assignment to provide personal protection for diplomats in Iraq by Blackwater has been renewed for the third year. The FBI is still investigating the killings at Nisour Square; more than 30 witnesses have been questioned and three Iraqis have testified before the Federal Grand Jury in May 2008. Neither the lives of the ordinary Iraqis nor the decisions of the Iraqi Government were taken into consideration while renewing the contracts for Blackwater.
"This is bad news," Sami al-Askari, advisory to Prime Minister Maliki said, "I personally am not happy with this, especially because they have committed acts of aggression, killed Iraqis, and this has not been resolved yet positively for families of victims." The neglect of such crucial Iraqi concerns by the U.S. has in fact prompted the demand for withdrawing foreign troops from Iraqi soil.
The Nisour Square killing is not an isolated incident. In February 2007 a Blackwater sniper shot three Iraqi guards, without provocation, ironically from the terrace of the Iraqi Justice Ministry. In October 2007 a Blackwater personnel was so heavily drunk that he killed the bodyguard of the Iraqi Vice-President. In the same month an Iraqi civilian was shot for simply driving too close to the State Department convoy.
The Iraqi Government has come to realize that the U.S. is attempting to run the Iraqi state through private contractors who cannot be held accountable for their misdeeds. The Report from the American Congressional Research Service in July 2007 clearly indicated that the Iraqi government has no authority over private security firms contracted by the U.S. Government. A shocking incident in the Green Zone in 2006 has demonstrated that the Blackwater personnel have gained greater impunity than the regular U.S. armed forces. A SUV driven by Blackwater operatives had crashed into a U.S. Army Humvee. The Blackwater guards disarmed the army soldiers and forced them to lie on the ground at gunpoint until the vehicle was recovered.
Erik Prince, the founder of Blackwater has been a major financial supporter of the Republican Party. Hence Republican Presidential candidate John McCain is an obvious supporter of Blackwater. Even Democratic Presidential candidate Barak Obama has refused to rule out the deployment of private security companies in Iraq. Prime Minister Maliki has realized that the continued U.S. occupation of Iraq is a lucrative business venture for the American private firms like the Blackwater Worldwide. Echoing the popular sentiment the Iraqi Foreign Minister stated that there will not be 'another colonization of Iraq.' This is precisely the reason that Iraq has demanded more time for discussions on the Status of Forces Agreement with the U.S.
The mission statement of Blackwater Worldwide reads: "Blackwater efficiently and effectively integrates a wide range of resources and core competencies to provide unique and timely solutions that exceed our customers stated needs and expectations". The poorly equipped yet struggling indigenous Iraqi forces might be no match for the Blackwater, but it will surely be a national armed force serving and remaing accountable to the Iraqi people.
The demand of Prime Minister Maliki is less reflective of his confidence in the stability of Iraq and more a sign of the growing apprehensions over the privatization of the Iraqi reconstruction efforts.
Madhavi Bhasin is a Doctoral Researcher at the Jadavpur University, India. Her research areas include conflict resolution, South Asia and Middle East. Currently based in California and working on Indo-U.S. Missile Defense Cooperation and India's Public Diplomacy Strategy.
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9 Comments so far
Show AllOur "diplomats" in Iraq protect themselves with a gang of hired killers entirely above the law...
It sounds like a demented fantasy, but it isn't.
Let's call a shovel a shovel here. Blackwater personnel are not "private contractors." They are mercenaries. They do on land what pirates do at sea.
This article is NONSENSE. Yeah, Blackwater personnel are bad actors in Iraq, but their presence is only part of the problem of a lack of real and perceived sovereignty of the Iraqi government. It's as though the author believes that with Blackwater gone, the government of Iraq would be much more malleable to US presence, which I don't believe is the case. The US occupation, in its totality, is the sticking point, not just Blackwater. Blackwater is a symptom of the problem, not the problem itself.
are you saying, gus, that the iraqis wouldnt want infidel armies patrolling their streets? but why not? why wouldnt any country welcome foreign military occupiers?
no, its only blackwater that is a problem. because if iraqi leaders dont boot blackwater, blackwater will get iraqi leaders booted by iraqis.
no prob - i think all blackwater personnel should be paid to operate back here in the USA anyway, to train our police in crowd control and interrogation and spying techniques, in support of any legislated corporate spying databases against US citizens. i thought i saw a terrorist hiding behind a tree down by a creek while i was driving the other day. our economy can support 300,000 blackwater mercenaries operationally in the Northamerican theatre simply from transferring the monies they are paid in iraq to america when they are redeployed here.
heil!
The Christian Militias will use their chickenpluckin' mercenaries to spread the Word of the Lord! Through the heroic efforts of McCain and Rice, the Biblical lands of Mesopotamia will be Re-Claimed to stage the Glorious End Times, as Foretold.
The Wisdom of McCain, Rice, and Erik Prince trickles upon the faces of Patriotic Americans throughout the Holy Land of Chickenpluckistan - Praise Jesus!
A Mercenary is the very definition of an illegal combatant. I can not understand how someone from The taliban defending his homeland from invaders is an illegal combatant, but someone who murders Civilians and does it for pay, is "legal" . It is an absolute farce. I have absolutely no sympathy for mercenaries.
I have no sympathy for the countries that hire them.
Mercenaries are just an example of how rotten and corrupt the United States has become.
Maybe we have all gotten used to the idea of it, but doesn't it still seem incredible? The State Department hires an army of mercenary killers absolutely immune from prosecution by the "host" country... Who would have believed that was possible, ten years ago?
Iraq is the "host" country of our occupation the same way a human being "hosts" some kind of malignant intestinal parasite...
200,000 hookworms in Iraq! That's all we are.
It lately seems that Barack's 'table' is becoming so enlarged that nothing is being left off of it, not even Blackwater's legal immunity.
Explain again why voting D over R is in our interests.
Blackwater sniper shot three Iraqi guards - next it will be Nuri al-Maliki himself if he does not shape up.