US Govt trying to curb Blackwater damage
UNITED STATES: The red-faced US government pleaded for
patience from Baghdad as a private US security firm’s role in a deadly
gun battle tested US claims that war-torn Iraq is a sovereign nation.
The White House, the Pentagon, and the State Department on Tuesday
grappled with how to curb the damage from Sunday’s clash in which
Blackwater contractors apparently killed civilians, fueling anti-US
sentiments in Iraq.
A top Iraqi judge has said Blackwater could face trial over the
incident, in which some of its guards, who were escorting US embassy
officials, opened fire in a Baghdad neighborhood, killing 10 people and
wounding 13.
But Blackwater denies any wrongdoing, and US legal experts said the
contractors may be immune from prosecution under a measure conceived by
the US-led Coalition Provisional Authority not long after the March 2003
invasion.
As concern mounted over potential backlash against foreigners in the
wake of the killings, the US embassy suspended all ground travel for its
diplomats and civilian officials across Iraq, limiting their movements
to inside Baghdad’s heavily fortified Green Zone.
And, US officials said, it was unclear whether — or if — any US
nationals involved would be tried under US or Iraqi law over the
incident, which Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has angrily branded
a “criminal” act.
“That bit of it will come at the very end” of a probe into what
happened, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said one day after
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice telephoned Maliki to ease his
concerns.
“You would have to have a precise set of facts in order to be able to
determine the various applicable legal authorities and whether or not
... there were any laws that were broken,” said McCormack.
“We want to be as open and transparent and cooperative as we possibly
can with the Iraqis. I think that this is going to be a process that
unfolds over a period of time. I can’t tell you how long,” he said.
The State Department and Iraq’s government were conducting parallel
probes into the incident, but “look for those investigations to merge
and to have a joint investigation pretty soon,” a US official said on
condition of anonymity.
McCormack declined to say whether Washington would make any US
nationals available for questioning by Iraqi officials, declined to say
how many Blackwater employees operate in Iraq, and said the convoy had
been provoked.
“The basic fact is that there was an attack on the convoy,” and
escorts are trained to “respond with graduated use of force,
proportionate to the kind of fire and attack that they’re coming under,”
he said.
“We have not been informed that Blackwater’s, quote, ‘license,’ has
been lifted, suspended or terminated,” McCormack said one day after
Iraqi officials said their interior ministry had done so.
Iraq’s government said it will review the operations of all security
firms working in the war-ravaged country, and the Pentagon said it was
taking a hard look into the US military’s use of private security
contractors in Iraq.
Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said the cabinet backed an
Interior Ministry decision to “halt the licence” of Blackwater, which
provides security for the U.S. embassy, and launch an immediate
investigation into the shooting.
Fiery anti-American Shi’ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, adding his voice
to Iraqi anger over the incident, urged the government to “cancel this
company’s work, and the rest of the criminal and intelligence
companies.”
A spokesman for the US Central Command said 7,300 private security
personnel were in Iraq under contract to the US Defense Department as of
July 5. Overall, there were 137,000 people in Iraq on Defense Department
contracts.
Those figures do not include private security personnel or others
under contract to the State Department — like the Blackwater contractors
in the shooting — or other US agencies.
The dispute came 17 months after US President George W. Bush was
unable to answer a graduate student who asked what laws apply to the
thousands of independent contractors working in Iraq.
Paul Williams, a former State Department lawyer who has advised
Iraq’s government, said that the contractors were immune from Iraqi
prosecution. Iraq could repeal that measure for the future but it would
not apply to Sunday’s incident.
Baghdad, Wednesday, AFP, Reuters |