Showing posts with label Blackwater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blackwater. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Warnings Unheeded on 48,000 Private Security Contractors in Iraq

Steve Fainaru at the Washington Post had this story on 12-24:

The U.S. government disregarded numerous warnings over the past two years about the risks of using Blackwater Worldwide and other private security firms in Iraq, expanding their presence even after a series of shooting incidents showed that the firms were operating with little regulation or oversight, according to government officials, private security firms and documents.

The warnings were conveyed in letters and memorandums from defense and legal experts and in high-level discussions between U.S. and Iraqi officials. They reflected growing concern about the lack of control over the tens of thousands of private guards in Iraq, the largest private security force ever employed by the United States in wartime.

Neither the Pentagon nor the State Department took substantive action to regulate private security companies until Blackwater guards opened fire Sept. 16 at a Baghdad traffic circle, killing 17 Iraqi civilians and provoking protests over the role of security contractors in Iraq....

On Feb. 7, 2006, Blackwater guards allegedly killed three Kurdish civilians outside the northern city of Kirkuk....

...On Christmas Eve 2006, a Blackwater employee killed the bodyguard of an Iraqi vice president in the Green Zone. Six weeks later, a Blackwater sniper killed three security guards for the state-run media network. On May 24, a Blackwater team shot and killed a civilian driver outside the Interior Ministry gates, sparking an armed standoff between the Blackwater guards and Iraqi security forces in downtown Baghdad.

By June 6, concerns about Blackwater had reached Iraq's National Intelligence Committee....

..."We set this thing up for failure from the beginning," said T.X. Hammes, a retired Marine colonel who advised the new Iraqi army from January to March 2004. He added that private security guards regularly infuriated his Iraqi staff with their aggressive tactics and that he reported the problems "up the chain of command."

"We're just sorting it out now," Hammes said. "I still think, from a pure counterinsurgency standpoint, armed contractors are an inherently bad idea, because you cannot control the quality, you cannot control the action on the ground, but you're held responsible for everything they do."....

...The State Department investigated previous Blackwater shootings and found no indication of wrongdoing, according to a senior official involved in security
matters....


...The Defense Department has paid $2.7 billion for private security since 2003... The State Department has paid $2.4 billion for private security in Iraq -- including $1 billion to Blackwater -- since 2003.... On Sept. 30, 2006, Congress passed a provision aimed at giving the military authority over all contractors in Iraq, including Blackwater. But the provision has not been implemented by the
Pentagon.....


...In previous wars, the Pentagon had prohibited contractors from participating in combat. But in Iraq, military planners rewrote the policy to match the reality on the ground. On Sept. 20, 2005, the military issued an order authorizing contractors to use deadly force to protect people and assets. In June 2006, the order was codified as an "interim rule" in the Federal Register. It took effect immediately without public debate.....

...But neither the military nor the State Department set guidelines for regulating tens of thousands of hired guns on the battlefield. Oversight was left to overburdened government contracting officers or the companies themselves, which conducted their own investigations when a shooting incident occurred. Dozens of security companies operated under layers of subcontracts that often made their activities all but impossible to track. They were accountable to no one for violent incidents, according to U.S. officials and security company representatives familiar with the contracting arrangements.

U.S. officials often turned to the Private Security Company Association of Iraq, a trade group funded by the security companies....

..."It violates all the best lessons of what goes into good policy and smart business," said Peter W. Singer, a Brookings Institution senior fellow... The association sometimes resisted regulation....

...On June 27, 2004, one day before he left Baghdad, L. Paul Bremer, administrator of the now-defunct U.S. occupation government, signed CPA Order 17, a decree granting contractors immunity from Iraqi law.... The February 2006 shooting incident in Kirkuk had damaged U.S.-Iraqi relations.... Ali, the provincial council president.... "sent official letters to the American and the British consulates and met them in my office to find out who the murderers were. They didn't do anything or give me clear answers. They only said, 'The ones who did it were from the Blackwater company.' "

A Blackwater spokeswoman did not respond to e-mails or phone messages seeking comment. U.S. officials said they could not recall the incident....

..."Contractors are . . . subject to oversight and accountability for their actions on the basis of U.S. law and regulation." ....




re The State Department investigated...and found no indication of wrongdoing - Remember - the Inspector General for the State Department was Howard "Cookie" Krongard, who was impeding the investigations into Blackwater, where his brother, former CIA executive director Alvin "Buzzy" Krongard, sat on the Advisory Panel.

Friday, December 21, 2007

PART II - British soldiers killed with US weapons

PART II

There are similarities to the situation the US government finds itself in now:

Blackwater was caught shipping weapons to Iraq without permits. The State Department attempted to block all investigations of Blackwater, claiming all records of Blackwater's actually belonged to the US government, and thus, required State Dept. permission for release. The State Department's decision blocked all inquiries into the extensive corruption of the Iraqi government.

State Department Inspector General Howard "Cookie" Krongard repeatedly blocked investigations into Blackwater. It turns out he's the brother of Alvin Bernard "Buzzy" Krongard, who sits on the Advisory board of Blackwater.

Some history on Buzzy: Buzzy was the Executive Director of the CIA on 9/11, {joining CIA in 1998 as counsel to Tenet} and up until 1997, had been chairman of the investment bank (Alex. Brown) that was used for the mysterious "put" options on 9/11 (on the most aggregiously affected companies. After leaving the CIA in late 2004, Buzzy was named non-executive chairman of the board of PHH Corp, which provides mortgage and fleet management services. In March of 2005, he was named to the global board of directors of the law firm of DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary US LLP. DLA Piper's board of directors includes chairman and former United States Senator George J. Mitchell.

Blackwater also has a "spy outfit" -- The Prince Group owns Blackwater Worldwide, and Total Intelligence Solutions.


... Its chairman is Cofer Black, the former head of counterterrorism at CIA, known for his leading role in many of the agency's more controversial programs, including the rendition and interrogation of al-Qaeda suspects and the detention of some of them in secret prisons overseas. Its chief executive is Robert Richer, a former CIA associate deputy director of operations who was heavily involved in running the agency's role in the Iraq war.

Aides to IG "Cookie" Krongard threatened investigators within his own office to prevent them from cooperating with the investigations into Iraq corruption and Blackwater's arms smuggling. Several of his staff have sought whistle-blower protections.

Matthew Lee reported for the Associated Press on September 22, 2007 (see Washington Post) that the U.S. Attorney's Office in Raleigh, N.C., with help from Pentagon and State Department auditors, was investigating whether weapons smuggled illegally into Iraq by Blackwater were sold on the black market, ending up in the hands of "terrorists".

The Turks had discovered PKK with the weapons and gave the serial numbers to US investigators.

Robert Fisk reported on the flood of weaponry into Lebanon:

...There are growing fears, moreover, that many of these guns are from the vast stock of 190,000 rifles and pistols which the US military "lost" when they handed them out to Iraqi police officers without registering their numbers or destination. The American weapons included 125,000 Glock pistols. The Lebanese-Iraqi connection is anyway well established. A growing number of suicide bombers in Iraq come from the Lebanese cities of Tripoli and Sidon....

PART III - British soldiers killed with US weapons

PART III

Now to the drugs side of the equation --

Peter Dale Scott (Berkeley) has chronicled the drug distribution operations of "The Meta Group" (which involves "Far West"):

... some of Far West's work with Halliburton is apparently approved by the CIA....


...Russian sources estimate that from 1991 to 2003 the same group shipped to Western Europe up to 300 tons of heroin and sold it to wholesale buyers of Kosovo Albanian nationality. In the same period they sold up to 60 tons of heroin to Azeri and Roma (gypsy) wholesalers in the Volga and the Urals Federal Districts of Russia. The group's total receipts for heroin in 1991-2003 are estimated to be $5 billion. The chief narco-baron of the group is said to be Vladimir Filin, who is also the head of Far West....


Note at the end of September, Army National Guard Spc. Ciara Durkin, stationed at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, was murdered - shot once through the head, her body found near a Church on base. She had warned her family during her most recent visit that she had seen some things she didn't like and had made enemies because of it.

Note that Bagram runways had just been upgraded to be able to support C-5s -- the largest airlifter in the Air Force inventory and has the ability to carry 36 pallets of cargo, it has unlimited range through aerial refueling, and could bypass the main (U.S. Central Command area of responsibility) hubs.

Note the opium "golden arteries" into Iran & Turkey, and into the Caucasus countries.

And note that heroin abuse is up at least fold, possibly 15 fold in the Caucasus countries, and is increasing in Russia (80,000 drug-related deaths are registered annually in Russia; 350,000 drug addicts were registered in the country at the end of 2006; 70% of those people who admitted to drug use are under the age of 30).

Also note that Charles D. Riechers, principal deputy assistant secretary for acquisition for the USAF was "suicided".

Ciara Durkin's family has gone to their Senator, John Kerry, for assistance investigating the matter. Note this is the same John Kerry who was responsible for producing the COVER-UP/BRUSH UNDER THE CARPET report for the Congressional IranContra investigation.

Bringing this up-to-date: Buzzy resigned from Blackwater's advisory board; the State Department's security chief Richard Griffin was forced to resign; then Cookie resigned from the State Department / Blackwater investigations, and then, from the State Department itself.

Has our illustrious media missed yet another story of USG-sponsored drug running for weapons?

Were the plans for IranContra merely re-architected for Afghanistan-Iraq-Lebanon?