Blackwater, State Department covered up incidents in Iraq

The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform will hold a hearing tomorrow on Blackwater’s activities in Iraq, and by all indications, lawmakers will have plenty to talk about.

Guards working in Iraq for Blackwater USA have shot innocent Iraqi civilians and have sought to cover up the incidents, sometimes with the help of the State Department, a report prepared for a Congressional committee said today.

The report, based largely on internal Blackwater e-mail messages and State Department documents, depicts the security contractor as being staffed with reckless, shoot-first guards who were not always sober and did not always stop to see who or what was hit by their bullets.

In one incident, the State Department and Blackwater agreed to pay $15,000 to the family of a man killed by “a drunken Blackwater contractor,” the report said. As a State Department official wrote, “We would like to help them resolve this so we can continue with our protective mission.”

And when it comes to alleged Blackwater malfeasance, that’s really just scratching the surface.

The committee’s majority staff, led by Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), will release a report on Blackwater’s activities to coincide with tomorrow’s hearing, and the document will no doubt raise plenty of questions, including a look at the extent to which Bush’s State Department covered up the company’s killings.

Indeed, given the revelations of the past few weeks, Blackwater seems to have reached a unique point in our discourse, one in which a corporate name is so scandalous, it automatically represents outrage and indignity. There are a few — Enron, WorldCom, Halliburton — and with each passing day, Blackwater is taking its place. Indeed, in some ways, it may be the most scandalous of all.

The Speaker’s office has a detailed post documenting information being made available to the rest of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.

Previously undisclosed information reveals (1) Blackwater has engaged in 195 “escalation of force” incidents since 2005, an average of 1.4 per week, including over 160 incidents in which Blackwater forces fired first; (2) after a drunken Blackwater contractor shot the guard of the Iraqi Vice President, the State Department allowed the contractor to leave Iraq and advised Blackwater on the size of the payment needed “to help them resolve this”; and (3) Blackwater, which has received over $1 billion in federal contracts since 2001, is charging the federal government over $1,200 per day for each “protective security specialist” employed by the company.

Moreover, Josh Marshall has a doozy, highlighting a State Department report that largely exonerates Blackwater personnel involved with the Sept. 16 Baghdad shootings. The report, apparently, was written by Blackwater.

The report was written out of the State Department’s Bureau of Diplomatic Security, the folks who hired Blackwater to provide security for US diplomats in Iraq. But it turns out that the State Department employee who interviewed the Blackwater folks and wrote the report, Darren Hanner … well, he wasn’t a State Department employee. He was another contractor from Blackwater.

So yes, you’ve got that right. We’ve now reached what can only be called the alpha and the omega of contracting accountability breakdown ridiculousness. We’re outsourcing our investigations of Blackwater to Blackwater.

And yet, through it all, the U.S. keeps awarding Blackwater more and more lucrative contracts.

Stay tuned.

Support our private mercenary armies!

  • Blackwater: what happens when you give hillbillies booze, guns and pick ’em up trucks and turn them loose without a sheriff around.

  • Blackwater is a renegade outfit that should have been disbanded long ago but State dept. has kept them protected with total unaccountability. They have no bosses, just attorneys to collect the money. They think of death like a tv show…you just don’t see ’em in the next episode. Iraqis see them as American assassins…and they are right.

    These hearings will barely dent their corrupt machinery and if justice be served will result in the removal of the upper echelon of the state department.

  • And I’ll betcha some of those $1200 a day protective security specialists are nonexistent. There’s absolutely no oversight of the mercenary operations in Iraq, and you can bet the taxpayer is getting raped. It wouldn’t surprise me to find out that half the money is going toward fraud of one kind or another. And that’s not counting what’s being wasted through sheer incompetence. Fortunately, we’ll never know how bad it really is. Not even close.

  • williamjacobs–
    Well, I doubt the mercenaries get that full $1,300. Most of that goes to the company.

    But, military pay chart can be found here. It doesn’t include combat zone exclusions, hostile fire pay, BHA, etc., but should give you an idea.

    My rough estimate is that they earn less than $130 per day — or one-tenth of what they’re paying Blackwater — even with added pay factored in.

    Truly pathetic.

  • Armies for hire have always been an ingredient with the fall of an empire. Roman emperors had German guards, Louis XVI had Swiss guards. At the rate we are losing money, people, resources, rights and education…we are soon going to disappear like Rome and the French monarchy. All the things that made us good and great have been hijacked and destroyed by this administration.
    This war is about money, not ideals. It was evil from the beginning.
    What will it take for people to wake up and demand these jerks be taken from power? Congress alone will do nothing, they are enjoying benefits from the corrupt money machine of war. We need to beat on them, too many people just turn away.

  • Any Iraqi Militia that wants to make itself instantly popular will start hunting these guys like rabbits.

  • Time for the corporate death penalty. Effing mercenaries. And Marilyn, don’t forget King George’s Hessians.

  • And yet, through it all, the U.S. keeps awarding Blackwater more and more lucrative contracts. — CB

    And why not? Who’s gonna say “nay” to them and make it stick? Congress???

    Regarding the pay discrepancy between the true mercenaries and our volunteer army (also somewhat mercenary, no?). Gates (I think it’s Gates) is pushing the Congress for setting some bars against contractors “poaching” the military-trained (at our expense) troops, but nobody’s expecting any real resolution to the problem. Troops, even those willing to go back and back again, are not re-upping in the necessary numbers… because why should they, if they can get 10 times as much by “re-upping” with the “private sector”?

    We’re subsidizing the murderous SOBs *twice*.

  • I suspect that I will sound naive and simplistic, but… I hope that the Democrats in 2009 strongly consider restoring fiscal sanity to our federal government by HEAVILY taxing war profiteers, both corporations and individuals. And if that somehow included Bush, Cheney, and all of the neocon and theocon scum, all the better. While I rationalize that I am just creating conversational conjecture (“what if…!), deep down I have to admit to myself that I am serious. Just as I am disgusted by the carnage and idiocy of this war and its participants, I am also deeply disgusted by the obscene profits that corporations and individuals have made off of this war and American taxpayers.

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