Yesterday, the Blackwater scandal claimed its first administration victim. Richard Griffin, the State Department’s top diplomatic security official, agreed to resign, effectively taking the fall for the department’s non-existent oversight. (A month ago, Griffin was asked by a House committee to explain why State helped Blackwater evacuate a contractor who’d drunkenly killed an Iraqi vice president’s bodyguard. He refused to offer an explanation.)
That’s the good news. The bad news, as ABC News’ Rhonda Schwartz and Justin Rood noted, is that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice “quietly promoted” two other senior staffers who directly oversaw Blackwater’s security operations.
Justine Sincavage has been serving as director of the Overseas Protection Operation (OPO), which has direct responsibility for all State Department security contracts for Iraq and Afghanistan. That includes overseeing Blackwater, which has won more than $1 billion in security work from the State Department.
According to internal State Department documents, Sincavage was promoted Tuesday. Sincavage’s predecessor as OPO director, Kevin Barry, was also promoted, the documents show.
A State Department official who asked not to be named told ABC, “It is ironic; on the day the assistant secretary for DSS resigns, the two people with oversight responsibility for the program get promoted.
Another State Department official went even further, calling the promotions of Sincavage and Barry a symptom of “a perverted system of government.”
“They both got promoted in the face of all this mismanagement and controversy — talk about government B.S.,” said another. “What does it say when State promotes the two people into DS’ most senior positions, when if they had properly managed the programs under their responsibility, we wouldn’t be in this mess?”
Actually, it says quite a bit about the Bush administration’s habit of rewarding those who fail.
Speaking of the State Department, Rice finally agreed to chat with Rep. Henry Waxman and the rest of the House Oversight Committee today. Spencer Ackerman is doing a great job covering the hearing at TPM Muckraker
There have been quite a few interesting revelations this morning, but this one stood out.
How well are the State Department’s anti-corruption efforts in Iraq managed? Don’t ask Condoleezza Rice.
Rep. John Tierney (D-MA) laid it all out. Not only are there duplicative U.S. offices in Baghdad to oversee anti-corruption efforts — the Anti-corruption Working Group and the Office of Accountability and Transparency, to name two — but coordination is so bad that the OAT for months boycotted the meetings of the AWG. Rice said she was “not aware” of that.
Another point she wasn’t aware of: OAT has had, according to Rep. Tierney, four acting or permanent directors in the past ten months alone. The most recent one isn’t a diplomat or a trained anti-corruption official at all, but rather a “paralegal” who works at the U.S. embassy.
I’ve known some pretty impressive paralegals, but shouldn’t the head of the U.S. effort to prevent corruption in Iraq probably have at least some experience in diplomacy and/or anti-corruption practices?
Of course, whether she did a good job is largely irrelevant. There’s probably a promotion waiting for her upon her return.