Feral Jundi

Saturday, December 6, 2008

News: Blackwater Guards Indicted In Deadly Baghdad Shooting

Filed under: Iraq,Legal News,News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:17 AM

     So this is what the prosecutors have to come to?  Using some weapons related drug law to get these guys?  That’s pretty low. Or the debate about jurisdiction will be interesting.  How are they not connected with the State Department, when their job is to protect DoS employees.  Hell, they even have to train to a specific State Department standard, just to be a protector of DoS and contract with them. Not to mention a clearance, so they can actually be around DoS folk.  

     In my opinion, DoS needs to do the right thing and own up to the fact that Blackwater was working for them and do more to stand up for them.  It’s the least they could do.  How many Blackwater employees died while protecting DoS people?  And from what I gather, out of all of the thousands of missions, not one DoS employee was killed over in Iraq.  That is a record that speaks for itself.  –Head Jundi

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Blackwater Guards Indicted In Deadly Baghdad Shooting

5 Face Trial Over Incident That Killed 17 Civilians, Sources Say

By Del Quentin Wilber

Washington Post Staff Writer

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Five Blackwater Worldwide Security guards have been charged in a September 2007 shooting that left 17 Iraqi civilians dead and raised questions about the U.S. government’s use of security contractors in combat zones, according to two sources familiar with the case.

The guards, all former U.S. military personnel, worked as security contractors for the State Department, assigned to protect U.S. diplomats and other nonmilitary officials in Iraq.

Federal prosecutors obtained the indictment Thursday, and it was sealed. Channing Phillips, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the District, declined to comment on the investigation. The exact nature of the charges could not be determined. The five security guards are expected to surrender to authorities on Monday, the sources said.

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Friday, December 5, 2008

Maritime Security: Export Law Blog and Anti-piracy

Filed under: Legal News,Maritime Security — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 11:56 PM

   Another gem.  These guys have a couple of awesome posts about the legalities of conducting anti-piracy operations out on the high seas.  They specifically talk about Blackwater and what they can or cannot do out there.  –Head Jundi

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export law blog

About ExportLawBlog

ExportLawBlog is written and maintained by Clif Burns, Carolyn Lindsey, Illya Antonenko and Martin Gold.

  

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Afghanistan: Policing Afghanistan, by Graeme Wood

Filed under: Afghanistan — Tags: , , — Matt @ 4:36 PM

   I have never heard of the Hazaras, and you learn something new every day.  Perhaps they could be part of the solution of protecting the local populations in Afghanistan, instead of using Pashtuns exclusively? It sounds like the Hazaras care, and they certainly have the incentive.  From the sounds of it, they have been crapped on for a long time in Afghanistan. They kind of remind me of the Kurds in Iraq. Great article, and worth the read.  –Head Jundi

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New Yorker

Afghan National Police commander Muhammad Khan. Photograph by Louie Palu.

Letter from Pashmul

Policing Afghanistan

An ethnic-minority force enters a Taliban stronghold.

by Graeme Wood

December 8, 2008 

In late 2007, in Pashmul, a tiny cluster of villages in southern Afghanistan, Muhammad Khan began his tenure as the police commander by torching all the hemp in a farmer’s field. Farmers in the area had grown plants up to seven feet tall, and, being teetotallers, like many Afghans, they smoked hashish constantly. Afghan soldiers and policemen in the area also smoked, to the exasperation of the NATO troops who were training them. But Khan wasn’t from Pashmul and he didn’t smoke. He ordered his men to set the harvest ablaze, moved upwind, then turned his back and left, with an expression of indifference.

Khan and his police officers are members of Afghanistan’s Hazara minority, identifiable among Afghans because of their Asiatic features; the population they patrol is Pashtun. Hazaras are mostly Shia, with a history of ties to Iran, whereas most Pashtuns are Sunni and have turned to Pakistan for support. Over the past century, the two peoples have fought periodically, and the Hazaras, who are thought to make up between nine and nineteen per cent of Afghanistan’s population—the Pashtuns make up nearly half—have usually lost. On the border between the Hazara heartland, in the country’s mountainous and impoverished center, and the Pashtun plains in the south and east, conflicts over grazing land are common. But, working alongside NATO soldiers, Hazara police units are now operating far to the south of these traditional battlegrounds and deep into Pashtun territory.

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Funny Stuff: The Chainsaw Bayonet!!

Filed under: Funny Stuff — Tags: , , — Matt @ 4:07 PM

Industry Talk: The New York Times, and a Sloppy Editorial

Filed under: Industry Talk,Iraq — Tags: , , — Matt @ 1:08 PM

     And of course the New York Times has to say something about PSC’s and the SOFA.  This editorial comes packed with ill informed opinion, it is insulting, it disrespects the sacrifice made by PSC’s in defense of the client, and makes no mention as to the repercussions of not protecting PSC’s in Iraq. Typical of the NYT.  As for a a counter point, I recommend Michael Cohen’s reply to this editorial on his blog called Democracy Arsenal. 

     I like the accountability part, but the attacks are not necessary and show a complete ignorance of the dynamics. ‘Spray and pray’ or ‘trigger happy’? How about ‘survival’ and ‘protecting the client with lethal force when necessare, when in a war zone’? Obviously the author of this editorial feels that non-lethal weapons or no weapons at all are the best tools for protecting someone in a war zone?

     For the record, weapons and lethal force are a fact of life in a war zone.  And those that are tasked with using those weapons, and implementing lethal force when necessary, have a huge responsibility that is not taken lightly.  That is how I felt, and ‘spray and pray’ or ‘trigger happy’ were not words used within my lexicon. Nor would any of my peers or companies have any respect for me if they were.   

     Of course you will get those that might not make the grade, but you find those types both in the military and the PSC industry.  And for those individuals, I say deal with them properly and apply the laws of the state they are working for.  Like the soldier, the PSC is a tool of the state, and a representative of the state.  We should have the protections of the state, just like the soldier has.  UCMJ can and should be enforced with PSC’s, and why it isn’t shows that the client really doesn’t want to put the effort into that kind of protection.  Although we can argue that we are covered by UCMJ, but still, the client should be making this distinction with a well thought out SOFA agreement and the proper regulation of this industry.   

     We are a tool of the client, and if there is any blame at all, it should be on how the client uses that tool.  And to me, the client should be dedicating the necessary resources to properly regulate our industry.  The companies cannot be expected to police themselves, and the client must be involved with quality control.  I do not believe in over regulation though, and we should not hinder the free market forces that can enhance a company. But throwing PSC’s at the mercy of Iraqi Law with an ill thought out SOFA, without any consideration for how that will impact the PSC industry and the overall war effort, is akin to breaking rocks and cement with your sword and thinking that is a good use for that weapon/tool.  -Mudeer

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The New York Times

December 3, 2008

Editorial

At Least Some Accountability

American forces in Iraq have relied far too heavily on private security contractors who have operated with no real legal accountability. The trigger-happy tactics of these armies for hire have alienated Iraqis. The fact that they have been out of reach of Iraqi law has been an especially bitter pill to swallow.

For some of those contractors, that get-out-of-jail-free card is now being withdrawn. A new agreement with the Iraqi government that allows American troops to remain in Iraq stipulates that contractors working for the Pentagon who commit crimes will be subject to prosecution in Iraqi courts.

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