Monday, June 30, 2014

It's sad we were right all along about Blackwater....

The top manager in Iraq of the notorious private security firm Blackwater threatened to kill a US State Department investigator for probing the company's performance, the New York Times reported Monday
The Times, citing an internal State Department memorandum, said the threat came just weeks before Blackwater guards shot and killed 17 civilians on September 16, 2007 in Baghdad's Nisour Square. 
However US embassy officials in Baghdad sided with Blackwater and the State Department investigators were ordered to leave, The Times said. 
Four former Blackwater employees are currently on trial in a US court for the Nisour Square deaths. 
The killing, seen as an example of the impunity enjoyed by private security firms on the US payroll in Iraq, exacerbated Iraqi resentment toward Americans. 
The lead State Department investigator, Jean Richter, warned in the memo dated August 31, 2007, that little oversight of the company, which had a $1 billion contract to protect US diplomats, had created "an environment full of liability and negligence." 
Blackwater guards "saw themselves as above the law," Richter wrote.

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