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Blackwater Crushed Car With Three Kids, Old Man to Avoid Traffic

Posted by GottaLaff at 6:06 AM on October 8, 2007.


GottaLaff: This is what BushCo has created. And to repeat what Clive Stafford Smith said, "The immoral has become so mundane."

This post, written by GottaLaff, originally appeared on Cliff Schecter's Blog

When I read this editorial by Janessa Gans in my L.A. Times yesterday, my mouth dropped open. Gans, a visiting political science professor at Principia College, was a U.S. official in Iraq from 2003 to 2005.

She's not a big Blackwater fan:

As a U.S. official in Baghdad for nearly two years, I was frequently the "beneficiary" of Blackwater's over-the-top zeal. "Just pretend it's a roller coaster," I used to tell myself during trips through downtown Baghdad.

Except that this was not an amusement park. Nor was it in the least bit amusing.

We would careen around corners, jump road dividers, reach speeds in excess of 100 mph and often cross over to the wrong side of the street, oncoming traffic be damned.

The theme here? Unless you're Blackwater, everyone be damned.

I began to wonder whether my meetings, intended to further U.S. policy goals and improve the lives of Iraqis, were doing more harm than good. With our drivers honking at, cutting off, pelting with water bottles (a favorite tactic) and menacing with weapons anyone in their way, how many enemies were we creating?

Iraqi lives mean nothing to these mercenaries:

We were on a narrow stretch of highway with no shoulders and foot-high barriers on both sides. The lead Suburban in our convoy loomed up behind an old, puttering sedan driven by an older man with a young woman and three children.

This is beyond sick:

As we approached at typical breakneck speed, the Blackwater driver honked furiously and motioned to the side, as if they should pull over. The kids in the back seat looked back in horror, mouths agape at the sight of the heavily armored Suburbans driven by large, armed men in dark sunglasses. The poor Iraqi driver frantically searched for a means of escape, but there was none. So the lead Blackwater vehicle smashed heedlessly into the car, pushing it into the barrier. We zoomed by too quickly to notice if anyone was hurt.

Gans, as you and I are, was horrified:

"Where do you all expect them to go?" I shrieked. "It was an old guy and a family, for goodness' sake. Was it necessary for them to destroy their poor old car?"

And their compassionate reply?

My driver responded impassively: "Ma'am, we've been trained to view anyone as a potential threat. You don't know who they might use as decoys or what the risks are. Terrorists could be disguised as anyone."

"Well, if they weren't terrorists before, they certainly are now!" I retorted. Sulking in my seat, I was stunned by the driver's indifference.

She goes on to say how our entire mission is undermined:

The military has established rules of engagement, plus it is required to pay compensation for damages (though it is a difficult and bureaucratic process). Blackwater seemed to have no such rules, paid no compensation and, per long-standing Coalition Provisional Authority fiat, had immunity from prosecution under Iraqi law.

I've said it before, and I'll say it again: This is what BushCo has created. And to repeat what Clive Stafford Smith said, "The immoral has become so mundane."

Digg!

Tagged as: iraq war, iraqis, blackwater

GottaLaff is a regular blogger for Cliff Schecter's Blog


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View:
. . . the peace dividend being distributed to he people of iraq . . .
Posted by: KaptainSpiffy on Oct 8, 2007 7:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
yay! mission accomplished!

ugly americans.

don't YOU feel safer, here in the homeland?

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The U.S. owes reparations, big time.
Posted by: darkenergy on Oct 8, 2007 7:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's say we had to pay $1,000,000 for every Iraqi life lost as a result of this illegal war. Then with credible estimates ranging from 500,000 to 1,000,000 people, we would owe the people of Iraq between $500,000,000,000 and $1,000,000,000,000. That's five-hundred-thousand-million to one-trillion dollars. As well, let's say we had to pay another trillion (million billion) dollars for the infrastructural damage wreaked upon Iraq.

This would halt the war in no time and prevent future preemptive wars by the U.S.

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» Slight correction Posted by: darkenergy
And what exactly did Professor Gans do about it?
Posted by: rinthy on Oct 8, 2007 7:39 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Did she report it? Did she make any effort to find the driver of the car? If so, did she offer any reparation? And what about those three passengers in the back, the children. Did the good professor make any attempt to track them down and, at the very least, apologize for the trauma?
Sorry, but unless she took even one of those steps, I have a problem with her ethics, too. It won't do to say, two years later, that she was just a helpless passenger.
Rinthy

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» RE: Easy to blame others Posted by: boydranchitos
Do unto them...
Posted by: Soaring on Oct 8, 2007 7:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why are the americans surprised that instead of making more friends, they are only making more and more enemies all over the world?.
What about the law (arab) that says " Do unto them as they do unto you"...what would you do, if you were in their place?...kill as many americans as they can..

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U.S. has Zero Respect for Iraqis
Posted by: US Citizen on Oct 8, 2007 8:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Because the United States has hired Blackwater to work in Iraq, the United States obviously has no respect for the Iraqi people. This Blackwater incident again proves that the United States occupation of Iraq is a criminal enterprise.

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Petition Asking Congress to Demand that the State Dept & DoD Fire Blackwater.
Posted by: global_butterfly on Oct 8, 2007 8:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It has become clear that there is enough documented evidence to prove that Blackwater's tactics as well as their attitude toward the Iraqi people and culture are inappropriate, to say the very least..

Does the US Government really want to run the risk of Blackwater USA starting WW III?

It's time for the US Congress to demand that the Department of State and the Department of Defense cancel all contracts with Blackwater USA and order them to depart Iraq immediately.

If you agree please sign this petition and ask your friends to sign as well. It's time to end Blackwater's terror for profit.

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/2/its-time-to-fire-blackwater

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» Figure the Odds! Posted by: ~Fiona~
Just like a woman..
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on Oct 8, 2007 10:38 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our State Department of all things is now as big a disgrace as is our Justice Dept..

If the American State Dept. is seen world wide as a human rights abuser as it must be, or shall be if this wholesale cruelty and slaughter persists we lose more than the Iraq war we lose the whole shooting match..

There doesn't seem to be a single agency in our government that hasn't been perverted and soiled by the Bush Administration yet Congress allows this pernicious behavior to continue in our name..it is an outrage and shall be our ruin..

I fault Nancy Pelosi and Reid and Emmanuel as much as Karl Rove and the Federalist society and Bush and Cheney they are the enablers of these abusers..co-conspirators accessories before and after the fact and should be tried rigt along side them..

If you think about it with Pelosi, Feinstein, Boxer and Rice all betraying the Constitution and Our Civil Rights and America itself why would anyone want a women like Hillary especially for President..?

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Blackwater smells like
Posted by: bettyn on Oct 8, 2007 11:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bush/Cheney's personal SS to me. Are they going to turn this bunch loose on US next?

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» RE: Blackwater smells like Posted by: AndreaN
» RE: Blackwater smells like Posted by: doneman2000
The Real Blackwater GeoXI-XXX
Posted by: geoXIXXX on Oct 8, 2007 11:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We seem reluctant here to "call an Ace an Ace and a Spade a Spade." Blackwater and their DOZENS of counterparts are doing EXACTLY what Bush & Co. want them to do. Blackwater and their counterparts are hired terrorists and assassins! They are hired to kill--any and all Iraqis they can--brutally, relentlessly and mercilessly! They are hired to show the Iraqis that their lives are meaningless. They are hired to do "dirty tricks" and intimidate all common Iraqi life they touch. They are the ongoing "Shock and Awe" Rumsfeld so loved. They are hired to graphically demonstrate to ordinary Iraqis, exactly, who is in charge and that they had better not interfere or object as we steal their oil!!

God Save Iraq!
God Save America!

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Stop blaming Gans for Blackwater!
Posted by: CJC on Oct 8, 2007 1:01 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The problem with Blackwater is NOT that Professor Gans failed to tell us all what was the matter with Blackwater. So what if she might have been one of the hundreds of under-qualified CPA workers that Rajiv Chandrasekaran told us all about in "Imperial Life in the Emerald City." None of us knows that she didn't tell anybody about her Blackwater trip through Baghdad. Keep your eyes on the real story!

Blackwater has been hiding in plain sight since the Iraq invasion. They have been "protecting" American officials in Iraq since they got a $27 million contract in the summer of 2003 to provide security for Paul Bremer. They were even going to provide the security last month for an FBI team that was to go to Iraq to investigate the Sept 16 shooting of civilians in the street in Baghdad. I think the FBI declined and I don't know whether they've gone to Baghdad yet or not.

Blackwater first came to prominent public notice on March 31, 2004 when they sent 4 underprotected contractors in poorly armored SUV's ("bullet magnets" they're called) to pick up kitchen equipment, for heaven's sakes!, on the far side of Fallujah 1 week after the Marines had entered Fallujah and had killed a number of people in the streets. This blunder was not the contractors' faults. They were killed, dismembered and hung from a bridge. The event inflamed the Americans and inflamed the Iraqis and put a lot of fuel on the growing insurgency. (And the families of the murdered contractors have tried to sue Blackwater, without success as far as I know.)

"Since its original Iraq contract, Blackwater has won more than $700 million in 'diplomatic security' contracts through the State Department alone." (Jeremy Scahill, The Nation, Oct 15, 2007 p 21. Scahill is the author of a whole book on Blackwater, "Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army." Read it and weep and gnash your teeth.)

There are two articles in the New York Times, Oct 8 - "Blackwater Shootings 'Deliberate Murder,' Iraq Says" James Glanz and Alissa J Rubin, and "Blackwater Chief at Nexus of Military and Business" James Risen.

Why look for a scapegoat? The whole thing stinks - the war, the mercenaries, the lies the Bush administration has told us and the public business they've kept from our eyes. Any citizen who hasn't been paying attention, and even those of us who have, the media reluctant to ask hard questions, the politicians afraid of their own shadows, bear some responsibility for the disaster of Iraq.

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Self-Censored
Posted by: greenpagan on Oct 8, 2007 7:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just imagine what I really think about Blackwater.

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Once a storm trooper, always a storm trooper. . .
Posted by: monkeywrench on Oct 9, 2007 9:18 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What will become of these Blackwater mercs when the Iraq occupation inevitably winds down? Will these cretins, used to lavish pay and lawless operations, just "go into that good obscurity" quietly?

No.

So –– where will our government use the 180,000-odd professional storm troopers that they have trained and paid soooo well?

Could their future employment have anything to do with the detention centers that another favorite corporation of BushCo, Halliburton, is building around the country? Hmmmm. . .

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Blackwater: Coming Soon to your neighborhood!
Posted by: rjgwood on Oct 9, 2007 9:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Blackwater has been negotiating acquiring "training facilities" throughout the United States (their latest attempt has been to put one in Illinois). This has a number of troubling implications:

Bush & Co. put Blackwater to work post Katrina guarding New Orleans, is this a trend we're to see more of?

Will state governments hire Blackwater to "help" their trouble spots (I can just see many Americans believe inner-city residents could use just such "supports" to alleviate their crime problem)?

Will Blackwater pick-up contracts for private security in the U.S.? Will we see business execs/hollywood stars contract with Blackwater to provide high profile security?

Will the U.S. government continue to parcel out its security work and military work at an ever escalating rate?

I shudder to think of the possibilities for market expansion for Blackwater. Each candidate for U.S. House should be asked for a position statement on Blackwater and their ilk.

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Vidiots in power.
Posted by: donneek on Oct 9, 2007 10:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As I read this story and the comments, I keep seeing all the adolecent boys of the last couple of decades who spent hours mowing down the "bad guys" on the multitude of video games dedicated to murder and mayhem for fun. Many never excelled in school or society, after all how much do you learn sitting in front of a screen all day. What they got was the instant high that they received from their high "kill scores" at the end of each game.

With few options open to them upon graduation, if they did graduate, they went into the military, they were then trained, at taxpayers expense, to put those earlier skill to work only now it was killing for real.

Upon discharge Blackwater hires these highly trained killing machines to create an army that is not controlled by the United States Congress and there are no checks and balances. They can be unleashed at anytime on an unsuspecting homeland population with the Presidents blessing and we'll never hear about it because the corporate controlled media don't want us to know.

Sounds just like what happened to Germany in the thirties.

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Where's the humanity?
Posted by: risk on Oct 14, 2007 8:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Where is this world going and is it too late to turn back?

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