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War on Iraq

Another Brutal Rape Cover-Up at KBR

By Karen Houppert, The Nation. Posted April 4, 2008.


Another female KBR employee has come forward with allegations of sexual assault in Iraq.
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Editor's Note: Lisa Smith is a pseudonym used on request. Additional reporting by Te-Ping Chen. Research support provided by the Investigative Fund of The Nation Institute.

HOUSTON -- It was an early January morning in 2008 when 42-year-old Lisa Smith*, a paramedic for a defense contractor in southern Iraq, woke up to find her entire room shaking. The shipping container that served as her living quarters was reverberating from nearby rocket attacks, and she was jolted awake to discover an awful reality. "Right then my whole life was turned upside down," she says.

What follows is the story she told me in a lengthy, painful on-the-record interview, conducted in a lawyer's office in Houston, Texas, while she was back from Iraq on a brief leave.

That dawn, naked, covered in blood and feces, bleeding from her anus, she found a U.S. soldier she did not know lying naked in the bed next to her: His gun lay on the floor beside the bed, she could not rouse him and all she could remember of the night before was screaming and screaming as the soldier anally penetrated her while a colleague who worked for defense contractor KBR held her hand -- but instead of helping her, as she had hoped, he jammed his penis in her mouth.

Over the next few weeks, Smith would be told to keep quiet about the incident by a KBR supervisor. The camp's military liaison officer also told her not to speak about what had happened, she says. And she would follow these instructions. "Because then, all of a sudden, if you've done exactly what you've been instructed not to do -- tell somebody -- then you're in danger," Smith says.

As a brand-new arrival at Camp Harper, she had not yet forged many connections and was working in a red zone under regular rocket fire alongside the very men who had participated in the attack. (At one point, as the sole medical provider, she was even forced to treat one of her alleged assailants for a minor injury.) She waited two and a half weeks, until she returned to a much larger facility, to report the incident. "It's very easy for bad things to happen down there and not have it be even slightly suspicious."

Over the next month and a half, she says, she faced a series of hurdles. She would be discouraged from reporting the incident by several KBR employees, she says. She would be confused by the lack of any written medical protocol for sexual assault (as the only medical person on site, she treated herself with doxycycline). She would wander through a tangled maze of interviews with KBR and Army investigators about the incident without any clear explanation of her rights. She would be asked to sign several documents agreeing not to publicly discuss the incident, she says. She describes having her computer -- which she saw as her lifeline, her main access to the outside world -- confiscated by Army investigators as "evidence" within hours of receiving her first email from a stateside lawyer she had reached out to for help.

And eventually she would find herself temporarily assigned to sleeping quarters between two Army Criminal Investigation Division (CID) officials, who, she says, assured her that it was for her own safety, since her alleged assailants were at the same camp for questioning; they roamed freely. When she wanted to move about the camp to get meals, etc., she was escorted.

Smith felt very alone. But she was not.

In fact, a growing number of women employees working for U.S. defense contractors in the Middle East are coming forward with complaints of violence directed at them. As the Iraq war drags on, and as stories of U.S. security contractors who seem to operate with impunity continue to emerge (like Blackwater and its deadly attack against Iraqi civilians on Sept. 16, 2007), a rash of new sexual assault and sexual harassment complaints are being lodged against overseas contractors -- by their own employees. Todd Kelly, a lawyer in Houston, says his firm alone has 15 clients with sexual assault, sexual harassment and retaliation complaints (for reporting assault and/or harassment) against Halliburton and its former subsidiary Kellogg, Brown & Root LLC (KBR), as well as Cayman Island-based Service Employees International Inc., a KBR shell company. (While Smith is technically an SEII employee, she is supervised by KBR staff as a KBR employee.)

Jamie Leigh Jones, whose story made the news in December -- when she alleged that her 2005 gang rape by Halliburton/KBR co-workers in Iraq was being covered up by the company and the U.S. government -- also initially believed hers was an isolated incident. But today, Jones reports that she has formed a nonprofit to support the many other women with similar stories. Currently, she has forty U.S. contractor employees in her database who have contacted her alleging a variety of sexual assault or sexual harassment incidents -- and claim that Halliburton, KBR and SEII have either failed to help them or outright obstructed them.


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I suspect she is still in danger.
Posted by: surfreality on Apr 4, 2008 6:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please keep the spotlight on.

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Tax Money Well Spent
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Apr 4, 2008 6:10 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They should hand every female employee a bottle of vaseline. I'm sure they could charge the taxpayers $50 for each bottle.

Seriously though, do you think problems like these are going to get better or worse in the coming years? What are the preconditions necessary to make problems like these go away? What kind of person would even work for bloodsucking parasite companies like KBR. What kind of morality can you expect the typical employee to have?

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» Read the whole article Posted by: Declan
» RE: Tax Money Well Spent Posted by: Quannah
» 'lie back and enjoy it?" Posted by: e rice
Looking the other way.
Posted by: Farragher on Apr 4, 2008 7:09 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If we can look the other way while female "employees" are raped, why can't we open gov't funed bordellos, get the whole thing out in the open, and then look the other way. That, in and of itself, would be the greatest protection for those females hoping to take advantage of the lucrative oportunities available to them in the war zone, while at the same time creating another lucrative oportunity for the women who want to make money in the sex trade. Simple solution. Police the approved houses of ilrepute, give the whores medical attention, and away we go.

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» **RAPE IS ABOUT POWER< NOT SEX** Posted by: cwilsondrum
A good representation and metaphor for the character of americans
Posted by: MikeOckhurtz on Apr 4, 2008 7:18 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Americans have become perpetrators of war crimes against their own kind. It has to do with the egocentric idea that America is above everyone in every way that carries over to the behavior of the american who thinks he or she is superior in every way. We have become victims of ourselves and we rape our own soldiers. How disgusting is that? It's difficult to understand why a woman would even join the Armed Services today. Our nation has humanistically devolved, we are committing genocide in Iraq. We have suffered a huge loss of our good national character as individuals. That loss began at the top, over the years since Reagan, Bush, Clinton and Bush II, we seem to be devoid of conscience and only feign guilt or shame if caught doing crimes. Our soldiers threat Iraqis as inhuman, the same way the Izraelis treat the Palestinians. Are we Americans really now as equally despicable as the Izraelis? I think so. maybe even worse. I do't recall any stories of Izraelis soldier raping each other.

As for the mercenary men and women who work for KBR and other "contractors" I have no sympathy for them whatsoever. They are mercenaries. The four mercenaries who were killed in Falluja and had their burnt bodies hung from a bridge got no sympathy from me. If you go to a war as hired gun and die that your problem. If you go to a war as a hired gun and got raped, that's your problem. It's not patriotism that got them there as mercenaries. It was, for whatever reason, money and only money. Only God knows how many innocent Iraqis have been killed by mercenaries. So a mercenary got raped in Iraq. Too Bad.

America is indeed a very sick place and Americans are sick people.

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Get the Truth Out There
Posted by: Southern Gal on Apr 4, 2008 7:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These incidences of rape need to be emphasized in the media. Women should know what they are getting into when they sign up with these private contractors. There should also be steps taken to make sure that there are procedures in place and personnel independent of the military and the private companies to process and handle the complaints and allegations made by women who are raped or assaulted.

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Accountability!
Posted by: kclaf on Apr 4, 2008 7:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That's a word and action that is not spoken of in this country anymore. When the persons commiting these horrific crimes are held completely accountable for their actions, these actions will happen less and less. Since no one is held accountable, except the victim of course, then it won't stop. The one's who make the 'laws' or 'rules' are the ones commiting the atrocities and/or allowing them to continue. This occupation of Iraq, and the White House, has brought out the ugliness of those who choose this type of behavior, and many of them call themselves christians...what a joke this country has become. The actions of this government and perpetrated by it's flunkies are definitely not representative of the majority of americans. Men can stop rape, so be men and protest this kind of treatment to the gender that brought you into this world.

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Calling all Islamophobes and Zionnazis
Posted by: PakiBoy on Apr 4, 2008 8:04 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Come out come out where you are....

You morons post ad naseam on any positive/negative article on women in muslim societies but are always MIA on an aticle that shows the true face of AmeriKKKan misogyny!

I guess hypocrisy and fascism go hand in hand ;)

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And this surprises you
Posted by: bitsfick on Apr 4, 2008 10:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
how???

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It's time
Posted by: willymack on Apr 4, 2008 10:34 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To pull ALL our women out of the combat zone. Let 'em complain; at least they won't be brutalized any more. It's highly unlikely any real investigation or punitive action will be taken in the case of those already abused. The thugs in Iraq are the same as the ones in Washington.

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» RE: It's time Posted by: aerdrie
» RE: It's time Posted by: ericksonml@sbcglobal.net
Lie down with dogs
Posted by: meetmeineleusis on Apr 4, 2008 11:37 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and get anally raped, apparently.

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» RE: Lie down with dogs Posted by: Quannah
Rev. Wright- Do A Speech
Posted by: johnbradleycopeland on Apr 4, 2008 12:26 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If we could get Rev. Wright to do a speech about this I bet we could get international attention devoted to this issue! Where is George Bush and the good "christian" Republicans on this issue? Don't they care about female American soldier's and employees? Where is the outrage from them? When will America make it criminal to have employment contracts that call for "arbitration" which is just another word for "**** you"! Vote for McWar and there will be a lot more of this!

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defshepard
Posted by: aurora545 on Apr 4, 2008 12:38 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please keep the spotlight shinning hard on these animals. They are a total disgrace to the uniform and the country they serve. As for the contractors, they need to be held up to the laws of this land period. No escape clauses for them in these contracts their employees sign. The law is the law is the law end of arguement. Prosecute to the fullest extent of the law.

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Why Do You Think the Contractor Had Her in Iraq?
Posted by: sofla100 on Apr 4, 2008 12:54 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They probably had her in Iraq to "service" the guys. You think the USA or US military is going to do anything? Contractors, 200,000 of them in Iraq, are the real power, not the USA military. Why do you think this war is costing $3 billion a week. This war is all about taking care of big defense contractors who have gotten richer and richer. As for the woman, her rape is completly approved and sanctioned by the Contractor and the USA military and government. If you don't think so, then why do they do nothing?

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» she was a paramedic Posted by: e rice
Rape and war go together
Posted by: fanny666 on Apr 4, 2008 1:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The culture of rape in war

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» RE: ape and war go together Posted by: chameleon
Deb
Posted by: debmcd on Apr 4, 2008 1:18 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I really hate to say this but payback is a Bitch. Maybe these assholes who feel like they have a right to rape should get it right back. A group of women who can't seem to get justice should just take it into their own hands. Let's see how fast this stops once these jerks start getting raped. I can't see them going along with something long and hard being shoved up their asses. This kind of misogynistic behavior will just continue unless women start giving it right back.

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» RE: Deb Posted by: maribelle
» RE: Deb Posted by: Blue Heron
» RE: Deb Posted by: -jw-
PROSECUTION IS A CHOICE ?
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Apr 4, 2008 1:52 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't believe that willymack is suggesting that women be owned and/or controlled. They appear to be in great danger and until someone has a better idea it makes sense to get them out. I understand the pressure of earning a living but this is a high price to pay for a decent job. If this happened to a woman coming home from a job here at home and the guy was caught, he'd go to jail long time. This is not 'inappropriate' behavior, it's vicious and criminal. Anna

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» RE: PROSECUTION IS A CHOICE ? Posted by: maribelle
Stories like this make me very happy to read this...
Posted by: Blue Heron on Apr 4, 2008 3:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4225769

Hallelujah and Amen!

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waste em
Posted by: cwilsondrum on Apr 4, 2008 4:17 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
suicide apparently is easy to fake in the military in a war zone "he cut off his own member" "worst case of suicide I've ever seen"

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Take it to the top.
Posted by: Gaubladt on Apr 4, 2008 6:09 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This "Order #17" has no place in our republic. The constitution mandates due process for all American citizens, regardless of where they are; order 17 denies it. This needs to reach the supreme court as soon as possible, so that it can be stricken down retroactively. Otherwise, all the dark trajedies of Cheney's lawyer-free-utopian Green Zone will never see the light of day.

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KBR: Kinky Bastard Rapists Inc...
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on Apr 4, 2008 8:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
KBR is a rapist corporation what would you expect from TEXANS anyway..?


Our Army has sexually attacked over 2750 American Service woman..!

We have become barbarians under the corrupt Texans and their Oil Cult of death and thievery and perversion..


Of course Bush approves of all these Rapes same as our "sh1t for brains" disgusting incompetent lying criminal Attorney General..Mukasey..!

Maybe Mukasey gets off hearing about all of these rapes of American woman..so that's why he does nothing about them..after all he is a Republican swine first and foremost..!

Bush doesn't seem mind these rapes either other wise he DO SOMETHING...worthless jerk..!

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Sympathy for the scum of the earth? I don't think so.
Posted by: Whistler on Apr 5, 2008 3:05 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No one - male or female - no matter what they have done, deserves to be raped. That having been said, I must say that on my long long list of sympathy priorities, ANYTHING that happens to a mercenary, invading, scum of the earth like these women who work for KBR are dead last. There are so many other people who have been murdered, stolen from, humiliated by this same group of mercenaries. In fact, I don't know why Alternet even carries this story. To hell with any woman dumb enough to join a band of immoral thugs and then want sympathy because they've been raped. Well boo friggin hoo. Go cry on George Bush's or Donald Rumsfeld shoulder, but on this issue my eyes are dry.

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if she'd killed her rapist while he slept off the 'festivities'... ?
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Apr 5, 2008 9:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...
...
...how fucking fast do you think they'd have found HER GUILTY of it?

She should have castrated that bastard while he slept to keep him from reproducing.


sure those rapists ARE SOMEBODY'S CHILDREN... & look what a lovely job their parents made of those obscene bastards.

...a cancerous waste of protoplasm & oxygen.

another good reason abortions should be far easier to obtain



~~~
Spread Love...

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian com
~~~
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
~~~
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"
"do no harm"

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A Fix That Might Work
Posted by: TheOldHippy on Apr 5, 2008 11:00 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why not charge KBR, Haliburton, etc with accessory to rape charges both before and after the events. If convicted, could we get the entire boards of the company's to register as sex offenders?

Just a thought from
The Old Hippy

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*Another* one: "Military Mom Says She Was Brutally Raped in Iraq"
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Apr 9, 2008 11:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Democracy NOW! EXCLUSIVE…In Their First Joint Interview, Two Ex-KBR Employees Say They Were Raped by Co-Workers in Iraq
...Jones has said that thirty-eight other female contractors have privately come forward with their own stories of sexual harassment and abuse in Iraq and other countries. A criminal probe into Jones’s case has lasted more than two-and-a-half years. No charges have been filed.
...

Guests:
"Lisa Smith", former employee of the military contractor KBR. She has come forward with allegations of rape by her co-workers in Iraq.

Jamie Leigh Jones, has filed a civil suit against Halliburton and its former subsidiary KBR for an alleged drugging and gang rape by employees of the company in Baghdad. No charges have been filed in her case so far, and she has accused both KBR and the Justice Department of a cover-up. She is founder of the Jamie Leigh Foundation, which aims to help US citizens victimized by government contractors or other corporations working overseas.

Karen Houppert, she broke the story of Lisa Smith’s rape allegations for The Nation magazine. The article is called “Another
KBR Rape Case." Her latest book is Home Fires Burning: Married to the Military for Better or Worse.

===

ABC News: Dawn Leamon, Who Alleges She Was Raped by Two Men, Told Her Story on Capitol Hill

Military Mom Says She Was Brutally Raped in Iraq

Yet another woman has come forward saying she was brutally raped in Iraq while working for the U.S. contractor Kellogg Brown Root (KBR).

Dawn Leamon, who has two sons on active duty, says she was raped earlier this year by a U.S. soldier and a KBR colleague.

She will tell her horrific story to members of Congress today at a hearing of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.

Leamon says that following her rape, she spoke with a woman at the KBR Employee Assistance Program. "She discouraged me from reporting, saying, 'You know what will happen if you do,'" Leamon said.

Leamon says KBR then assigned full-time security guards to her which gave her no privacy to talk about the incident, and her movements around camp were restricted, yet her attackers' movements were unrestricted.
...
Last December, the department declined to send an official to testify before the House Judiciary Committee hearing on law enforcement efforts to protect U.S. contractors in Iraq. The hearing featured testimony by Jamie Leigh Jones, a young Texan woman who also says she was gang-raped while working for KBR in Iraq.

Like Jamie Jones, Leamon believes she was drugged before her attack.

In January, several lawmakers pounded the Justice Department for flatly refusing to answer their questions about how sexual assault cases in Iraq involving U.S. citizens are handled. "We still have heard nothing from your office," complained several Democratic senators, including presidential hopeful Barack Obama, D-Ill.
===

~~~
Spread Love...

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian com
~~~
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
~~~
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"
"do no harm"

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Defense Contractors
Posted by: modeler on Apr 9, 2008 2:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A disgusting bunch of potential criminazis. No wonder the reputation of the US has tanked not only in the third world but even more amongst our (former) friends and allies. That is the primary effect of the present Repugnican administration by Bush and Cheney and war dodging warmakers like them.

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"Lisa Smith" testifies before a congressional committee today
Posted by: Quannah on Apr 9, 2008 2:35 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm hoping they will play the tape of the hearing later on.

This is most despicable behavior. They need to be punished. And why isn't our illustrious VP asked about this treatment of employees by his former(?) employer??? Would be interesting to see what he would have to say! Fucking pigs, all!

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Hey - an opportunity for OPEN SEASON on testosterone poisoned males
Posted by: ericksonml@sbcglobal.net on Apr 11, 2008 3:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
NEEDED: a mean, vigilante response is required in a lawless place:

An alternative to 'pulling women out' is to give all women training in how to protect themselves - AND in HOW TO RETALIATE. Since KBR and the Gov. wants to hush over 'incidents' it is a perfect situation for a woman to get revenge. 'Lisa's first reaction - had she been trained in true American retaliation - would have been to take a knife and cut off her assailant's dick, and then go off to work and let him bleed to death. Then act aghast when she finds a dead, castrate in her bed. As a medic she had perfect opportunities to 'get' the rest of her assailants - They need medical treatment; give them a shot with the aids virus - or give them a knock out drug (the date rape drug)and castrate them. KBR would surely try to cover THIS up. Would they publicize that their female employees are castrating male employees? Who would prosecute - for what?

And you, the WRITER, have to publicize NAMES (and addresses) just as police authorities publicize the names of Johns. Just say "it has been alleged, from authorities who desire to remain unnamed that e.g. "James Cheney' of Wichita Falls brutally raped a fellow KBR employee. It is not known whether he is alleged to have raped a female employee or a male employee. SEND this 'allegation' to the guy's family and church. Keep track of his future employers and send reminders of his past.
Women who have been raped by their fellow soldiers or employees in a combat situation and who are not protected by 'the authorities' should form a vigilante association. Every raped woman should carry at least one cut off penis on her belt or in her purse. The guy can't commit the crime again with no equipment. A big X cut on his forehead might help to ostracize him as well.
Listen, an illegal occupational war is a rough place. Women may have to play by the rules - 'strike back' using lethal force. Hey, nothing will happen to you if there is more than one of you.

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