Embassy May Cut Blackwater Ties
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.
BAGHDAD — American and Iraqi officials are negotiating Baghdad’s demand that security company Blackwater USA be expelled from the country within six months, and American diplomats appear to be working on how to fill the security gap if the company is phased out.
The talks about Blackwater’s future in Iraq flow from recommendations in an Iraqi government report on the incident September 16 when, Iraqi officials determined, Blackwater guards opened fire without provocation in Baghdad’s Nisoor Square and killed 17 Iraqi citizens.
The Iraqi investigators issued five recommendations to the government of Prime Minister al-Maliki, which has since sent them to the American Embassy as demands for action.
Point no. 2 in the report says:
“The Iraqi government should demand that American stops using the services of Blackwater in Iraq within six months and replace it with a new, more disciplined organization that would be answerable to Iraqi laws.”
A top aide to Mr. al-Maliki, Sami al-Askari, said that point in the Iraqi list of demands was nonnegotiable.
“I believe the government has been clear. There have been attacks on the lives of Iraqi citizens on the part of that company (Blackwater). It must be expelled. The government has given six months for its expulsion and it’s left to the U.S. Embassy to determine with Blackwater when to terminate the contract. The American administration must find another company,” he said.
In talks between American diplomats and the Mr. al-Maliki government, Mr. al-Askari said, the American side was not “insisting on Blackwater staying.” He was the only Iraqi or American official who would allow use of his name, others said information they gave was too sensitive.