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Immunity Lifted for U.S. Contractors in Iraq

by stevequilala | July 2, 2008 at 07:27 pm | 89 views | 1 comment

I'm surprised, but relieved the US has agreed to this. I wonder what the ramifications of would be.

Blackwater, KBR, Triple Canopy, Titan, CACI and countless other Private Military Companies/Contractors (PMCs) have been operating as privately contracted mercenaries inside Iraq. They are known to use excessive force during missions and terrorize Iraqi civilians. The contractors are usually former soldiers who are paid much more than actual US soldiers and not subject to any form of military justice - that is if a soldier does something wrong, he is paid out and given a plane ticket home. No investigation, no tribunals, no sentencing, nothing.

BAGHDAD β€” Iraq’s foreign minister said Tuesday that the United States had agreed to lift immunity for foreign security contractors operating in Iraq, making them subject to prosecution under Iraqi law, according to Iraqi politicians.

In a briefing for lawmakers on the status of a complex security agreement being negotiated with the United States, the foreign minister, Hoshyar Zebari, said Iraq had insisted on ending the immunity for private security companies, according to three Iraqi politicians who were present.

The private security companies, like Blackwater USA, have reputations of using excessive force in protecting diplomatic and other foreign clients, and currently enjoy immunity from Iraqi law. That immunity became a political issue last fall, after a Blackwater shooting in Baghdad in September left 17 Iraqis dead, according to Iraqi investigators.

According to the three Iraqi politicians who were interviewed, Mr. Zebari said the agreement by the United States to lift the immunity eliminated one of many sticking points in the negotiations, which the United States has said it wants to complete by the end of this month.

A spokeswoman for the United States Embassy declined to comment on the negotiations.

Some Iraqi politicians also want to end immunity for American soldiers, a demand the United States military has strongly opposed.

Iraqi negotiators are working β€œto submit the American soldiers, their security companies and their movements and behaviors in military operations to Iraqi law,” said Falah Shanshal, a lawmaker from the bloc of Moktada al-Sadr, the rebel Shiite cleric.

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julianw
good stuff:

stevequilala, good stuff and good news.

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July 2, 2008 at 07:27 pm by stevequilala, 89 views, 1 comment

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