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Blackwater to Leave Security Business Following Problems in Iraq

by: Elana Schor  |  The Guardian UK

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CEO of Blackwater, Erik Prince, during his testimony before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee in October 2007. (Photo: Reuters)

    Editor's Note: Though, as reported by The Guardian below, Blackwater blames its exit from the security business on negative media coverage, the corporation is still scoring large government contracts and raking in profits in the wake of its bad publicity. Blackwater's decision to shift its business to other sectors may be prompted by other motives, like a potential US pullout from Iraq, according to Daniel Schulman of Mother Jones. - TO/ms

    Blackwater, the US private military contractor widely accused of abuse of power in Iraq, is getting out of the security business.

    Company executives said they are moving away from security work in the wake of close media scrutiny of private contractors' behaviour in Iraq, particularly a Baghdad shooting involving Blackwater employees that left 17 Iraqi civilians dead. The incident is under investigation by American law enforcement.

    "The experience we've had would certainly be a disincentive to any other companies that want to step in and put their entire business at risk,'' Blackwater founder and chief executive Erik Prince told an Associated Press reporter who was given a daylong tour of the company's headquarters.

    Anne Tyrrell, a Blackwater spokesman, said the company has not planned any "shift," but rather that the company would grow in other areas besides private security.

    "When we are seeking to expand the business we will be doing it in other area," she said. "We don't see that market growing".

    Blackwater has made hundreds of millions of dollars off of contracts to guard US state department officials. Its seemingly ubiquitous presence, combined with the larger-than-life personality of the conservative Prince, turned Blackwater into an emblem for the privatised military that the Bush administration relied upon to help wage the Iraq war.

    The company also operated under broad legal immunity from criminal prosecution in Iraq, attracting criticism from government officials in Washington as well as Baghdad. The US Congress ultimately passed legislation bringing contracting firms under the American military code of justice. Blackwater's now plans to focus attention on its expansive rural training facilities. Its North Carolina home attracts swarms of US military, law enforcement and local officials each year.

    The company also has expanded its aviation division, which provides airplane and helicopter maintenance and also drops supplies into hard-to-reach military bases. A 6,000-foot runway is under construction and a large map in the company's hanger shows units based across the world, from Africa to the Middle East to Australia.

    "Our focus is away from security work. We're just not bidding on it," Blackwater president Gary Jackson told the Associated Press.

    The debate over how much of military operations should be turned over to for-profit firms has also touched on contractors' ability to protect its own employees. Four Blackwater workers were murdered in 2004 in the Iraqi city of Fallujah, then a hotbed of violence, and seven more died in a roadside bomb attack a year later.

    Five British private contractors, including IT consultant Peter Moore, were kidnapped from the Baghdad finance ministry by a Shiite militant group 14 months ago. Anguish over their plight flared this week after reports that one of the hostages succumbed to depression and killed himself while in captivity.

  

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No doubt Blackwater has

No doubt Blackwater has enough "opportunity" in the domestic US prison system. Round 'em up, move 'em out, rawhide.

Whatever it takes to get

Whatever it takes to get these thugs away from us. Good riddance I say!

Good riddance to blackwater.

Good riddance to blackwater. I can't imagine what other 'business' they are considering. They very well should consider being put in prison themselves.

Eric found the big money

Eric found the big money running heroin poppies from "hard to reach bases" in Afghanistan to "hard to reach bases" in the former Soviet bloc countries for staging to Eastern Europe and Russia.

Blackwater . . . coming home

Blackwater . . . coming home to America. Why fight in foreign countries for hostile well-armed hajis when you can ply your trade among tubby docile Americans who understand the words "Freeze, mother f*cker!" I understand the corporation has four bases in the Homeland, in places like Illinois, North Carolina, the west coast, and elsewhere. They're coming home to stay, friends--to give employment to ratty little conservative shellbacks with Party-operative mindsets and scores to settle locally. Love those bearclaws. Watch for the logo ballcaps to show up at the diners, at the bowling alley and farm auctions. Going to work for the Bear, eh? More honorable than being a prison guard and hell if the money isn't better, you always gotta respect a man who knows where the action is. Then the quasi-medical people, the wives and unschooled family memebers: the CNAs, the LPNs--they'll get hired to service the prisoner population, wipe them off after they've been tortured, that kind of thing. Feed and water the enemy combatants, you don't need a degree for that. Coming on down, people, coming on down. Blackwater, your new favorite corporate citizen. Let's have an ice cream flavor named for them, eh?

Great post, for this

Great post, for this excellent compilation of companies operating in this space.

Useful info, the companies

Useful info, the companies away from the limelight are making all the money.

Feed and water the enemy

Feed and water the enemy combatants, you don't need a degree for that. Coming on down, people, coming on down.