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State Department Coverup on Blackwater Revealed
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Officials Balked on '05 Blackwater Inquiry
By T. Christian Miller
The Los Angeles Times
Friday 26 October 2007
State Department e-mails obtained by ABC News discuss how to deflect a Times reporter's questions about a civilian shooting death.
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"Give [the Los Angeles Times] what we can and then dump the rest on Blackwater," one State Department official wrote to another in the e-mails, which were obtained by ABC News. "We can't win this one."
One department official taking part in a chain of e-mails noted that the "findings of the investigation are to remain off-limits to the reporter." Another recommended that there be no mention of the existence of a criminal investigation since such a reference would "raise questions and issues."
In the May 2005 incident, a Blackwater convoy was transporting a senior U.S. diplomat down a Baghdad thoroughfare when guards opened fire on an approaching taxi.
The taxi driver, Mohammed Nouri Hattab, told The Times that he was slowing to a stop when a burst of machine-gun fire cut into his taxi, wounding him and killing a passenger, 19-year-old newlywed Yas Ali Mohammed Yassiri.
The Times began making inquiries after receiving a tip in August 2005.
Peter Mitchell, then a spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in Iraq, told superiors that he planned to tell a reporter that the State Department had "thoroughly investigated" the incident and that "no criminal act occurred."
The e-mails indicate, however, that the only investigation done was "administrative." Two Blackwater employees were fired and sent back to the U.S. after they were found to have violated operating procedures. Blackwater has declined to comment on the incident.
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Mitchell could not be reached for comment Thursday. His proposed response sparked a furious debate within the department.
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"This is a sensitive story that deals with sensitive contract issues," one official wrote.
In his e-mail to the Times reporter, Mitchell said that State officials were continuing to investigate the incident. In the end, the State Department declined to provide comment.
"I've been assured that the issue continues to be staffed back in Washington," Mitchell said.
In another e-mail obtained by the news channel, a regional State Department official complained of several incidents in which Blackwater guards had allegedly fired at innocent civilians.
The official complained that Iraqis had been frustrated in seeking justice for alleged wrongdoing by Blackwater.
"If we are unable or unwilling to address this issue, sooner or later those requesting compensation for their losses will lose patience with us and seek recourse through other means," the officer wrote. "In the worst-case scenario, some might seek revenge."








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