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Iraq
Blackwater Likely to Be Out of Iraq
2007-10-18
A State Department review of private security guards for diplomats in Iraq is unlikely to recommend firing Blackwater USA over the deaths of 17 Iraqis last month, but the company probably is on the way out of that job, U.S. officials said Wednesday. Blackwater's work escorting U.S. diplomats outside the protected Green Zone in Baghdad expires in May, one official said, and other officials told The Associated Press they expect the North Carolina company will not continue to work for the embassy after that.

It is likely that Blackwater does not compete to keep the job, one official said. Blackwater probably will not be fired outright or even "eased out," the official added, but there is a mutual feeling that the Sept. 16 shooting deaths mean the company cannot continue in its current role.
While one of our trolls may be thinking that he told us so, the big question remains: if not Blackwater, who will step up for the contract? This is a complex, risky job, and I don't think other companies that have the ability will want to put up with this nonsense. They'll need assurances that they won't end up like Blackwater while trying to protect people. And if you can provide such assurances, why not just keep the people you already have?
State Department officials spoke on condition of anonymity because Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has not yet considered results of an internal review of Blackwater and the other two companies that protect diplomats in Iraq. Department officials said no decisions have been made and that Rice has the final say. They gave admiring appraisals of Blackwater's work overall, noting that no diplomats have died while riding in Blackwater's heavily armed convoys.

President Bush did not directly answer a question Wednesday about whether he was satisfied with the performance of security contractors. "I will be anxious to see the analysis of their performance," Bush said at a news conference. "There's a lot of studying going on, both inside Iraq and out, as to whether or not people violated rules of engagement. I will tell you, though, that a firm like Blackwater provides a valuable service. They protect people's lives, and I appreciate the sacrifice and the service that the Blackwater employees have made."

A panel that Rice appointed to review the contractors will report to her as soon as Friday, and Rice's announcement of what to do next probably will follow quickly, one department official said.

A transition from Blackwater would take time. The company employs more people and has more equipment than its two competitors in Iraq. Any outside company that might replace Blackwater would have to provide trained U.S. citizens, with security clearances. That may mean that if Blackwater leaves, competitors hired some of its workers. Blackwater spokeswoman Anne Tyrrell said, "We will follow the lead of our client. If they want us to stay we will stay. If they want us to leave we will do so."

The team of State Department management experts and outside specialists is expected to recommend greater oversight of security contractors and better coordination of their work with military forces, two officials said. It is practically impossible to eliminate private security contractors altogether in Iraq because there are not enough department security agents to fill the gap, officials said.
Posted by:Steve White

#9  bye Mike!
Posted by: Frank G   2007-10-18 19:03  

#8  [Mike Sylwester has been pooplisted.]
Posted by: Mike Sylwester   2007-10-18 18:47  

#7  "I will be anxious to see the analysis of their performance,"

They've not lost a single principle. What more must you see? Go ahead, throw BW under the bus for Maliki and the CONUS based liberal swine. Issue all the diplodinks 9mm Berettas, keys to the vehicles, and a city map that takes them down route Pluto at least once a day and let them fend for themselves. After the first two or three get their brains splattered on the dashboard the diplomatic problem will be solved. State won't be able to get a single employee to deploy and we'll have saved untold millions in tax dollars!
Posted by: Besoeker   2007-10-18 12:39  

#6  This is probably disinformation meant to calm Iraqi politicians. As has been pointed out: Who's going to replace them? And traveling without a PSD is not an option.

Al
Posted by: Frozen Al   2007-10-18 12:31  

#5  State Department officials spoke on condition of anonymity

i.e. We couldn't get the story we wanted, so we decided to make it up anyway.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2007-10-18 08:59  

#4  Blackwater, as a private company, can dissolve itself. Ownership interests can incorporate a new company, say Brownair, hire all the newly unemployed operators etc., buy up the training facilities and equipment, and solicit contracts (at a higher price) to replace Blackwater.
Posted by: Glenmore   2007-10-18 07:23  

#3  State is living in fantasy land if they don't think the exact same setup won't happen with their replacement guards.
Posted by: ed   2007-10-18 07:17  

#2  A transition from Blackwater would take time.

I wonder if Blackwater is contractually obligated to provide it. It would be interesting to see what the State folks do if they don't have a successor lined up and ready to go and Blackwater gets out of Dodge 5/1.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2007-10-18 06:54  

#1  if not Blackwater, who will step up for the contract?

Nobody---that's exactly why Maliki started this.
Posted by: gromgoru   2007-10-18 04:49  

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