Archive for the “Blackwater” Category


Source: MotherJones Blog

Blackwater Worldwide is facing a “multimillion-dollar” fine from the State Department for allegedly shipping illegal weapons to its contractors in Iraq, McClatchy reports. The fine could be levied in the next few days. State officials charge that Blackwater, which holds a lucrative personnel-protection contract for US diplomats in Iraq, hid the arms inside shrink-wrapped pallets that were shipped directly from the company’s sprawling Moyock, North Carolina, headquarters. About 900 weapons were sent to Iraq without permits, 119 of which were especially “erroneous,” says a State Department official familiar with the shipments. Some of the weapons are thought to have wound up on Iraq’s thriving black market.

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Source: State

Blackwater Worldwide has laid off an undisclosed number of employees after the security firm failed to win a government contract for its Grizzly armored vehicle to replace the Humvee.

Blackwater spokeswoman Anne Tyrrell said Monday that reductions were necessary because the company wasn’t selected to make the Army’s joint light tactical vehicle.

The Grizzly was one of the company’s ideas to diversify away from an emphasis on providing security contractors that Blackwater had become known for during the Iraq war.

“We have stopped building all trucks,” Tyrrell said.

Tyrrell said the company also developed a newer version of the heavier mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicle, known as the MRAP, before the military decided to stay with its current version.

Tyrrell declined to disclose how many employees lost their jobs because she hadn’t been able to get an official number.

The Daily Advance of Elizabeth City reported that Blackwater president Gary Jackson said in June 2007 that the company had 52 employees to build the armored personnel carrier at a 70,000-square-foot plant in Camden County.

Jackson said many of the Grizzly workers were former employees of Ford and Volvo.

“Our employees and independent contractors are our greatest asset and it is always unfortunate when cutbacks become necessary,” Tyrrell said. “Because we were not selected for the Army’s JLTV contract, manufacturing staff reductions were necessary.”

She said the layoffs would “improve the company’s efficiency by taking into account the cyclical nature of government contracting.”

Last week, the Pentagon selected teams led by Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics, and the U.S. subsidiary of British defense conglomerate BAE Systems PLC to compete in developing a lightweight tactical vehicle.

Each team received deals worth between $35.9 million and $45 million.

Blackwater had been given a $120,000 grant by the North Carolina Department of Commerce to create and maintain up to 60 jobs at the Grizzly plant.

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Source: Navy Times

The contractor Blackwater Worldwide is in talks with 13 shipping companies interested in hiring the firm’s ship to escort their cargo vessels through the pirate-plagued waters off the Horn of Africa, the company’s president said.

Blackwater CEO Erik Prince said the world’s shipping firms are eager for as much protection as possible for their vessels, partly because the U.S. and international warships in the Gulf of Aden haven’t done enough to stop or dissuade piracy.

“Clearly they’re not patrolling everywhere because there are attacks occurring on a regular basis,” Prince said. “We’d be focusing on the customers who hired us.”

Blackwater’s main tool is its 183-foot ship, the McArthur, a retired oceanographic survey vessel that has been refitted to carry two OH-6 Little Bird helicopters, three rigid-hull inflatable boats and 35 “security professionals,” as Prince called them. The McArthur, its aircraft and its boats will run a maritime version of Blackwater’s personal security detail, Prince said, escorting client vessels just as their ground operatives protect clients in road convoys.

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Private armies, hard at work….

Source: washingtonpost.com

Federal prosecutors have sent target letters to six Blackwater Worldwide security guards involved in a September shooting that left 17 Iraqi civilians dead, indicating a high likelihood the Justice Department will seek to indict at least some of the men, according to three sources close to the case.

The guards, all former U.S. military personnel, were working as security contractors for the State Department, assigned to protect U.S. diplomats and other non-military officials in Iraq. The shooting occurred when their convoy arrived at a busy square in central Baghdad and guards tried to stop traffic.

An Iraqi government investigation concluded that the security contractors fired without provocation. Blackwater has said its personnel acted in self-defense.

The sources said that any charges against the guards would likely be brought under the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act, which has previously been used to prosecute only the cases referred to the Justice Department by the Defense Department for crimes committed by military personnel and contractors overseas. Legal experts have questioned whether contractors working for the State Department can be prosecuted under its provisions.

The sources cautioned that prosecutors are still weighing evidence gathered in a 10-month investigation that began shortly after the shootings. A federal grand jury has heard testimony from about three dozen witnesses since November, including U.S. and Blackwater officials and Iraqis, according to two of the sources.

Target letters, often considered a prelude to indictment, offer suspects the opportunity to contest evidence brought before the grand jury and give their own version of events. The letters were sent this summer, although the sources, who agreed to discuss the case only on the condition of anonymity because of its sensitivity, said a final decision on whether to indict may not be made until October, about a year after the incident.

The U.S. attorney’s office in Washington and the Justice Department’s National Security Division are leading the investigation. Channing Phillips, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office, declined to comment, as did Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd. A spokeswoman for the FBI’s Washington field office, which investigated the shooting on the ground in Iraq in the weeks after the incident, also declined to comment.

Anne E. Tyrell, a spokeswoman for North Carolina-based Blackwater, said that the company believes the guards fired their weapons “in response to a hostile threat” and is monitoring the investigation closely.

“If it is determined that an individual acted improperly, Blackwater would support holding that person accountable,” Tyrell said in a statement. “But at this stage, without being able to review evidence collected in an ongoing investigation, we will not prejudge the actions of any individual. The company is cooperating fully with ongoing investigations and believes that accountability is important.”

Earlier reports on the investigation indicated that the FBI had focused on three Blackwater guards among a larger but unknown number present at the time of the Sept. 16 incident in Baghdad’s Nisoor Square. None has been publicly identified, and authorities did not say which six received the target letters.

The shooting, and the perceived failure to hold anyone accountable for it, has fueled congressional dissatisfaction with the government’s use of private security contractors in a combat zone. Contractors working for the Defense Department are now explicitly liable for crimes under laws covering the military, but several efforts in Congress to extend that jurisdiction to State Department contractors have failed.

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Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported