US uses contractors to bypass international humanitarian laws

Published time: August 28, 2012 16:00
Edited time: August 28, 2012 22:07
In a file picture dated 05 February 2005, members of the US-based Blackwater private security firm scan Baghdad city centre from their helicopter. Iraq's interior minister Jawad al-Bolani 17 September 2007 has ordered to cancel the licence of Blackwater, the US-based private security company, after it was involved in a shootout that killed eight people, an offical told AFP. (AFP Photo/Marwan Naamani)

The use of private contractors allows the US to evade responsibility for violations of international humanitarian legislation, a top Russian diplomat for human rights and democracy said.

The comment came from Foreign Ministry Commissioner Konstantin Dolgov as the US Justice Department halted an investigation into the attempted bribing of Iraqi police officials by employees of the Blackwater security company (re-branded as ‘Academi’ in late 2011).

Blackwater attempted to pay $1 million in bribes for new contracts in Iraq, and also to block an investigation into the 2007 murder of 17 Iraqi civilians, including several children, by Blackwater operatives, a statement published on the Russian Foreign Ministry’s website said.

The US State Department didn’t end its relationship with Blackwater for two years after the tragedy, Dolgov said.

“Despite the scandalous experience with the Blackwater company, the US military and foreign policy agencies continue to attract contractors for doing the ‘dirty work’ in the zone of armed conflicts,” Dolgov said. “Such outsourcing of state functions to private firms allows the US government to evade the responsibility for violation of international humanitarian norms.”

“The Blackwater case is a vivid example of impunity enjoyed by the employees of private security companies, despite blatant violations of international Human Rights standards. The current situation is a result of the inconsistent and selective actions of the US authorities, who ignore the rights of Iraqis who fall victim to the employees of private security companies. We expect that the US authorities will at last take some measures to punish the responsible contractors of the company formerly known as Blackwater,” the statement read.

Dolgov added that a US court had sentenced Russian citizen Viktor Bout to 25 years in prison for his alleged intention to sell weapons to Colombian rebels, while the “company that succeeded Blackwater” received no punishment after confessing to illegally supplying weapons to Iraq, Afghanistan and Sudan. “Is not it a very visual demonstration of double standards used by the US justice?” he said.

Comments (29)

Grayman (unregistered) 22.09.2012 17:56

What matters is who has a bigger gun. That's all. So all those of you complaining, just go ahead and match that firepower. Then you can try to dictate yourself. Until then, you are just like a little barking dog. And I am going for a walk. It is sunny outside. 

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Billy (unregistered) 08.09.2012 01:05

In good tradition of US lawlessness, dating back to the "old wild west", and their current introductions of new laws and regulations that gives Americans abroad and at home, a more and more freedom to get away with murder and carrying firearms, even visually in some states, and the right to pretty much do what crime they prefer abroad, and they can not, and will not be prosecuted just because they are US citizens? Who and what have given them the idea, that the laws that everybody else (non us citizens) have to follow and face the consequenceses of in the respective country they are in, and of cause the land they live in? But if the US decides that a person (non us  citizen)  knows too much or they no longer needs the services that the person provides, or commits what for US citizens is a minor fellony, they will make an example and the poor individual get's a sentence way out of proportions to the crime comitted! 

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gerd (unregistered) 04.09.2012 05:00

Germany had not such luck after WW2 . As many foreigners where un the german side fighting -both where prosecutet if just or not! In this case also both should be facing Intern. Human rights courts.

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