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Old Saturday, November 14, 2009
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Smile Black water

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thanks for sharing..

can you plz tell me from where you get all these topics?
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THE mercenary firm Blackwater has become a symbol of the utter lawlessness and criminality that permeates the privatised wing of the US war machine. The company’s operatives have shot dead scores of Iraqi and Afghan civilians, while former employees allege in sworn statements that Blackwater’s owner Erik Prince “views himself as a Christian crusader tasked with eliminating Muslims and the Islamic faith from the globe”, and that Prince’s companies “encouraged and rewarded the destruction of Iraqi life”.
Five Blackwater employees will stand trial in federal court in the US on charges that they slaughtered 14 innocent Iraqis, while a sixth Blackwater operative has already pleaded guilty. The company faces allegations of illicit weapons-smuggling and tax evasion, and is being sued for war crimes. The private army is under fire. And yet, despite all the action, none of the legal bullets has — to date — landed a serious blow.
An explosive report in the New York Times on Wednesday could change that. The paper alleges that in the aftermath of the infamous 2007 Nisour Square massacre of 17 Iraqi civilians, top Blackwater officials “authorised secret payments” of about $1m into Iraq intending to bribe officials to allow Blackwater to remain in Iraq despite Baghdad’s position that the company would be banned and the killers prosecuted.
Blackwater continued to operate in Iraq for two years after the Iraqis announced the company would be kicked out — a fact that has baffled and angered Iraqis. In fact, Blackwater remains in Iraq to this day on a $200m contract that was recently extended by the Obama administration. The new report, if true, could help explain why Blackwater has survived so long in Iraq. It could also be a window into what may become the most serious legal issue facing Prince and other executives.
Claims that Prince was aware of the bribery scheme — and that his deputy, the company president Gary Jackson, directed the transfer of the money to Blackwater’s hub in Jordan, from where it was funnelled to a top Blackwater manager in Iraq — are reported in the New York Times. Such actions would be illegal under US law. At the time of the alleged bribery scheme, FBI agents were on the ground in Baghdad conducting a criminal investigation of the incident and were, in part, relying on the cooperation of Iraqi officials — particularly from Iraq’s interior ministry, the alleged intended recipients.
Blackwater swiftly denounced the story as “baseless”, while a former Blackwater official — the CIA veteran Cofer Black — denied the New York Times’s claim that he confronted Prince over the bribery. Jackson told the paper: “I don’t care what you write.” It is an incredible fact that Blackwater has remained as long as it has in the country given the severity and extent of its alleged crimes and the rhetoric from Iraqi political figures about the company.
It was not until March 2009 that the Iraqi government announced it would not extend Blackwater an operating licence. In May, Blackwater’s prime contract was awarded to competitor Triple Canopy, but a downsized Blackwater remains armed in Iraq. And the company continues to do robust business with the US government elsewhere.
Today, Blackwater works in Afghanistan for the State Department, the CIA and the Defence Department. It protects US officials there and guards visiting congressional delegations. ¦ — The Guardian, London The writer is the author of Blackwater: The Rise of the World’s Most Powerful Mercenary Army.
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I consult alot of books for current affairs .
Black water is from crrent affairs by Ap publishers
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Blackwater

What is Blackwater?

Blackwater is the notorious and despised American security firm. It is world’s biggest, richest, deadliest and most powerful mercenary army, which operates from United States of America. Black Water hires retired army-men and villains and criminals from around the world. Especially they target the poor countries in Asia and Africa for the fodder. They act as NGOs and welfare organization in poor countries and recruit people in the name of sending them to the land of dreams; the USA. They also reach first to the areas where earthquakes and floods strike, and pickup the strong helpless men and give them “jobs.” It was founded in 1997 as BlackWater USA by Erik Prince and Al Clark. Erik Prince is the CEO of Blackwater.

Renamed as Xe Services:


Black Water now operates under the name of “Xe” since February 2009. After Black Water name became so notorious with respect to the Iraq war, the company president Gary Jackson changed the name. Black Water or Xe is based in the U.S. state of North Carolina, Xe operates a tactical training facility which the company claims is the world’s largest, and at which the company trains more than 40,000 people a year, mostly from U.S. or foreign military and police services. The training consists of military offensive and defensive operations, as well as smaller scale personal security. That’s only a cover, and the workings of this secret organization comprises of all the dirty and murderous acts.

Blackwater in Iraq

Iraq is just one example. Black Water recruited the Iraqi men and used them against the Iraqi people. Iraqis are very well aware of this evil outfit and in Fluja city they killed the Black Water personnel who were working in the garb of food contractors and hung their corpses along with the banks of Euphrates. Later in September 2007, 17 civilians were shot down by Blackwater operatives in Baghdad’s Nisoor Square and allegedly, the firm sent US$ 1m to its Iraq office to buy the silence of government officials outraged by the shootings.

CIA had hired Blackwater in 2004:

Earlier in 2009, The New York Times reported that the CIA in 2004 hired Blackwater to locate and assassinate top Al Qaeda operatives. The CIA deployed that secret programme as an alternative to drone attacks that often kill civilians and are unsuited to urban environments. In other words, the CIA tasked Blackwater operatives, often described as ‘hired guns’, to extend its policy of extrajudicial killings of known and suspected terrorists.

Blackwater in Pakistan:

In Iraq, Afghanistan, and now, as per media reports, Pakistan, Blackwater is primarily associated with targeted assassinations of high-value militants. The Blackwater is expected to protect American headquarters and also carry out search and destroy operations anywhere in Pakistan. Orya Maqbool Jan of Express News wrote in his column that University Town in Peshawar is the headquarter of Black Water in Pakistan. He also claims that Black Water people can be frequently seen in the area guarding vehicles and people, clad in black suits and black glasses. He also says that the biggest embassy of America in Islamabad having thousands of employees is just another Black Water plan. He also says that Black Water is operating in Pakistan under the cover of a NGO Creative Associates.

And its presence is associated with the proposed expansion of the US embassy in Islamabad which is billed to become the largest communication complex in the world. To provide security to the installation, the reports say, the services of 1,000 US marines and Blackwater operatives have been acquired. They have started arriving in Pakistan but the US embassy spokespersons deny presence of Blackwater in Pakistan and equally in denial is Shah Mahmood Qureshi.

The question is: why is such a huge facility being built here in Pakistan? Americans say it is to facilitate the war against terror and also to manage increased load of work after socio-economic assistance begins to reach here. If this is true one wonders why the Chinese ambassador had to state that he was concerned at the increasing US influence in Pakistan. Such statements are rare in China's diplomatic practice.

Out of the proposed US aid to Pakistan for the year 2008-9, one billion dollars out of $1.8 billion, have been earmarked for the proposed extension of the US embassy. And there are reasons for the construction of a 'mini-Pentagon' in Pakistan. Firstly, the cornerstone of American global policy remains the repression of China. To accomplish it, it is necessary to bring together the countries of South Asia, West Asia and South-East Asia and the Central Asian countries in this alliance.

Secondly, both India and Pakistan are nuclear powers and the US policy makers feel that there should not only be a new equation between the two but they want to monitor their ‘nuclear assets’ from a close range. Thirdly, the need to coordinate the international effort on the ‘war against terror’ provides an explanation acceptable to the world. The US government knows that an installation of this kind would require a large force of personnel. Hence, the Blackwater.

In Pakistan’s context, the firm has become synonymous with public perception about American interference in the country. Blogs are buzzing about Blackwater’s alleged activities here, ranging from advance missions for US/Nato forces to plots to capture Dr A.Q. Khan. Pakistanis are also enraged at the idea that Blackwater employees — who operate outside any legal framework — are running around their country, taking pot shots at anyone who seems suspicious, or is deemed problematic by the US.

US media stands testimony of presence of Blackwater in Pakistan:
One American journalist who has researched deeply into the subject is Jeremy Scahill, a reporter with The Nation, and author of Blackwater. He has written about the firm’s birth in 1997, and its phenomenal growth after 9/11.

investigative reports published in the New York Times, the Washington Post and most recently The Nation (US) have shown the CIA programme planned to target various Al Qaeda terrorists overseas by dispatching small hit teams made of highly trained special operatives. According to Jeremy Scahill’s report in The Nation these special Blackwater cells also had bases in Karachi and other parts of Pakistan from which they ran their operations. Scahill’s report suggests that Blackwater operatives are working with the US Joint Special Operations Command on a secret programme to assassinate Taliban and Al Qaeda militants and conduct ‘snatch and grabs’ of other high-value targets.

Blackwater operatives are violating International Law:

Blackwater operatives tasked with assassinating terrorist suspects are also in violation of international law. Indeed, US President Barack Obama has acknowledged the need for mercenaries to work within a legal framework and has called for greater accountability for the employees of private security firms.

What Pakistanis need to do?
Rather than conflate condemnations of Blackwater operations with a more general anti-Americanism, Pakistanis should specifically reject the practice of extrajudicial killings.

Such focused opposition to mercenary activity will also put pressure on the Pakistani government to wage a clean war against terrorism, one that can win this ideological battle rather than generate more sympathy for the militant cause.

Compiled from various articles in Dawn
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