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Controversial US security firm Blackwater ends Iraq operations

Iraq/US - Blackwater

Article published on the 2009-05-07 Latest update 2009-05-07 14:53 TU
Radio France Internationale

US security firm Blackwater ended its Iraqi operations Thursday, 7 May, less than two years after its company shot dead 17 civilians in Baghdad.

The US State Department refused to renew contracts for Blackwater, which renamed itself Xe after the Iraqi government banned it in January over the killings.

“The task order for security protection operations held by Blackwater comes to an end today in Baghdad,” said US embassy spokesperson Susan Ziadeh, who added that Triple Canopy will take over operations.

An Iraqi investigation found that 17civilians were killed and 20 more were injured when Blackwater guards opened fire with automatic weapons while escorting a US diplomatic envoy through Baghdad’s Nisour Square on 16 September 2007.

US prosecutors say 14 civilians, and not 17, were killed in the shooting and have charged five former Blackwater guards with manslaughter. The guards pleaded not guilty at a Washington federal court in January.

The event cast attention to the lucrative but grey area in which foreign security firms operate while in Iraq. Blackwater guards were reported to earn as much as 1,000 dollars (745 euros) per day.

But in November, Baghdad signed an accord with Washington ending US security firms’ immunity to prosecution.

Blackwater began its Iraq operations in 2003 and had been among the largest security firm in the country.

The company made headlines in 2004, when a crowd killed four of its employees and mutilated the bodies in Fallujah.

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Xe - Blackwater Faces New Claims Over Civilian Shootings in Iraq, According to U.S. Legal Team for Iraqi Families

WASHINGTON, March 27 /PRNewswire/ — A group of injured civilians and families of Iraqis killed in two unprovoked shootings in Baghdad by Blackwater “shooters” sued the company and founder Erik Prince in separate lawsuits filed today and Thursday in California federal court, according to their U.S.-based legal team.

The lawsuits allege that several Blackwater defendants - now operating as Xe and other names under the control of Mr. Prince - have demonstrated “a pattern and practice of recklessness in the use of deadly force.”

The first case was brought by the family of Sa’ad Raheem Jarallah, a 53-year-old teacher at a technical institution in the city of Al Amara, who was killed by Blackwater personnel near Al Watahba Square while in Baghdad on school business on Sept. 9, 2007.

According to the complaint, Blackwater “shooters” fired “without justification, on a crowd of innocent Iraqi persons in and around Al Watahba Square resulting in multiple deaths and injuries.” The complaint continues, “This senseless slaughter … was only one in a series of recent incidents in Blackwater’s lengthy pattern of egregious misconduct in Iraq resulting in the deaths of innocent Iraqis.”

The second case involves another Blackwater civilian shooting - the infamous Sept. 16, 2007 Nisoor Square massacre which killed 17 people and resulted in criminal prosecutions by the U.S. Department of Justice against Blackwater personnel. One Blackwater employee has pled guilty, admitting that Blackwater personnel were not protecting diplomats or being threatened and instead intentionally killed innocents after ignoring orders to stay in the International Zone by the U.S. Embassy Regional Security Office.

The 15 plaintiffs include the estates of 12-year-old Qasim Mohamed Abbas Mahmoud, who was shot while riding in a car with his father, who also was killed, and his mother, who was injured; numerous men and women who were in or around Nisoor Square; and two Baghdad police officers, whose attempts to stop the killing allegedly were ignored by Blackwater personnel.

According to the complaint, “Xe - Blackwater created and fostered a culture of lawlessness amongst its employees, encouraging them to act in the company’s financial interests at the expense of innocent human life.”

The defendants are accused of committing war crimes, assault and battery, wrongful death, intentional infliction of emotional distress, negligent infliction of emotional distress, negligent hiring, training and supervision, and tortious spoliation of evidence. The complaint also includes allegations of drug use and cover-ups of illegal conduct by Xe - Blackwater personnel.

The families of the dead and injured are represented by attorneys Susan L. Burke, William T. O’Neil and William F. Gould of Burke O’Neil LLC, of Washington, D.C., and Katherine Gallagher of the Center for Constitutional Rights.

Susan L. Burke, of Burke O’Neil LLC, stated, “These deaths are part of a pattern of illegal Xe - Blackwater shootings around the globe known to company management. With the litany of civilian shootings by Xe - Blackwater personnel, the company has created, fostered and refused to curb a culture of lawlessness and unaccountability.”

Center for Constitutional Rights attorney Katherine Gallagher stated, “The Iraqi victims of Xe - Blackwater’s unlawful actions have come to U.S. courts in search of justice. Justice begins with accountability, and private military contractors must be held accountable when they shoot innocent people.”

The defendants in both cases include Mr. Prince, Xe, various Prince-controlled entities such as Blackwater, The Prince Group, Falcon, Greystone Limited, Total Intelligence Solutions, EP Investments, and Raven Development Group.

The cases are:

“Estate of Sa’ad Raheem Jarallah v. Xe, formerly known as Blackwater Worldwide, et al.,” in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California (Case No. 09 CV 0 631 H JMA), and,

“Estate of Mushtaq Karim Abd Al-Razzaq, et al., v. Xe, formerly known as Blackwater Worldwide, et al.,” in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California (Case No. 09 CV 0626 LAB BLM).

For information about other cases pending against Xe - Blackwater, please see http://www.ccrjustice.org/current-cases and http://www.burkeoneil.com/human-rights/human-rights.php.

Media Contacts: Erin Powers, Powers MediaWorks LLC, for Burke O’Neil LLC, 281.703.6000; and Jen Nessel, Center for Constitutional Rights, 212.614.6449.

SOURCE Burke O’Neil LLC; Center for Constitutional Rights

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Military hangs ‘Help Wanted’ sign in Afghanistan

By ANNE FLAHERTY – 8 hours ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The military buildup in Afghanistan is stoking a surge of private security contractors despite a string of deadly shootings in Iraq in recent years that has called into question the government’s ability to manage the guns for hire.

In recent online postings, the military has asked private security companies to protect traveling convoys and guard U.S. bases in troubled southern provinces such as Helmand and Kandahar. And if truckers hired to transport fuel for the military want protection, they can hire their own armed guards, the military says.

The Bush administration expanded the use of such companies with the onset of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan because it can save the military time and money. But the practice lost much of its appeal with Congress after September 2007, when five guards with what was then called Blackwater Worldwide (the company recently changed its name to Xe) opened fire in a crowded Baghdad square and killed 17 Iraqis.

Those killings followed a 2006 incident in which a drunken Blackwater employee fatally shot an Iraqi politician’s bodyguard.

Now, as President Barack Obama plans to send more U.S. personnel to Afghanistan to boost security and diplomatic efforts, more contractors are preparing to deploy, too.

Still, serious questions remain as to how these private forces are managed, when they can use deadly force and what happens if they break the rules.

“We understand the difficulty of providing for the security of the Department of Defense facilities,” Sen. Carl Levin, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, wrote Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Dec. 9.

“However, the proposed contract would appear to dramatically expand the use of private security contractors in Afghanistan,” Levin said, adding that the reliance on contractors in Iraq resulted in “widespread abuses.”

Levin, D-Mich., wrote to Gates after The Washington Post reported on the contract bid for armed guards at U.S. bases in southern Afghanistan.

In his letter, he noted the 2009 National Defense Authorization Act, which warns the Defense Department against outsourcing security operations “in uncontrolled or unpredictable high-threat environments.”

Complicating matters is that the armed guards hired in Afghanistan most likely won’t be U.S. citizens. According to Gates, only nine out of the 3,847 security contractors in Afghanistan have U.S. passports.

Some lawmakers worry that arming non-U.S. citizens to protect American bases or convoys poses a security risk in a country rife with corruption and on the defensive against the militant Taliban.

Gates defended the practice in his Feb. 17 response to Levin. “The use of contractor security personnel is vital to supporting the forward-operating bases in certain parts of the country and in continuing our efforts to employ local nationals whenever possible,” the Pentagon chief said.

Sen. John McCain, the top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, agrees.

“If Afghans are qualified to do jobs, we want them to do jobs,” McCain, R-Ariz., said in an interview.

Despite Gates’ assurances, Levin said in a statement to the Associated Press that he would “continue to actively review the issue and to consider the need for legislation.”

But so far, Congress has struggled to close even the most glaring of legal loopholes governing security contractors in war zones.

While the law says U.S. courts have jurisdiction over defense contractors working in a war zone, it leaves in question those supporting other agencies, such as the Blackwater guards hired by the State Department and involved in the Baghdad shooting.

In October 2007, the House voted 389-30 to give U.S. courts jurisdiction over all contractors in a war zone. But momentum on the bill stalled after the Bush administration raised objections. The Senate version of the bill, introduced by Barack Obama when he was an Illinois senator, never received a vote.

Last month, two sponsors of the bill, Reps. David Price, D-N.C., and Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., asked President Obama in a letter to pick up where he left off by helping Congress define which tasks only government should perform.

Currently, there are 71,700 contractors in Afghanistan, which is more than twice the number of U.S. troops. With more than 3,000 of those contractors carrying weapons, the Defense Department established an office to oversee them.

That office, known as the “armed contractor oversight directorate,” just agreed to pay $993,000 to Aegis Defense Services, a London-based security and risk management company, to help do that job.

Gates assured Levin that the military’s contract with Aegis would not result in contractors overseeing contractors.

Instead, the nearly $1 million dollar deal would provide administrative support only and that the company’s workers would not have “direct input into daily operations, force protection, or combat operations,” Gates said.

On the Net:
Aegis Defense Services: http://www.aegisworld.com/index.php/security-operations

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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Blackwater dumps tarnished brand name

Security firm chooses the name Xe; plans to shift focus on training, logistics

Associated Press
updated 12:12 p.m. PT, Fri., Feb. 13, 2009
MSNBC

RALEIGH, North Carolina - Blackwater Worldwide is abandoning its tarnished brand name as it tries to shake a reputation battered by oft-criticized work in Iraq, renaming its family of two dozen businesses under the name Xe.

The parent company’s new name is pronounced “zee.” Blackwater Lodge & Training Center — the subsidiary that conducts much of the company’s overseas operations and domestic training — has been renamed U.S. Training Center Inc., the company said Friday.

The decision comes as part of an ongoing rebranding effort that grew more urgent following a September 2007 shooting in Iraq that left at least a dozen civilians dead. Blackwater president Gary Jackson said in a memo to employees the new name reflects the change in company focus away from the business of providing private security.

“The volume of changes over the past half year have taken the company to an exciting place, and we are now ready for two of the final, and most obvious, changes,” Jackson said in the note.

In his memo, Jackson indicated the company was not interested in actively pursuing new private security contracts. Jackson and other Blackwater executives told The Associated Press last year the company was shifting its focus away from such work to focus on training and providing logistics.

“This company will continue to provide personnel protective services for high-threat environments when needed by the U.S. government, but its primary mission will be operating our training facilities around the world, including the flagship campus in North Carolina,” Jackson said.

The company has operated under the Blackwater name since 1997, when chief executive Erik Prince and some of his former Navy SEAL colleagues launched it in northeastern North Carolina, naming their new endeavor for the area swamp streams that run black with murky water. But the name change underscores how badly the Moyock-based company’s brand was damaged by its work in Iraq.

In 2004, four of its contractors were killed in an insurgent ambush in Fallujuah, with their bodies burned, mutilated and strung from a bridge. The incident triggered a U.S. siege of the restive city.

The September 2007 shooting in Baghdad’s Nisoor Square added to the damage. The incident infuriated politicians both in Baghdad and in Washington, triggering congressional hearings and increasing calls that the company be banned from operating in Iraq.

Last month, Iraqi leaders said they would not renew Blackwater’s license to operate there, citing the lingering outrage over the shooting in Nisoor Square, and the State Department said later it will not renew Blackwater’s contract to protect diplomats when it expires in May.

Blackwater spokeswoman Anne Tyrrell said the company made the name change largely because of changes in its focus, but acknowledged the need for the company to shake its past in Iraq.

“It’s not a direct result of a loss of contract, but certainly that is an aspect of our work that we feel we were defined by,” Tyrrell said.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Blackwater’s New Business: Training Pro Athletes

By Noah Shachtman
February 06, 2009 | 4:49:57 PM
Wired - Danger Room

Blackwater Worldwide’s core business — diplomat protection — is in trouble. The mercenary firm is getting kicked out of Iraq, and their actions in Afghanistan are now under investigation by the State Department’s Inspector General. Which is why Blackwater is diversifying, fast. The company’s latest offering: Firearms and self-defense classes for pro athletes.

“The first weekend class at the company’s compound in North Carolina is set for April, about six months after New York Giants receiver Plaxico Burress (pictured) shot himself in the thigh inside a nightclub,” the AP notes. “No athletes have signed up yet for the weekend course, which the company only began advertising this week.”

In some ways, it’s a return to Blackwater’s roots. The firm got its start “providing such training, and last year, some 25,000 people - civilians, law enforcement and military - attended its classes,” the AP adds.

But Blackwater isn’t simply going old school. Firm CEO Erik Prince has put together teams of spies-for-hire. The company is pushing ahead with plans to protect commercial ships, traveling through pirate-packed seas. And in case that doesn’t work out, Blackwater is making custom rifles, marketing spy blimps, assembling a fleet of light attack aicraft, and billing itself as experts in everything from cargo handling to dog training to construction management.

But many athletes — especially NFL players — feel these days like they have to take drastic measures, to protect themselves. Which makes me think a few of them might like the idea of being trained by the world’s most notorious mercenary outfit.

<---End of Quote--->

Related Article:
Blackwater offers arms training for pro athletes

By MIKE BAKER
Associated Press Writer
WRAL.com

Posted: Feb. 5, 2009

RALEIGH, N.C. — Blackwater Worldwide, best known for protecting American diplomats in Iraq, is opening up its firearm training ranges and safety workshops to a new class of customer: professional athletes.

The first weekend class at the company’s compound in North Carolina is set for April, about six months after New York Giants receiver Plaxico Burress shot himself in the thigh inside a nightclub. The company cites that case, along with the shooting death by an intruder of Washington Redskins safety Sean Taylor, as examples of why pro athletes need to have a handle on firearms safety.

“They’re high-profile personnel, and high-profile people need to be able to protect themselves and their families,” said Jim Sierawski, Blackwater’s vice president of training. “A lot of times gun handling and gun safety is a big part of that protection package.”

No athletes have signed up yet for the weekend course, which the company only began advertising this week.

Blackwater got its start as a company providing such training, and last year, some 25,000 people - civilians, law enforcement and military - attended its classes. The decision to go after a new kind of customer underscores Blackwater’s renewed focus on its training business as it moves away from its high-profile work in private security.

The company had already announced plans to scale back its security business when the State Department said last week it would not renew Blackwater’s contract to protect diplomats in Iraq when it expires in May. That decision came after Iraq declined to issue Blackwater a license amid the ongoing outrage over a 2007 shooting involving the company’s contractors that left several civilians dead.

“Even though (the Iraq work) still follows us around, we’ve always catered to the domestic customers here,” Sierawski said. “The training center and what we’ve done here at the training center has a very good reputation.”

Blackwater scheduled the first athlete-only course to coincide with the NFL’s offseason, which doesn’t sit well with the league. The NFL has made it clear it doesn’t want players to carry guns and has made presentation in the past describing the dangers of firearms.

“Our strong recommendation to players is that they should not own guns and our policy prohibits all NFL employees from possessing guns or other weapons on NFL facilities or while on NFL business,” said league spokesman Brian McCarthy on Thursday.

Anything involving firearms and athletes is bound to draw attention. Burress has been charged with illegal weapons possession, a felony, but in the days afterward, some players said they could see why guns were necessary for protection. Taylor died after being shot in the leg at his house by an armed intruder in 2007, and afterward, the NFL players’ union ran seminars about home protection.

The list of athletes and shootings is not limited to football. NBA swingman Stephen Jackson pleaded guilty in 2007 to a felony count of criminal recklessness for firing a gun outside a strip club while with the Indiana Pacers. In a separate case, Pacers guard Jamaal Tinsley and several companions were targeted in a shooting that wounded the team’s equipment manager outside a downtown Indianapolis hotel.

“I don’t see any negative in learning more,” said Bob Myers, a sports agent with Los Angeles-based WMG, who estimated that up to half of the 14 NBA players he represents have guns and has at times suggested they seek out training in how to safely use and store them. “I certainly don’t think you can get enough training in that respect.”

Sierawski said Blackwater was promoting the course through agents and contacts in the industry. It’s based on the personal defense classes that Blackwater already offers to civilians; past clients have included executives from Fortune 500 companies learning protection techniques, Sierawski said.

“A lot people don’t know us for those types of courses - they know us for tactical firearms courses - but in the world of CEOs and high-profile people, it’s pretty popular,” Sierawski said.

Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Blackwater: We will leave if U.S. orders it

By Mike Baker - The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Jan 30, 2009 18:27:31 EST
Navy Times

MOYOCK, N.C. — Blackwater Worldwide, denied an operating license in Iraq, said Thursday it could leave the country within 72 hours but cautioned that such a move would cause more harm to the American diplomats it protects than the company itself.

Iraqi officials made public Thursday a decision to deny the North Carolina-based company an operating license, citing lingering outrage over a September 2007 shooting in Baghdad’s Nisoor Square that left 17 Iraqi civilians dead.

Blackwater founder Erik Prince stressed that Blackwater had yet to receive any indication from the State Department that it would be ordered to evacuate.

“Our abrupt departure would far more hurt the reconstruction team and the diplomats trying to rebuild the country than it would hurt us as a business,” Prince said in an exclusive interview with the AP.

The shooting strained relations between Washington and Baghdad and fueled the anti-American insurgency in Iraq, where many Iraqis saw the bloodshed as a demonstration of American brutality and arrogance. Five former Blackwater guards have pleaded not guilty to federal charges in the United States that include 14 counts of manslaughter and 20 counts of attempted manslaughter.

Blackwater maintains the guards opened fire after coming under attack, an argument supported by transcripts of Blackwater radio logs obtained by the AP. They describe a hectic eight minutes in which the guards repeatedly reported incoming gunfire from insurgents and Iraqi police.

A U.S.-Iraqi security agreement, which took effect Jan. 1, gives the Iraqis the authority to determine which Western contractors operate in their country.

“We sent our decision to the U.S. Embassy last Friday,” Iraqi Interior Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Abdul-Karim Khalaf told the AP. “They have to find a new security company.”

State Department spokesman Robert A. Wood said the department has yet to determine its next step.

“We have to study and see what we’re going to do next,” said Wood. “We haven’t made a decision on how we’re going to move forward yet.”

Neither Khalaf nor a U.S. Embassy official speaking on condition of anonymity gave a date for Blackwater personnel to leave Iraq, and neither said whether they would be allowed to continue guarding U.S. diplomats in the meantime.

Blackwater president Gary Jackson told the AP the company has plans allowing the company to remove its nearly two dozen aircraft and 1,000 security contractors from Iraq within 72 hours of receiving such an order. “If they tell us to leave, we’ll pack it up and go,” Jackson said.

Two other U.S.-based security contractors working for the State Department — DynCorp and Triple Canopy — have licenses to operate in Iraq. But Prince played down the possibility that Blackwater contractors would simply move to another employer.

“It is a big assumption for someone to say, ‘Fire Blackwater (and) all those guys will migrate over to one of the other competitors.”’ Prince said. “It’s not that easy.”

Blackwater has been operating in Iraq without a formal license since 2006. The State Department extended Blackwater’s contract for a year last spring, despite widespread calls for it to be expelled because of the shootings.

Blackwater’s work in Iraq, which includes a reputation for aggressive operations and excessive force it disputes as unfair and inaccurate, turned the company into a catchall brand name for private security contractors. Executives said last year that the unwanted attention had them shifting their focus away from private security.

If banned from protecting diplomats in Iraq, Blackwater executives said Thursday the company remains on track to reach a goal of $1 billion in annual revenues in the next year or two. The State Department contract comprises about one-third of the company’s overall revenues, though the work of providing actual boots-on-ground security is only part of the deal.

The private security firm, which trained some 25,000 civilians, law enforcement and military personnel last year, continues to expand even as its future in Iraq becomes less promising. Blackwater has a fleet of 76 aircraft, and almost all of them are deployed in hot spots in places like Afghanistan and West Africa.

On Thursday, three international teams were at the company’s compound in North Carolina going through classes: Authorities from Yemen flipped through four-inch binders as they learned how to identify the components of an explosive by looking at X-rays. A group from the country of Georgia was practicing SWAT techniques in a makeshift building, taking instructions through a translator from a Blackwater official.

A Canadian team was also on site, along with a number of other law enforcement, Coast Guard and civilians who kicked up burning rubber on a driving track and rattled off rounds on shooting ranges. Members of the Army and Navy were practicing their driving skills in Blackwater’s mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles.

“When you first hear Blackwater, you automatically, instantly think about the overseas stuff,” said Jim Sierawski, Blackwater’s vice president for training. “That overshadows the training center. Here, we’ve been on a steady incline every year.”

———

Associated Press writers Robert Burns in Washington and Sinan Salaheddin and Chelsea J. Carter in Baghdad contributed to this report.

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Official: Blackwater’s Iraq security deal won’t be renewed

USA Today

WASHINGTON (AP) — The State Department will not renew Blackwater Worldwide’s contract to protect American diplomats in Iraq when it expires in May, a senior U.S. official said Friday.

The official told The Associated Press that the contract will expire because of the Iraqi government’s decision to deny Blackwater a license to operate. The Iraqis informed the State Department last week of the cancellation, which was made amid lingering outrage over a September 2007 shooting in Baghdad’s Nisoor Square that left 17 Iraqi civilians dead.

The official said that renewing the contract was “basically a moot point because they were not going to be allowed to operate in Iraq anyway.” The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the decision has yet to be announced.

The State Department said that it was still considering options on how to protect U.S. diplomats in the wake of the Iraqi denial of Blackwater’s operating license.

Officials have said one possibility would be to replace Blackwater with one or a combination of guards from two other U.S.-based security contractors that work for the State Department in Iraq, DynCorp and Triple Canopy. Both have licenses to operate in Iraq.

Blackwater spokeswoman Anne Tyrrell declined to comment on the status of the contract, saying the company had been informed that the State Department would like to meet with its executives “to discuss the situation.” But she stressed that Blackwater had always known that its services in Iraq would be temporary.

Blackwater executives say the company could leave Iraq within 72 hours of being told to do so, but they cautioned that such a move would cause more harm to the diplomats it protects than to the company itself.

In a Thursday interview with the AP at the firm’s North Carolina headquarters, Blackwater founder Erik Prince said he had not received any indication that the company would be ordered to evacuate in light of the license denial.

The Nisoor Square shooting strained relations between Washington and Baghdad and fueled the anti-American insurgency in Iraq, where many Iraqis saw the bloodshed as a demonstration of American brutality and arrogance. Five former Blackwater guards have pleaded not guilty to federal charges in the United States that include 14 counts of manslaughter and 20 counts of attempted manslaughter.

Blackwater maintains the guards opened fire after coming under attack, an argument supported by transcripts of Blackwater radio logs obtained by the AP. They describe a hectic eight minutes in which the guards repeatedly reported incoming gunfire from insurgents and Iraqi police.

A U.S.-Iraqi security agreement, which took effect Jan. 1, gives the Iraqis the authority to determine which Western contractors operate in their country.

Blackwater has been operating in Iraq without a formal license since 2006. The State Department extended Blackwater’s contract for a year last spring, despite widespread calls for it to be expelled because of the shootings.

Blackwater’s work in Iraq, which includes a reputation for aggressive operations and excessive force it disputes as unfair and inaccurate, turned the company into a catchall brand name for private security contractors. Executives said last year that the unwanted attention had them shifting their focus away from private security.

Executives also acknowledged that losing a contract that comprises one-third of the company’s annual revenues could disrupt its growth.

“It would hurt us,” Prince said. “It would not be a mortal blow, but it would hurt us.”

However, Blackwater has also repeatedly said that it performs the contract at the request of the government, noting that while revenues for the contract are high, the margins are low, and the work in Iraq has sullied Blackwater’s brand. Executives said this week that they’d prefer to focus on other endeavors, such as international training and aviation support, where they see greater room for growth.

Separate from its State Department work in Iraq, the country trained some 25,000 civilians, law enforcement and military personnel last year. It has a fleet of 76 aircraft, with many of them deployed in Afghanistan and West Africa.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Not-Guilty Pleas in Blackwater Manslaughter Case

By ANTONIE BOESSENKOOL
Published: 6 Jan 16:40 EST (21:40 GMT)
Defense News

Five Blackwater Worldwide employees pleaded not guilty in federal court Jan. 6 to manslaughter charges stemming from the 2007 shooting deaths of 17 Iraqi civilians in Baghdad, The Associated Press reported.

The Blackwater guards were arraigned in U.S. district court in Washington.

The five defendants are former U.S. Marines Donald Ball of West Valley City, Utah; Dustin Heard of Knoxville, Tenn.; Evan Liberty of Rochester, N.H.; and Army veterans Nick Slatten of Sparta, Tenn., and Paul Slough of Keller, Texas.

The U.S. Justice Department said Dec. 8 that it indicted the five Blackwater employees on manslaughter and weapon charges for their involvement in a Sept. 16, 2007, shooting in Nisur Square in Baghdad.

The employees were working as security guards for the U.S. State Department at the time of the shooting. The Justice Department charged the five men with killing 14 unarmed civilians and wounding 20 other people in a 35-count indictment.

Blackwater Worldwide hasn’t been charged with a crime.

A sixth Blackwater security guard, Jeremy Ridgeway of California, pleaded guilty Dec. 5 to charges of voluntary manslaughter and attempt to commit manslaughter for his role in the Nisur Square shooting.

The case is the first prosecution under the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act to be filed against non-Defense Department private contractors, which wasn’t possible before amendments in 2004 expanded the act to apply to non-Defense Department contractors who provide services “in support of the mission of the Department of Defense overseas,” according to the Justice Department.

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