We've already seen what "private security" does under similar circumstances last year, when Mike Stark was assaulted by thugs "guarding" then-Senator George Allen. We also know that Blackwater mercenaries who patrolled New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina were authorized to use lethal force -- the same Blackwater that's been investigated for killing civilians in Iraq.
But Blackwater isn't the only company supplying mercenaries who kill at will. The latest name to hit the news is DynCorp:
An Iraqi taxi driver was shot and killed on Saturday by a guard with DynCorp International, a private security company hired to protect American diplomats here, when a DynCorp convoy rolled past a knot of traffic on an exit ramp in Baghdad, the Iraqi Interior Ministry said Sunday.
Three witnesses said the taxi had posed no threat to the convoy, and one of them, an Iraqi Army sergeant who inspected the car afterward, said it contained no weapons or explosive devices.
“They just killed a man and drove away,” Maj. Gen. Abdul-Karim Khalaf, an Interior Ministry spokesman, said in his office on Sunday afternoon. He added later, “We have opened an investigation, and we have contacted the company and told them about our accusations, and we are still waiting for their response.”
It was the latest in what the Iraqi government has said are unprovoked shootings on the streets of Baghdad by security companies hired by the State Department or contractors affiliated with it. On Sept. 16, guards with another of those concerns, Blackwater, opened fire a few miles south of Saturday’s shooting, killing 17 Iraqi civilians and wounding at least 24, according to Iraqi investigators.
The Iraqi government has accused Blackwater of involvement in at least six questionable shootings in Baghdad since September 2006. DynCorp has not drawn the same scrutiny, though it is unclear whether it has been involved in any other episodes in which Iraqis have been killed.
The shootings have stoked outrage among Iraqis, driven efforts to hold private security companies legally accountable for their actions in both the United States and Iraq, and created new challenges for American officials who were already forced to do much of their business within Baghdad’s protected Green Zone.
Why don't Americans care about this? Is it that we don't care what's done in our name as long as it means American young people aren't drafted into this war? Or is it that we really don't care that civilians are being killed because "our oil is under their sand?" Or is it that most Americans don't know what's happening?
We need to look at what these so-called "private security companies" are doing in Iraq, because you know damn well the next time there's a disaster here like there was in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the only law that will matter is the law that exists at the barrel of a gun held by a cop-for-hire.
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