Blackwater mercenaries used for CIA renditions

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Mon Aug 24 19:13:18 CEST 2009


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German magazine reports
Blackwater mercenaries used for CIA renditions
By Patrick Martin
24 August 2009

The German news magazine Der Spiegel announced Saturday that it has
obtained evidence that the security firm formerly known as Blackwater
Associates was hired by the CIA to transport prisoners from Guantánamo
Bay to secret prisons in Central Asia where they could be tortured.

US press reports late last week revealed that Blackwater had CIA
contracts to carry out “targeted killings”—assassinations—and to load
and service the missiles used by CIA officers to conduct assassination
strikes against targets in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The report in Der Spiegel adds to the litany of crimes committed by
Blackwater, which was renamed Xe after five of its operatives were
charged with mass murder in the slaughter of 17 Iraqi civilians on
September 17, 2007 in a Baghdad square.

The Der Spiegel report is based on a memo from two former Blackwater
employees that describes the relations between the company and the
CIA. The full article is to be published in the magazine’s Monday
edition, but a summary posted on the magazine’s web site includes the
following details:

• The CIA hired Blackwater to conduct extraordinary renditions
(kidnappings illegal under international law)
• Blackwater flew the rendition targets from the United States and
Guantánamo, Cuba to Kandahar, Afghanistan
• Blackwater transported prisoners from Guantánamo to interrogations
at other secret prison camps in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Uzbekistan.

Uzbekistan is a police-state run by President Islam Karimov.

The memo also names “five participants who were responsible for
building the assassination team, including a member of the
Blackwater’s paratrooper team and an employee of Blackwater Security
Consulting, who, according to the memo was meant to be used as a
‘hitman’.”

The memo names the man who “set up the teams” of assassins as Alvin
Bernard Krongard, executive director of the CIA (the third-ranking
position), who shortly thereafter retired to join Blackwater.

A report in the New York Times Saturday noted that despite Barack
Obama’s claim that he would put an end to such atrocities as the
indiscriminate shooting of Iraqi civilians, the State Department has
more than $400 million in contracts with Blackwater to fly personnel
around Iraq, guard diplomats in Afghanistan, and conduct training in
“antiterrorism tactics” at its North Carolina camp. The Afghanistan
contracts run through 2011. Such deals have made the company’s founder
Erik Prince, scion of an auto parts mogul, immensely wealthy.

Four top former CIA officials play major roles at Blackwater/Xe:
Krongard; former counterterrorism chief Cofer Black; deputy operations
director Robert Richer; and Enrique Prado, former senior executive
officer in the Directorate of Operations, who has close ties to Jose
A. Rodriquez, head of the CIA’s clandestine service. The four
officials moved from the government to the contractor, at enormous
increases in salary, while continuing to direct key operations for the
US intelligence apparatus.

The Der Spiegel article comes on the eve of the publication of a CIA
inspector general’s report, produced in 2004, into the torture of
prisoners at secret CIA prisons around the world. The report has been
suppressed for five years, first by the Bush administration and then
by Obama, and is now being released, in heavily censored form, as a
consequence of a lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties Union.

Newsweek magazine, in a posting on its website Friday, claimed to have
had an advance look at the report, asserting that the report documents
at least two clear cases of torture that have not been previously made
public: one instance where a gun was used to threaten a prisoner with
execution, the other where an electric drill was turned on near the
prisoner’s body, with the clear implication that it would be used to
torture him if he did not cooperate.

Threats of execution are illegal under the Geneva Conventions and US
laws, and barred even by the torture memos drafted by Justice
Department lawyers under the Bush administration. This last fact is
the basis for Attorney General Eric Holder’s reported decision to
bring criminal charges against a handful of CIA
interrogators—presumably including those involved in the drill and gun
incidents.

The response in Washington to the latest revelations about the CIA and
Blackwater has been a mixture of full-throated defense of all CIA
agents, no matter what crimes they may have committed (the
Republicans), and an effort to focus blame on a handful of individuals
and exonerate the decision makers like Bush, Cheney, Tenet and
Rumsfeld (the Democrats and the Obama administration).

The chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Dianne Feinstein,
criticized the agency’s failure to notify Congress, in accordance with
the decision by then vice president Cheney. The California Democrat
said that contrary to claims by the CIA and congressional Republicans,
the assassination program “had, in fact, gone beyond the simple
planning stage” and therefore had to be reported to Congress, by law.

She also attacked the outsourcing of CIA activities to Blackwater, in
the following language: “I have believed for a long time that the
Intelligence Community is over-reliant on contractors to carry out its
work. This is especially a problem when contractors are used to carry
out activities that are inherently governmental.”

This remarkable statement deserves consideration. Feinstein is
speaking of assassination, torture and kidnapping, to which she gives
the label “activities that are inherently governmental.” The senator
perhaps has said more than she intended.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/aug2009/blac-a24.shtml

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