Posted by Jack
Here is a book for your reading list, it’s called, We Meant Well…How I helped lose the war for the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people.” After almost 9 years of occupation, tens of thousands of lives lost and $63b spent on reconstruction by the USA alone, Iraq is not our friend. Every American owes it to themselves to be informed about what really happened in Iraq and see it through the eyes of this State Dept. administrator. What is depicted are the kind of monumental blunders that could only come from “big government”. We have seen the same kind of monumental boondoggles here year after year, why should we think big gov would be any smarter if it’s in Iraq?
Can you imagine we sent a HOG FARMER to Iraq as the AG ADVISER or that we bought computers for schools when they really needed electricity? This reads like fictional satire but its about actual events…it’s stunning and a must read. -Jack
RECENT REVIEW: “When it comes to our own missteps in the region, you won’t find a more shocking, saddening–and yes, hilarious–account than Peter Van Buren’s We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People, the State Department insider’s firsthand account of how the U.S. is bungling the reconstruction of Iraq with symbolic rather than substantive efforts to provide relief”
Here’s an excerpt….”It was the 2007 Nisor Square Blackwater Killings, Not Wikileaks, that Derailed Plans for US Troops to Stay on in Iraq.
Despite some creative speech making as Obama tries to take credit for “agreeing” to withdraw the last of America’s occupying army from Iraq by the end of the year, Iraq’s own version tells the true story: US troops are leaving Iraq after more than eight years of war because Baghdad rejected American demands that the soldiers have immunity. Comments by Prime Minister Maliki make clear that it was Iraq who refused to let the military remain under American terms.
Why Iraq Said No
Why the Iraqis might not want to grant full immunity to every American soldier in Iraq come January 1, 2012 (they all do have immunity now, under the Bush-negotiated SOFA in place until midnight 12/31/2011) is not hard to guess, likely something to do with almost nine years of war and occupation, almost nine years of accidents and “collateral damage” and mistaken identities and all the sad rest. One incident singled out was detailed by the release of a diplomatic cable that alleged Iraqi civilians, including children, were killed in a 2006 raid by American troops rather than in an airstrike as the US military initially reported. There is clearly far too much blood on American hands for Iraq to simply forgive and forget, what State Department spokesman Mark Toner described after the troop withdrawal announcement as the start of “a new chapter in our relationship” with Iraq.
But despite the long legacy of bloodshed which became frightenly common place for many Iraqis, the refusal of immunity is more likely tied to one horrible, bad day in Nisor Square, where in 2007 Blackwater mercenaries hired by the State Department gunned down 14 Iraqis (some say it was 17) and wounded 20 more. Such killings occurred almost daily in Iraq, but what made this one tragically memorable is that despite almost over-whelming evidence that the victims were innocent, technicalities in US law were used to prevent the shooters from being prosecuted. They walk free today. The system the US wanted for its troops in 2012 did not work when tested. The process America promises in 2012 will protect Iraqis them failed them completely in 2007.
To begin, the American Embassy in Baghdad in 2007 produced a “spot report” claiming that Blackwater had come under fire from an “estimated 8-10 persons” who “fired from multiple nearby locations, with some aggressors dressed in civilian apparel and others in Iraqi Police uniforms. The team returned defensive fire.” The report was on State Department Diplomatic Security letterhead, but was actually written by a Blackwater employee.
However, the US Army’s First Cavalry Division arrived at the Square moments after the shooting. They found no shell casings from AK-47s (the kind used by insurgents or the Iraqi police). The Cav concluded “It was obviously excessive. It was obviously wrong. The civilians that were fired upon, they didn’t have any weapons to fire back. And none of the Iraqi police or any of the local security forces fired back at them.” A later Iraqi government inquiry also concluded that Blackwater opened fire without provocation.
The Iraqi government revoked Blackwater’s license to operate in Iraq the day after the massacre. Blackwater, however, kept operating in Iraq without a license, under State Department contract, until 2009, two years later. Through its many name changes and corporate reshuffling, remnants of Blackwater continue to carry weapons in Iraq today.
Immediately following the shooting, State Department officials for reasons never explained offered limited immunity from US Federal prosecution to the Blackwater mercs involved to compel them to make statements. At the time, State disagreed with other law enforcement officials that such actions might jeopardize prosecutions. That proved to be the money shot: the US government obtained indictments against the contractors involved in the shooting. The case was then punted in court because it was not clear whether the indictments were based on immunized statements or other evidence. The DC Circuit court remanded the case, directing the government to show that it obtained sufficient evidence implicating the contractors prior to obtaining the immunized statements. Basically, since the State Department compelled the Blackwater guys to answer questions, the courts ultimately found they were denied their Fifth Amendment rights. Game over.
Immunity and the American Empire
Do soldiers garrisoning the American Empire in places like Germany, Korea and Japan have some form of immunity now? Yep, pretty much they do. Here’s how it works.
Virtually without exception, American military forces assigned abroad (at least those in place overtly) are covered under a country-specific Status of Forces Agreement, a SOFA. Each SOFA is negotiated between the US and the “host” country, and covers things from as mundane as the need for driving licenses and who pays local taxes to immunity from national laws. An American soldier covered by a SOFA typically cannot be held accountable under local law, or, if accountable, only under specified conditions and circumstances that typically offer the soldier US-level rights protections. In many cases, s/he may be punished by the US military for a crime, but not necessarily by the local government. The SOFA rules vary considerably from place to place, and can be as complex as any legal code. Most SOFAs are public documents available on the web, though some have a classified addendum.
A SOFA agreement is not unique to the US military, though our overseas presence makes us the biggest user. Most NATO forces, as well as folks like Australian military abroad, exist under some sort of SOFA agreement. Though it can be misused and is often seen as unfair by host country people who are victims of soldier crimes and accidents, SOFA in its most benign form is not much more than a written agreement for the conditions under which a foreign military exists in another, sovereign, nation.
The theory behind all these rules is that the US does not want to grant the host country the ability to arrest and prosecute its soldiers, especially for anything remotely in the line of duty. Accidents do happen, but the SOFA is supposed to prevent politically-charged arrests when say the host country party in power needs to look tough around election season.
Full immunity, what the US wanted in Iraq, is at the extreme end of the SOFA scale: anything an American soldier would do in Iraq has a get-out-of-jail free card attached to it, whether it is a truly accidental weapon discharge or a violent rape of a young girl. The latter, on Okinawa in 1995, when three US service members gang raped a 12 year old, remains an impediment to changes in the US-Japan SOFA even today, over fifteen years later, and even though the men were ultimately convicted in a local court and served sentences in a Japanese prison. A current alleged rape of a young woman by a soldier in Korea serves to highlight how contentious a SOFA agreement can be, even among friends. “I understand the US wants to protect its soldiers from kangaroo courts overseas, but Koreans also have a right to safeguard their own citizens,” said one Korean activist. “The perception among many here is that US soldiers commit crimes and then run back to the protection of their base.”
Back in Iraq
From the Iraqi point of view, the outcome of the Nisor Square Blackwater killings was pure evil. US mercs murdered Iraqi civilians, and then the State Department and US Courts together let them go unpunished. Nobody in Iraq, given the horrors perpetrated on them by the US, was ready to hear talk about “rights.” The State Department thought they saved their own butts with a short-term solution of not taking responsibility for what their own guards did, but in the end likely contributed in large part to the deal breaker that will midwife the full withdrawal of US troops from Iraq this New Year’s Eve.
Meanwhile, the Army pull-out means that the State Department will need to hire 5000 mercenaries to protect itself in Iraq. Those mercs will be protected under existing international standards for diplomatic immunity, meaning they will be completely free from any prosecution under Iraqi law and unaffected by the existence or absence of any SOFA.
There it is, full circle. This damn war has just too much irony in it.”
Why Iraq said no? I am not buying it. It may have made for an excuse. Or part of it.
Iraqis did far more horrendous things to other Iraqis in far greater numbers than the Blackwater incidents before and after the deposing of Saddam Hussein. They will continue to do so. (No pure evil there, right? It is the will of Allah.) I am not saying the US did not handle this badly, but a deal breaker? OK. perhaps.
I won’t comment on the Okinawa and Korea rapes other than to ask does this indicate a trend in military force and diplomatic failures? I think not. They are exceptions.
As for irony, I do not recall the exact quote or what Arab pundit said it just after the downfall of Saddam Hussein but it went something like this, “The west will be surprised just how ungrateful Muslims can be.”
Nope, I am not at all surprised.
Jack, I take it all back, with apologies. This could not ever be your work … not even to boost circulation.
And you, Pie, why don’t you do something extravagant … read the book!
Libby, yea I did it and it was painful, but I believe its the truth. There’s no other way to say it, we really did mean well, but we didn’t handle it right and we went through $63b in the process and a tens of thousands of lives were lost on both sides.
I hope Iraq will stay independent, but Iran’s already in there and ready to run things at the first opening. The Sunni’s have all but lost the internal battle, most of their leaders are now dead and the Shia are basically in power at almost all levels…thats good for Iran, bad for Saudi Arabia and bad for us.
PS If there is one thing I think we can all agree on, its that winning the peace is a whole lot tougher than winning a war.
“Such killings occurred almost daily in Iraq”
I am taking a class on literature of the U.S.-Iraq War this semester, and sadly, the reading I have done seems to confirm this statement. If the media were willing to show images of the bodies that resulted from our own military’s careless disregard for “collateral damage,” this war would have ended years ago.
Jack, your perspective on the Iraq War has always given me a lot of respect for you. Thank you for this post.
Pie Guevara: “Iraqis did far more horrendous things to other Iraqis in far greater numbers than the Blackwater incidents before and after the deposing of Saddam Hussein. They will continue to do so. (No pure evil there, right? It is the will of Allah.)”
I hope you are not implying that Saddam Hussein ever gave a damn about “the will of Allah.” His was a monstrous regime, but it was also a secular one. Shi’a terrorist groups did not have a strong foothold in Iraq until after the invasion. Since then, Islamic terrorism has flourished in the region and most of the insurgency has resulted from their renewed strength, not from Ba’ath Party loyalists.
Maybe Iraq said “no” because the current administration basically abandoned and dissed Iraqi’s from the start. He couldn’t “bring our troops home” as promised or shut Gitmo as promised because he discovered it wasn’t as easy as he thought but it didn’t stopo him from turning his back on a hard won victory.
Bush was able to work with the many contentious factions and leaders to bring them to a level of cooperation never seen before to form a new government where heach played a role. The opportunity to establish a democratic ally in the heart of the ME has been squandered by Obama.
Read Krauthammer and weep:
http://news.investors.com/Article.aspx?id=590436&p=1
Chris said: “Shi’a terrorist groups did not have a strong foothold in Iraq until after the invasion. Since then, Islamic terrorism has flourished in the region and most of the insurgency has resulted from their renewed strength, not from Ba’ath Party loyalists. ”
This is unfortunately true. Iran had almost no presence in Iraq until we came in. Either by flawed diplomacy or sheer incompetence, we virtually tolerated their invasion by not taking direct military action against them from the time we first discovered that Iranian secret agents and tons of weapons and bomb materials were used to kill US soldiers.
Come on, Tina, the notion that Bush handled Iraq perfectly well until Obama came along to ruin things is just ridiculous. Even Jack admits that this operation was a disaster from the start. You can’t pin this one on Obama.