Inilah yang berlaku apabila sesebuah negara hilang kedaulatannya dan diduduki 
oleh tentera asing, walaupun mungkin ia nampak macam merdeka dan mempunyai 
sebuah kerajaan yang dikatakan dipilih oleh rakyatnya, siap dengan Presiden, 
Perdana Menteri dan Parlimennya sendiri. Namun ia tidak boleh menguatkuasakan 
undang-undangnya di buminya sendiri dan tidak boleh membela nasib rakyatnya 
sendiri tanpa anggukan daripada pihak penjajah, walau apapun retorik yang 
diperkatakan. Yang terus menderita ialah rakyatnya, sedangkan pada masa yang 
sama orang-orang asing bermaharajalela dan terus mengaut kekayaan negara untuk 
dipunggah keluar.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

What happens to private contractors who kill Iraqis? Maybe nothing
Blackwater USA employees are accused of killing several civilians, but there 
might not be anyone with the authority to prosecute them.

By Alex Koppelman and Mark Benjamin
Sept. 18, 2007

An incident this past weekend in which employees of Blackwater USA, a private 
security firm that has become controversial for its extensive role in the war 
in Iraq, allegedly opened fire on and killed several Iraqis seems to be the 
last straw for Iraqi tolerance of the company. Iraqi government officials have 
promised action, including but not limited to the suspension or outright 
revocation of the company's license to operate in Iraq. 

But pulling Blackwater's license may be all the Iraqis can do. Should any 
Iraqis ever seek redress for the deaths of the civilians in a criminal court, 
they will be out of luck. Because of an order promulgated by the Coalition 
Provisional Authority, the now-defunct American occupation government, there 
appears to be almost no chance that the contractors involved would be, or could 
be, successfully prosecuted in any court in Iraq. CPA Order 17 says private 
contractors working for the U.S. or coalition governments in Iraq are not 
subject to Iraqi law. Should any attempt be made to prosecute Blackwater in the 
United States, meanwhile, it's not clear what law, if any, applies. 

"Blackwater and all these other contractors are beyond the reach of the justice 
process in Iraq. They can not be held to account," says Scott Horton, who 
chairs the International Law Committee at the New York City Bar Association. 
"There is nothing [the Iraqi government] can do that gives them the right to 
punish someone for misbehaving or doing anything else." 
L. Paul Bremer, then the head of the Coalition Provisional Authority, the 
initial occupation government of Iraq, issued CPA Order 17 in June 2004, the 
day before the CPA ceased to exist. "Contractors," it says, "shall not be 
subject to Iraqi laws or regulations in matters relating to the terms and 
conditions of their Contracts." 

The Iraqi government has contested the continued application of this order, but 
because of restraints that inhibit the Iraqi government from changing or 
revoking CPA orders, Order 17 technically still has legal force in Iraq. 
Furthermore, as Peter W. Singer, an expert on private security contractors who 
is a senior fellow at the center-left Brookings Institute, points out, in order 
for the Iraqi government to prosecute those contractors, the U.S. government 
would have to accede to it. And that, Singer says, poses a whole new set of 
thorny questions. 

"The question for the U.S. is whether it will hand over its citizens or 
contractors to an Iraqi court, particularly an Iraqi court that's going to try 
and make a political point out of this," Singer says. If the United States is 
not willing to do so because of concerns that the trial will be politically 
motivated, he adds, there's a new question at hand. "If we really say that 
openly, doesn't that defeat everything we heard in the Kabuki play last week 
with [General David] Petraeus and [U.S. Ambassador Ryan] Crocker, that 
everything was going great? What happens if we say, 'No, we don't think you can 
deal with this fairly in your justice system?'" 

That leaves international and U.S. law. But international law is probably out. 
Even before the Bush administration, the United States had established a 
precedent of rejecting the jurisdiction of international courts. The United 
States is not, for example, a member of the International Criminal Court in the 
Hague. (In 2005, the government of Iraq announced its decision to join the 
court; it reversed that decision two weeks later.) 
U.S. law, meanwhile, is hopelessly murky. More so than in any of America's 
previous conflicts, contractors are an integral part of the U.S. effort in 
Iraq, providing logistical support and performing essential functions that were 
once the province of the official military. There are currently at least 
180,000 in Iraq, more than the total number of U.S. troops. But the 
introduction of private contractors into Iraq was not accompanied by a 
definitive legal construct specifying potential consequences for alleged 
criminal acts. Various members of Congress are now attempting to clarify the 
laws that might apply to contractors. In the meantime, experts who spoke with 
Salon say there's little clarity on what law applies to contractors like the 
ones involved in Sunday's incident, and the Bush administration has shown 
little desire to take action against contractor malfeasance. 

In June of this year, the Congressional Research Service -- a nonpartisan 
research arm of Congress -- issued a report on private security contractors in 
Iraq that included a discussion of their legal status. The report's authors 
gave a bleak picture of prospects for prosecution under U.S. law, referring at 
one point to "the U.S. government's practical inability to discipline errant 
contract employees."

It's not clear that Blackwater even has a license to revoke

The problem is that no one seems quite sure what law, if any, would apply to 
security firm contractors, and any potential applications are untested and 
would be vigorously challenged. Uniformed military personnel are subject to the 
Uniform Code of Military Justice, and "persons serving with or accompanying an 
armed force in the field" are technically subject as well. But the application 
of the UCMJ to these contractors would undoubtedly be challenged on 
constitutional grounds, and even if it were to hold up in court, the CRS report 
noted a particular irony: At least one court has held that "a serviceman who 
had been discharged was no longer amenable to court-martial." In other words, 
Blackwater could protect its employees from the UCMJ simply by firing them. 

Another potential avenue for prosecution is the Military Extraterritorial 
Jurisdiction Act of 2000, or MEJA, which applies to civilians. Originally 
written only to cover civilian employees of the Department of Defense and 
contractors working for the DOD, it was changed after the Abu Ghraib scandal, 
which involved contractors not working for DOD, to cover persons "employed by 
or accompanying the Armed Forces outside the United States." But even that 
definition might be too narrow to apply to the Blackwater employees in 
question. Those employees, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack confirmed 
in an interview with Salon, work for the State Department, not the DOD. "[They] 
report to our diplomatic security office in Baghdad." 

Horton says he believes that "Blackwater is preparing to make the argument, if 
they ever get in the crosshairs of this, that they are there with a Department 
of State diplomatic contract and, therefore, MEJA doesn't apply." 

Rep. David Price, D-N.C., is the sponsor of a law that attempts to deal with 
this loophole, the Transparency and Accountability in Military and Security 
Contracting Act of 2007. 
"I just want to know whether it can and will be prosecuted if prosecution is 
warranted, and I don't think we have the clear legislative coverage of this 
that we should," Price said in an interview Monday. "If the contractors were 
under a DOD contract, that wouldn't be the question so much as whether the 
administration's doing its job pressing forward, but here you do have a real 
question about whether it has the authority in the first place." 

Singer concurs. "There's a lot of stuff that could be done. It's just there's 
no easy answers," he says. "You could use them as a test case for UCMJ. You 
could hand them over to the Iraqis. President Bush says it's a functioning 
democracy. You could try to test out MEJA on them. You could investigate it and 
find out that actually it was a rightful shooting. There's lots of coulds, but 
there's no silver-bullet solution. We've painted ourselves in a corner." 

Back in Baghdad, the Iraqis may not have the power to enforce the one action 
they've taken so far, the simple revocation of Blackwater's license. A 
spokesman for Iraq's Interior Ministry, Brig. Gen. Abdul Kareem Khalaf, told 
reporters Monday: "We have revoked Blackwater's license to operate in Iraq. As 
of now they are not allowed to operate anywhere in the Republic of Iraq. The 
investigation is ongoing, and all those responsible for Sunday's killing will 
be referred to Iraqi justice." 

But it's not clear that Blackwater even has a license to revoke. Speculation 
abounded on Monday that it did not. On June 16, the Washington Post reported 
that "Blackwater USA ... [has] not applied, U.S. and Iraqi officials said. 
Blackwater said that it obtained a one-year license in 2005 but that shifting 
Iraqi government policy has impeded its attempts to renew." 
Lawrence T. Peter, the director of the Private Security Company Association of 
Iraq, an industry trade group, told the Post on Monday that Blackwater did have 
a license. He seems to be contradicted by his own organization's Web site, 
however, which lists Blackwater as in the process of obtaining one. Salon 
contacted Peter to ask whether Blackwater was licensed. He did not answer the 
question, but a spokesman did forward a statement emphasizing that members of 
his trade group "pride themselves" on abiding by the "Rules for Use of Force" 
in effect. 

By Monday afternoon, Iraqi officials seemed to be backing away from their 
earlier statements, making their pronouncements about Blackwater's license much 
less definitive. Time magazine reported that "a senior Iraqi official ... said 
that prime minister Maliki is expected to discuss the episode at a cabinet 
session scheduled for Tuesday and that, as far as the license being permanently 
revoked, 'it's not a done deal yet.'" 

Additional reporting by Erin Renzas. 

Kirim email ke