http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/25/world/middleeast/25blackwater.html?n=Top/R
eference/Times%20Topics/People/Z/Zielbauer,%20Paul%20von




October 25, 2007


Under Siege, Blackwater Takes On Air of Bunker 


By
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/z/paul_von_zielb
auer/index.html?inline=nyt-per> PAUL von ZIELBAUER and
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/g/james_glanz/in
dex.html?inline=nyt-per> JAMES GLANZ

New York Times



In their compound in Baghdad's Green Zone, Blackwater USA contractors live
in trailers stacked one on top of the other. 

BAGHDAD, Oct. 24 - The
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/blackwater_usa/index.
html?inline=nyt-org> Blackwater USA compound here is a fortress within a
fortress. Surrounded by a 25-foot-high wall of concrete topped by a
chain-link fence and razor wire, the compound sits deep inside the heavily
defended Green Zone, its two points of entry guarded by Colombian Army
veterans carrying shotguns and automatic rifles.

In the mazelike interior, Blackwater employees live in trailers stacked one
on top of the other in surroundings that one employee likens to a
"minimum-security prison."

Since Sept. 16, when Blackwater guards opened fire in a crowded Baghdad
square, the compound has begun to feel more like a prison, too. On that day,
employees of Blackwater, a private security firm hired to protect American
diplomats, responded to what they called a threat and killed as many as 17
people and wounded 24. 

Richard J. Griffin, the State Department official who oversaw Blackwater USA
and other private security contractors in
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/ir
aq/index.html?inline=nyt-geo> Iraq, resigned Wednesday. 

For weeks, not a word has emerged publicly from the compound, as the
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/f/federal
_bureau_of_investigation/index.html?inline=nyt-org> F.B.I., the American
military and the Iraqi government investigate the Sept. 16 and earlier
Blackwater shootings in Iraq.

But in recent days, that secretive Blackwater world has begun to fray under
so much scrutiny, said four current and two former Blackwater employees.
They described a grating sense among many of Blackwater guards, especially
those with years of experience, that the killings on Sept. 16 were
unjustified.

"Some guys are thinking that it was not a good shoot, that it was not
warranted," said one Blackwater contractor, using military jargon for an
episode that results in a wrongful death. "I don't think there was criminal
intent involved. I just think it was the application of the use of deadly
force gone horribly wrong."

He added, "To mitigate one threat, 17 people had to die?"

Blackwater employees are aware of the conclusions of Iraqi investigators:
that Blackwater never received fire and that any threat was illusory. Like
the company in its official statements, the guards appear to believe that
three armored Blackwater vehicles received several rounds of gunfire
somewhere in the city that day, and that this might help explain why the
guards fired into Nisour Square.

Still, a growing number of Blackwater guards here believe that the federal
investigation may result in criminal charges against some of the four to six
members of the team believed to have fired weapons on Sept. 16. Most of the
men who fired are former Marine infantrymen still in their 20s, said one
Blackwater contractor with a military background.

In a series of detailed interviews, given despite a company policy that
forbids contractors to speak openly, the Blackwater employees provided the
first glimpse into how the deaths on Sept. 16 and in prior episodes were
being recounted and understood by the armed men who protect American
officials on Baghdad's streets each day.

Reporters for The New York Times spoke directly with four of the current and
former employees; two others communicated with The Times in discussions and
e-mail messages passed through intermediaries.

In the weeks since the shootings, Blackwater has been flooded with federal
agents and investigators. A new group of State Department security agents
have flown in to help supervise each Blackwater convoy. F.B.I. agents are
interviewing guards involved in the Sept. 16 episode. Blackwater lawyers
also arrived at the camp about two weeks ago, contractors here said, to
monitor those interviews.

"I'm just trying to hold on," said one member of the Blackwater convoy that
was involved in the Sept. 16 killings, in an e-mail message. "They've been
trying to bring in so many State agents, it's getting full over here."

Inside the Blackwater camp, a crisp American flag is carefully raised and
lowered each day in Baghdad's dusty heat. In the closely stacked gray metal
trailers that serve as living quarters, employees have 8-by-12-foot rooms
and shared bathrooms. Recreation time is limited, and the employees eat
among themselves. Many of the younger guards sunbathe on their trailer roofs
- a few regularly did so in the nude, until female helicopter pilots flew
overhead, saw them and complained.

According to Blackwater employees, the leader of the convoy on Nisour Square
was a man known as Hoss. He and two or three other members of the team have
returned to the United States because their tours of duty were up or their
contracts with the company had ended, one employee here said. In Hoss's
case, the trip home was to remove shrapnel from a wound he received before
the Sept. 16 shootings.

Blackwater workers rarely interact with Iraqis in Baghdad, and regulations
forbid them to travel outside the Green Zone when they are not on well-armed
missions to protect State Department officials. Most convoys through the
city do not carry Iraqi translators, leaving the young guards, former
military men, to judge whether a gesture, a foreign phrase or a glance
suggests a threat strong enough to justify a violent response.

Even in the Blackwater compound, no definitive account has emerged of how
and why the Sept. 16 shootings occurred, company employees said. For its
part, Blackwater has said that its guards were responding to an insurgent
attack. But in furtive discussions over recent weeks, certain details about
the episode, they said, have gained currency among many Blackwater workers,
many of whom would like to believe that their colleagues acted
appropriately.

Those workers said, for example, that Blackwater guards who fired at Iraqis
in Nisour Square described how an Iraqi driver had pulled up his car well
after the Blackwater convoy had arrived and warned traffic to stay back. The
encroaching car, the workers said, caused their colleagues to feel
threatened and initiate machine-gun fire. They also said that friction
between Blackwater convoys and groups of armed Iraqi police in the days
before the shooting had created a mutual distrust, and that the police
officers, perhaps as a result of earlier disputes, fired at the Blackwater
convoy. "The Iraqi police were testing these guys at various intersections,"
said one former Blackwater guard who has spoken with men on the convoy at
Nisour Square.

Iraqi police at the intersection have said they were not armed that day, and
none of the dozens of Iraqi witnesses interviewed by Iraqi investigators and
reporters for The New York Times said they saw anyone firing at the
Blackwater convoy or even brandishing a weapon.

But in a measure of the gulf between the narratives that have taken hold in
the Blackwater compound and on the streets of Baghdad, the former guard and
a current employee said that a consistent view had developed within the
compound: that Blackwater was fired upon by Iraqis with AK-47s who fled the
scene after Blackwater returned an overwhelming amount of fire.

"How long does it take for a dead terrorist to become a dead civilian?" a
Blackwater employee said. "As long as it takes to remove an AK-47 from the
body," suggesting that accomplices might have removed weapons as they fled.

The Blackwater employees said that talk about the Sept. 16 shootings had
also focused on a heated dispute between members of the team in the square,
pitting the men pouring gunfire into Iraqi vehicles against other Blackwater
guards who were imploring them to stop. 

"There was turmoil in the team, where half the guys were saying, 'Don't
shoot,'" said a military veteran who spoke to a member of the Blackwater
team on the convoy. 

But that dispute, the guards said, like the uncertainty in the compound, is
likely to remain unresolved until federal investigators finally report their
conclusions on what really happened that day on Nisour Square. 

.
 
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d=45885/stime=1193307979/nc1=3848627/nc2=4936878/nc3=3848643> 
 


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