Titan Corp. employee beheaded

Titan Corp. contractors beheaded

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) An Islamic Web site on Monday showed the beheading of two hostages one a Turkish contractor and the other an Iraqi Kurdish translator wearing a badge of the Titan security company. A statement said the two were killed by the Ansar al-Sunnah Army, which also claimed responsibility for slaughtering 12 Nepalese workers and three Iraqi Kurds on Aug. 31

Titan Corporation

On a related topic:

KIRKUK, Oct 11 (AFP) – A spike in the number of kidnappings of Turkish tanker drivers delivering fuel to Iraq has plunged the northern city of Kirkuk in an energy crisis, an oil executive said Monday.

“For the first time, Kirkuk is facing a severe fuel shortage because Turkish drivers are refusing to come to Iraq because of the threat of kidnapping and attacks on the road between the two countries,” said Ali Sahin, director of the General Oil Products company during a city council meeting.

He said the Kirkuk refinery was in no position to meet all of the region’s demand, especially with winter approaching.

Two other beheaded bodies were found near Mosul today, but were not identified.

Is the Mahdi Army disarming?

I think I’ll predict that the “weapons handover” currently being touted as part of a “peace deal” between the Mahdi Army of Muqtada al Sadr and the Occupation and it’s Puppets is well on it’s way to fizzling out.

First of all, the deal was that the Mahdi army turn in “medium and heavy weapons” for cash from the government. Early reports say that whoever was supposed to dole out the cash never showed up. In lieu of the promised cash, the Iraqi police have begun to issue “receipts” which insurgents can cash in at some later unspecified point. If you were a guerilla, would you go for that?

According to the AFP, the guerillas are selling their weapons to dealers who are then bringing them to the weapon collection points to collect the money.

It was intermediaries, not bearded militiamen, who handed over the bulk of weapons.

“You see, our bosses sold weapons to the Mehdi Army in the first place,” says Hashim, seemingly proud that he is part of the whole scheme.

“Now we bought them back from them and we will sell them to whoever pays the highest price, and we heard the government is paying good dollars.”

An RPG launcher was fetching 170 dollars, while a sniper rifle was going for 640 dollars, according to a list drawn up by a committee of the interior and defence ministries and the local city council.

They have been charged with overseeing the whole process, which is expected to last until Friday.

Hashim says most of the weapons that were handed in were Russian-made and belonged to the once-mighty army of ousted president Saddam Hussein.

“If this whole ceasefire falls through, we will be ready to rearm the Mehdi Army,” he says, before he is called over by one his companions to unload another stash of mortar launchers and rockets.

And if early signs are any indication, the so-called ceasefire and disarmament initiative appears to be fraught with mistrust and misunderstanding on both sides.

The mechanics of the deal were verbally thrashed out at a meeting Saturday between two Sadr loyalists, Iraq’s National Security Advisor Kassem Daoud and the US military’s Colonel Abe Abrams.

The aim is to restore security and begin reconstruction in Sadr City, which has been the scene of recurring violence and fighting since Sadr launched his revolt against the US occupation in April.

Sadr leaders said Sunday at their base in Sadr City’s Al-Hikma mosque that they expected nothing less than an immediate end to raids and arrests by US troops in the area.

They also demand the release of all their prisoners held in US-run detention centres, estimating their number at 500.

Although both the Iraqi government and the US military have endorsed the initiative, they have taken a wait-and-see approach given so many false starts in the past, insisting they retain the right to conduct raids.

“There is no agreement, there is no ceasefire,” says the US battalion commander for Sadr City, Lieutenant Colonel Gary Volesky, in front of the Al-Jazayer police station, another drop-off centre.

“The leadership (Sadr) has to get out and say that the militia has no role, and that has not been met yet,” he said.

Another day in bizarro-world

Talkleft points out this excellent SKBubba rant. Here’s his conclusion:

But only in America can a harmless homemaker/cooking show host be cooling her jets in Federal prison for fibbing about a crime she did not commit and was never charged with while the President of the United States can stand before the people and lie about the economy, taxes, the deficit, and the reasons for taking us into a war that has cost the lives of over 1000 American soldiers, countless civilian lives, and hundreds of billions of dollars.

Only in America can Martha Stewart sit in prison while Ashcroft gets away with shredding the Constitution and Rumsfeld presides over the torture and murder of prisoners of war in violation of international law while Bush pats them on the back for a job well done and nearly half the people in America agree and think this crew ought to be allowed to stay in the White House instead of being sent to jail. Go figure.

OK, then.

Read the rest.

Oh, and speaking of Rumsfeld: Killer Clownshoes Spreads More Death Check out the picture of Rumsfeld in his Bremer costume.

Meanwhile, car bombs explode in Baghdad and at least one US soldier died in one of the explosions. Probably by now they’ve scraped up all the body parts from the Oil Ministry car bombing, while Reuters informs us that the “Iraqi government” is mulling the possibility of committing a mini-ethnic cleansing by moving out all the Iraqi families who are unfortunate enough to happen to live in the area the US took over as it’s fortress because the fortress is getting more dangerous by the day, which is probably why this article surfaced yesterday:Iraqis Want U.S. Out of Green Zone .

The hideous Bigley beheading video was posted on the net today, amid accusations that the US could have saved his life by releasing Iraqi women scheduled to be released anyway. The US declined to release them, prompting Charles Glass, who was once held hostage in Beirut by Hizbollah, to comment, “In other words, the Iraqi women detainees could have been released on the merits of their case without anyone ‘giving in.’ But to hold them as a way of proving that kidnapping does not pay was perverse. “ Everyone seems to focus on the two Iraqi scientists whose American captivity is well known, so I’ll ask again – What about al-Douri’s wife and daughter?? You’d think some enterprising reporter with access to the PTBs in Iraq would ask this question.

The Washington Post quotes frustrated, disgruntled Marines who speak freely to reporters, concluding with this cynical observation: Asked if he was concerned that the Marines would be punished for speaking out, Autin responded: “We don’t give a crap. What are they going to do, send us to Iraq?”

Iraq Contractor Threatens Antiwar.com Partner

CACI International, the contracting firm accused of systematic torture and abuse in Iraq, has threatened to sue the original publisher of a recent article that appeared on Antiwar.com.

Antiwar.com has an agreement withThe New Standard, an alternative news Web publication, to run many of their original news investigative articles. A recent article by Lisa Ashkenaz Croke prompted a letter to The New Standard‘s editor, Brian Dominick, accusing them of “defaming” the company accused of torturing hundreds of Iraqi prisoners on behalf of the Pentagon.

We have been very impressed with the quality of reporting the The New Standard, whose articles by Dahr Jamail and others we have been regularly carrying for about six months. I am confident that this threat the CACI is an attempt to silence one of the more outspoken critics of such torture.

I am posting Brian Dominick’s blog post below in its entirity:


CACI Int’l v. NewStandard: Goliath Stirs

There’s nothing quite as thrilling as receiving a letter from a fancy corporate law firm addressed to me as “Brian Dominick, Editor” — it means I upset someone powerful.

And so we seem to have done with Lisa Croke‘s recent article on new allegations of abuse and torture throughout US-run prisons in Iraq, which we posted on September 23rd. The lawyers who wrote us the scolding letter (Steptoe and Johnson LLP — you can’t make this stuff up, folks) are upset that we have “cast aspersions” on the “character, prestige and standing” of CACI International — Steptoe’s client — “within its field of business.” They say our article “constitutes defamation,” and they point out that it does so “per se” (which means they couldn’t write a whole letter without using an impressive legal term).

Well, we showed the letter to our industry-renowned legal department. The team of high-priced lawyers there (who work on Saturdays just in case) said we should encourage CACI International to sue The NewStandard.

Evidently, the list of attorneys who would line up to defend us pro bono (we know some legal terms, too!)in a defamation case is longer than the list even a big military industrial complex partner like CACI could ever afford — especially given that the suit would bring them untold negative attention and probably expand our readership multifold.

Now, as to the substance of CACI’s letter, there might be something to address without posturing. CACI’s claims about our “misrepresentation” of them aside, the letter constitutes the direct response to anything raised by reporters that I am aware of.

Their website is chock-full of FAQ-type documents and press statements that contain responses to various accusations, but the company wouldn’t speak to me when I contacted them for a response to a previous report, and they haven’t given interviews to any journalists that I’ve seen. And, in fact, even the Army wouldn’t talk to us about the scope CACI’s role in Iraq.

One part of the letter reads:

In fact, none of the reports issued [by the US government] to date states that any CACI employee is guilty of any criminal behavior.

I guess CACI’s lawyers haven’t read the Taguba report, which says:

Mr. Steven Stephanowicz [sic], Contract US Civilian Interrogator, CACI, 205th Military Intelligence Brigade, be given an Official Reprimand to be placed in his employment file, termination of employment, and generation of a derogatory report to revoke his security clearance for the following acts which have been previously referred to in the aforementioned findings:

  • Made a false statement to the investigation team regarding the locations of his interrogations, the activities during his interrogations, and his knowledge of abuses.
  • Allowed and/or instructed MPs, who were not trained in interrogation techniques, to facilitate interrogations by “setting conditions” which were neither authorized and in accordance with applicable regulations/policy. He clearly knew his instructions equated to physical abuse.

You’ll recall that the “setting conditions” accusations formed some of the clearest indication of the systemic nature of torture uncovered at Abu Ghraib — at least, that is, until lawyer Shereef Akeel and his colleagues at the Center for Constitutional Rights began discovering evidence that unethical interrogation tactics and other abuses are remarkably consistent throughout US-run faciliies all over Iraq.

For good measure, that same report also lists Mr. Stefanowicz among people who “were either directly or indirectly responsible for the abuses at Abu Ghraib.”

And CACI itself has admitted:

Steven Stefanowicz is a CACI employee.

Our “lawyers” are presently trying to figure out where the confusion at Steptoe & Johnson stems from.

In addition, CACI writes to me:

The public record is devoid of any factual information supporting the conclusion that CACI personnel have been assigned to work at locations other than Abu Ghraib, much less participated in abuses at such locations.

Since we couldn’t get CACI or the Army to tell us whether CACI employees have been assigned as interrogators at other facilities, we didn’t report whether they were or were not. But we do not want to know about evidence in the public record, we want to know, point blank: Has any employee of CACI International operated as interrogators or assistant interrogators at any other facilities in Iraq?

In any case, if you read the relevant portions of our article, you’ll see that we were more than responsible when discussing CACI and Titan (the other firm accused of abuses). We took all the usual journalistic precautions against libel, like calling the claims against CACI/Titan “allegations” and making it clear that evidence uncovered so far by Akeel and his colleagues does not yet indicate any specific employees at either corporation. In fact, here’s the full snippet from the article:

Akeel had teamed up with attorneys in Philadelphia and New York to work with the Center for Constitutional Rights in bringing a lawsuit against private security firms Titan Corp and CACI International. The class action suit accuses the US firms of violating the Alien Tort Claims Act and the Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) by engaging in illegal abuse and torture of detainees with the goal of securing lucrative government contracts.

In fact, despite a recent military report recommending criminal charges be filed against at least two Titan employees contracted as translators at Abu Ghraib prison, the US Army has awarded a six month “bridging contract” to the San Diego-based security firm to continue providing translators and interpreters after its current contract ends this month. The Associated Press reports that the new contract could bring Titan as much as $400 million.

Both Titan and CACI have repeatedly denied allegations that their personnel have been involved in any illegal activity or wrongdoing. They have said the lawsuit against them is unfounded and have stood by specific employees accused of abuses in Iraq.

Akeel says the discovery of gross mistreatment at over two dozen prisons controlled by the US military is “another piece of the puzzle,” and could strengthen the legal team’s case. Pieces have been put into place with the declassified sections of three military reports investigating prison abuse in Iraq. Though the findings have been limited to activities at Abu Ghraib, Akeel says they still provide evidence of private contractors at both firms engaging in crimes against former detainees.

The legal team’s next move is to fit former detainees’ descriptions of assailants and prison release papers with names and photographs of Titan and CACI employees contracted to the prisons. It is not yet known if Titan or CACI workers were contracted to the majority of the prisons where detainees allege abuse took place.

We stand by that reporting 100 percent, and unfortunately for the good people at CACI and the Steptoe & Johnson law firm, there’s no way they can build a case against us, since the law and the Constitution are squarely and unambiguously on our side as journalists reporting news of public relevance.

Afghanistan goes to the polls

If anyone can figure out what’s going on in Afghanistan’s elections, let me know. From what I can piece together, all the candidates withdrew, claiming fraud, except Karzai. The US bombed some “suspected Taliban militants” killing 25 people in southern Afghanistan, and voting hours were extended because “thousands” of Afghans were still in line when voting was supposed to end. No polling places exploded, and only a few were rocketed.

I suppose it’s safe to call this one for Karzai, since he’s the only candidate. It should at least be amusing to see how many votes were cast, out of the 10+ million registered voters (out of a pool of 9 million eligible voters) in Afghanistan.

UK hostage Bigley reportedly beheaded

Bigley_1

Various sources are reporting that British hostage Ken Bigley has been beheaded in Iraq.

FALLUJA, Iraq (Reuters) – British hostage Ken Bigley was beheaded near Baghdad on Thursday afternoon, insurgent sources in the rebel-held town of Falluja said on Friday.

Abu Dhabi Television, quoting “informed” sources in Iraq, had said earlier that the militant group led by al Qaeda ally Abu Musab al-Zarqawi had killed Bigley.

Britain’s Foreign Office said it was aware of the reports. “We cannot corroborate the reports … We are in close touch with Mr. Bigley’s family at this difficult time,” a Foreign Office spokesman told Reuters in London.

The insurgent sources said Bigley was killed in the town of Latifiya, about 35 km (22 miles) southwest of the Iraqi capital.

They declined to say how they had got their information.

Britain’s Sky TV, quoting British government sources, also said Bigley had been killed.

Bigley was last seen in a cage, begging Tony Blair for his life, beneath a Tawhid and Jihad flag.

Last week, Bigley appealed, in a video tape released by his kidnappers, to British Prime Minister Tony Blair to meet the captor’s demands to save his life.

“Tony Blair is lying, he is lying when he said he’s negotiated. He has not negotiated. My life is cheap. He doesn’t care about me,” Bigley said while squatting behind metal meshing and looking distraught.

“I am begging you for my life. Have some compassion please,” he said, his voice cracking with emotion.

Blair has said his government will not negotiate with the hostage takers.

I think Ilana Mercer has said what needs to be said about these despicable heads of State who put so little value on human life.

UPDATE: Reuters is reporting that a video showing the Bigley beheading has surfaced, confirming his death.