January 23, 2010 12:33 PM

Blackwater Can Be Out Of Iraq In 3 Days

(CBS/AP)  Blackwater Worldwide, which guards American diplomats in Iraq, said Thursday it would be prepared to leave that country within 72 hours after Iraqi officials denied the North Carolina-based company an operating license because of a deadly shooting spree in Baghdad.

But Blackwater founder Erik Prince told The Associated Press that while losing the State Department contract would hurt the company, the move would cause more harm to the diplomats it has protected since soon after the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.

"Our abrupt departure would far more hurt the reconstruction team and the diplomats trying to rebuild the country than it would hurt us as a business," Prince said Thursday in an exclusive interview with the AP.

Iraqi officials said the lingering outrage over a September 2007 shooting in Baghdad's Nisoor Square that left 17 Iraqi civilians dead led to its decision.

The shooting strained relations between Washington and Baghdad and fueled the anti-American insurgency in Iraq, where many Iraqis saw the bloodshed as a demonstration of American brutality and arrogance. Five former Blackwater guards have pleaded not guilty to federal charges in the United States that include 14 counts of manslaughter and 20 counts of attempted manslaughter.

Blackwater maintains the guards opened fire after coming under attack, an argument supported by transcripts of Blackwater radio logs obtained by the AP. They describe a hectic eight minutes in which the guards repeatedly reported incoming gunfire from insurgents and Iraqi police.

Hassan Jaber was wounded that day - shot in the arm and back as he tried to escape, CBS News correspondent Elizabeth Palmer reported last month from Baghdad. Jaber, like other wounded victims, got $7,500 compensation from the U.S. Embassy in Iraq, which he used to pay for medical care. But his body is still full of shrapnel.

The Iraqi decision to deny Blackwater an operating license was made public Thursday. A U.S.-Iraqi security agreement, which took effect Jan. 1, gives the Iraqis the authority to determine which Western contractors operate in their country.

"We sent our decision to the U.S. Embassy last Friday," Iraqi Interior Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Abdul-Karim Khalaf told the AP. "They have to find a new security company."

State Department spokesman Robert A. Wood said the department has yet to determine its next step.

"We have to study and see what we're going to do next," said Wood. "We haven't made a decision on how we're going to move forward yet."

Prince said his company had yet to receive orders from the State Department to evacuate.

Neither Khalaf nor a U.S. Embassy official speaking on condition of anonymity gave a date for Blackwater personnel to leave Iraq, and neither said whether they would be allowed to continue guarding U.S. diplomats in the meantime.

Blackwater president Gary Jackson told the AP the company has plans to remove its nearly two dozen aircraft and 1,000 security contractors from Iraq within 72 hours of receiving such an order. "If they tell us to leave, we'll pack it up and go," Jackson said.

Two other U.S.-based security contractors working for the State Department - DynCorp and Triple Canopy - have licenses to operate in Iraq. But Prince played down the possibility that Blackwater contractors would simply move to another employer.

"It is a big assumption for someone to say, 'Fire Blackwater (and) all those guys will migrate over to one of the other competitors."' Prince said. "It's not that easy."

Blackwater has been operating in Iraq without a formal license since it arrived in the country. The State Department extended Blackwater's contract for a year last spring, despite widespread calls for it to be expelled because of the shootings.

Blackwater's work in Iraq, which includes a reputation for aggressive operations and excessive force it disputes as unfair and inaccurate, turned the company into a catchall brand name for private security contractors. Executives said last year that the unwanted attention had them shifting their focus away from private security.

If banned from protecting diplomats in Iraq, Blackwater executives said Thursday the company remains on track to reach a goal of $1 billion in annual revenues in the next year or two. The State Department contract comprises about one-third of the company's overall revenues, though the work of providing actual boots-on-ground security is only part of the deal.

The private security firm, which trained some 25,000 civilians, law enforcement and military personnel last year, continues to expand even as its future in Iraq becomes less promising. Blackwater has a fleet of 76 aircraft, and almost all of them are deployed in hot spots in places like Afghanistan and West Africa.

On Thursday, three international teams were at the company's compound in North Carolina going through classes: Authorities from Yemen flipped through four-inch binders as they learned how to identify the components of an explosive by looking at X-rays. A group from the country of Georgia was practicing SWAT techniques in a makeshift building, taking instructions through a translator from a Blackwater official.

A Canadian team was also on site, along with a number of other law enforcement, Coast Guard and civilians who kicked up burning rubber on a driving track and rattled off rounds on shooting ranges. Members of the Army and Navy were practicing their driving skills in Blackwater's mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles.

"When you first hear Blackwater, you automatically, instantly think about the overseas stuff," said Jim Sierawski, Blackwater's vice president for training. "That overshadows the training center. Here, we've been on a steady incline every year."

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 79 Comments
by indamiddle February 1, 2009 6:34 PM EST
without the idea of ''blackwater'', who would protect the world....

Reply to this comment
by jetranger7 January 31, 2009 2:56 AM EST
Yaaa, and here thse Gung Ho Shoot Em Wanna be''s come too, right back here to the United States, only to be hired as Security Guards and Wanna Be Cops, armed with a Gun, a Badge and an attitude !!! America best wake up, they''ll be opening fire on us next, all part of that Jughead so called Professional Training they supposedly Recieved , everybody watch out - were next !
Reply to this comment
by flolake January 30, 2009 8:55 AM EST
Republicans must really be hating life now.

Buh-bye Blackwater.


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Posted by shanev137 at 02:27 AM




Amen, Shane V137!
Reply to this comment
by flolake January 30, 2009 8:52 AM EST
It''s time the whole world blackballed Blackwater...
Reply to this comment
by j-whitman5 January 30, 2009 7:53 AM EST
Blackwater should of been Kicked out in 2005, but the Bush Admin. just didn''''t have the guts or the integrity to do it !! Why it might of made them look badd, like they didn''''t know what they were doing, as we all know now, quite obviously they never did actually have any plans to begin with other than lie to the American people, and the World about having that so-called plan, they never planned anything except for to tell more lies and Spin about having a plan for which they had none !!! Now we all know their supposed plan, what a joke and Disgrace !

Posted by JetRanger7 at 04:21 AM : Jan 30, 2009
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Wrong IDIOT. Bush knew that the rest of the American security companies are a bunch of coward chicken and are not qualified to protect our diplomatic personnel abroad. Only Blackwater can do this job in Iraq.
Reply to this comment
by j-whitman5 January 30, 2009 7:51 AM EST
The Blackwater guys are the heroes of our times. They have the courage and audacity to fight insurgents and al-qaeda for the coward Iraqi politicians. Now those same coward Iraqi officials blame Blackwater for their security problems. Thats unfair.
Reply to this comment
by jetranger7 January 30, 2009 7:21 AM EST
Blackwater should of been Kicked out in 2005, but the Bush Admin. just didn''t have the guts or the integrity to do it !! Why it might of made them look badd, like they didn''t know what they were doing, as we all know now, quite obviously they never did actually have any plans to begin with other than lie to the American people, and the World about having that so-called plan, they never planned anything except for to tell more lies and Spin about having a plan for which they had none !!! Now we all know their supposed plan, what a joke and Disgrace !
Reply to this comment
by hillaryin016 January 30, 2009 7:16 AM EST
Yes, I agree about the hype in regards to the military. I live in San Diego and these guys are bullies, to say the least. There is a reason women/men divorce the military life and the strangers they used to call their partners. And domestic violence? The police cover for it. Bar violence, too, is rampant, and police cover for the "heroes".
Please stop making heroes out of every brain-washed,angry, desperate soul who has no where else to turn except the military. There are true heroes, but you will never hear their stories. Heroes don''''t blab.
And the intelligent, ones are soon taught, Brains we don''''t need; we want killers and robots.
I like every thing our new President is doing. He is a logical person.



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Posted by MariahWelch at 02:39 AM : Jan 30, 2009

You got beat up by a vet didnt you lib. Did you call him a stormtrooper or a baby killer. How did it feel?
Reply to this comment
by hillaryin016 January 30, 2009 7:14 AM EST
Are you saying that the US Military in not capable of doing it?

Posted by leglizhemp at 11:24 PM : Jan 29, 2009

Contrary to all the hype, the US military is a bunch of incompetent high school dropouts.


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Posted by ROTFLMMFAO at 11:51 PM : Jan 29, 2009

Typical Obmama worshiper and voter........
Reply to this comment
by mariahwelch January 30, 2009 5:39 AM EST
Yes, I agree about the hype in regards to the military. I live in San Diego and these guys are bullies, to say the least. There is a reason women/men divorce the military life and the strangers they used to call their partners. And domestic violence? The police cover for it. Bar violence, too, is rampant, and police cover for the "heroes".
Please stop making heroes out of every brain-washed,angry, desperate soul who has no where else to turn except the military. There are true heroes, but you will never hear their stories. Heroes don''t blab.
And the intelligent, ones are soon taught, Brains we don''t need; we want killers and robots.
I like every thing our new President is doing. He is a logical person.
Reply to this comment
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