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Thursday 23 October 2014

In  A  Land Where  Justice  Is  Still   A  Game:
The Blackwater  4

The recent Court and jury decision to convict 4 former Blackwater contractors of murder is, in my opinion, another travesty of justice.
It is a travesty of justice because the contractors were assured that they were 'protected' in the course of what was, at that time, one of the most dangerous jobs on the planet.
They were asked to undertake work which professional Armed forces personnel would find, at the best of times, stressful and where only intensive professional training could have possibly averted a tragedy on that day in Nisoor Square, Baghdad.
The truth was they (the convicted ex-Blackwater employees) were betrayed by the very politicians whose safety they were prepared (and some did) to sacrifice their lives to protect whilst visiting Iraq.
But you won't read about this in the 'hanging press', all reproducing the same storyline – that 'justice' has been 'seen' to be done. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Given public hysteria and fear of loss of electoral votes over any sensitive [vote losing] issue, all run for cover, and, to put it bluntly, hang anyone and everyone 'out to dry' to save their own political necks.
But you will never read about this in the mainstream news.
I never condone murder. Yes there is little doubt that the restraints normally in place where professional Armed Forces personnel are involved, were absent on that fateful day in 2007 at Nisoor Square, Baghdad when innocent civilians were indiscriminately shot dead. But how many of the jury or the judge, the Justice Department or FBI staffers have been in a war zone under these exceptional conditions? I have so I can speak with some confidence and knowledge in this regard.
If you have ever been in a war zone where local conditions can change in an instant and the atmosphere can go from being unhostile, to build up, general hysteria, or being 'hemmed in' to someone shouting 'kill the Infidels' or something similar or a language you do not understand but have to infer many things from gestures, actions and try to anticipate intentions, all in an instant. I can assure you there is little time to react, between you being surrounded, torn to shreds, your head on a pole, little time between being alive and dead. The only thing which may save you – and the civilians surrounding you - from carnage – is your training, or sheer luck. For myself, it was the latter, on three separate occasions in two different countries. There is no time to react logically, basic survival instinct takes over and you do what you can in an instant to save your own life [or protect your VIP as the case is.] Once the shooting starts only training and discipline can bring it to an end with minimum loss of life.
But you won't read or hear or see about this in your mainstream media. Those few who have had this experience will, on the whole, prefer to just keep quiet. Maybe for personal reasons. Maybe for professional career fears for the future. Maybe they themselves continue to be traumatized, suffering in silence rather than seeking professional help – or because they just can't afford the cost of such private psychiatric healthcare or just can't afford the cost of speaking out.  (Yes Michael Savage, PTSD does exist – and many who served their country suffer in silence rather than seek help. Only armchair critics have no knowledge of it.)
I have experienced this [operating under extremely stressful or life-threatening conditions] situation three times, in two different War zones, in two different countries, as a non-combatant civilian, in my lifetime. I would not wish it on anyone. If I had been armed, I would have instantly acted to defend myself from what were rapidly changing (in an instant) conditions. I may (or may not) have issued verbal warnings which, if ignored, I too would have had no hesitation in opening fire on hysterical or surrounding local crowds. I was unarmed and, with hindsight and surprise, used other innate survival skills, which I did not even realize I possessed until those moments, to save my own life. But I have never forgotten those events. They do not haunt me, but they were very formative in my personal evolution and development.
A judge and jury who have never experienced a combat zone close up and personal – other than the six feet between themselves and the plasma, LCD or LED in their living room, and witnesses for the prosecution, must give added weight to the innocent victims accounts by the very nature of the outcome. The jury have not just taken away the liberty but the dignity of the contractors whose only crime was that they believed in their country and were prepared to lay down their lives whilst undertaking tasks their masters would often prefer to plausibly deny and, more importantly, under extreme pressure and stress, they made fatal mistakes. Once bullets are fired, unfortunately they cannot be recalled.

For the record, the former Blackwater contractors were guilty of opening fire on an apparently defenceless crowd of civilians. But Baghdad in 2007, was not (as it is likewise today) a cakewalk.

As far as I am concerned, justice will not have been done until all these convicted Blackwater contractors are freed or pardoned for the mitigating reasons and exceptional conditions which few citizens will ever experience in their lifetimes, thankfully.
They will not even have the 'dignity' of serving out their sentences at Leavenworth [USDB/JRCF] but are now branded as common criminals, murderers to be incarcerated, keys thrown away, no chance of reprieve.
If the four individuals convicted are guilty of anything it is a lack of good judgement under exceptionally stressful conditions which resulted in a tragic loss of innocent Iraqi civilian lives.
Their indirect employer, the government, should acknowledge it's own culpability.

In my opinion, one of the last acts in Office of the incumbent President should be to acknowledge this fact and that these individuals were not the only ones who should have been in the dock but were shamelessly used, hung out to swing in the wind, thrown away as garbage, then abandoned by the country they served. One can argue with justification the issues of honor ,dignity and recompense for the innocent victims and their grieving families in their quest for some sense of justice and closure.

I will not quote much of the 'hanging press' as it is all, almost unanimously, singing from the same hymn sheet, with as many as can clammer, scramble and fight their way on board, all along for the ride, steering, cajoling on, at the top of their vocals, the wheeled wicker baskets with the (now) convicted murderers, towards their pre-prepared pyres for incineration, to satisfy the frenzied 'blood-lust' of the psyched-up masses.


Patrick Emek

Detailed description of a convoy 'hemmed in' at a very congested junction:
This very descriptive account of tragic loss also gives some sense of an environment where, at any moment, anything can happen - and this is a point where a convoy is at it's most vulnerable - and 'on edge' for such reasons:







Bob Dylan:
''could not help but make me feel ashamed to live in a land where justice is a game'':
http://www.goodreads.com/quotes/243119-couldn-t-help-but-make-me-feel-ashamed-to-live-in

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