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It should come as no surprise murderous yahoos working for Aegis Defense Services
randomly shoot up innocent Iraqis, as a video currently posted on the Prison
Planet site reveals. “The video has sparked concern that private security
companies, which are not subject to any form of regulation either in Britain
or in Iraq, could be responsible for the deaths of hundreds of innocent Iraqis,”
reports the London
Telegraph.
Aegis is run by a former British soldier and a one-time member of the Scots
Guards, Tim Spicer, who made a sum of money violating a UN arms embargo in Sierra
Leone and touching off a coup in Papua New Guinea. Spicer is apparently so good
at what he does—apparently including randomly murdering Iraqis—the
Pentagon awarded him a $293 million contract to have his hired thugs act as
bodyguards (or maybe we should call them what they are—spree killers).
Spicer has a bad habit of rubbing elbows with cutthroat psychopaths. For instance,
in Belfast in 1992, two men under Spicer’s command killed an unarmed teenager
and father of two children, Peter Mc Bride. Mark Wright and James Fisher were
charged with the murder and sentenced to life, but thanks to campaign led by
the Daily Mail and with help from the British Ministry of Defense, the men were
released after serving three years (see Brief
introduction to the case of Peter McBride September 1992 - April 2005 and
Barry McCaffrey
reporting for the Irish News). A British Army review board eventually reinstated
Wright and Fisher, probably because they really have no problem with their soldiers
killing unarmed Irish civilians.
According to one Dr. Alexander von Paleske, head of the department of oncology
at the Princess Marina Hospital in Gaborone, Botswana, Spicer “worked
with Anthony Buckingham, one of Britain’s wealthiest men, in a company
called Sandline,” according to Ray O’Hanlon of the Irish Echo. “Buckingham’s
worldwide business dealings included an oil deal with the now unemployed Saddam
Hussein,” von Paleske wrote for the Zimbabwe newspaper the Standard last
year. As it turns out, Spicer worked with Buckingham in a company called Sandline,
a PMC, or “Private Military Company,” and Sandline was neck-deep
in the coup in Papua New Guinea in 1997.
Enter the “honorable sir” Mark Thatcher, the rich playboy who “is
suspected by South African police as being a moneyman behind the alleged plot
to overthrow the Equatorial Guinea regime.” So outraged are the bluebloods
in Britain, Gordon Prentice, a Member of Parliament, has demanded “sir”
Mark be stripped of his baronetcy. Had a commoner been convicted of such a crime,
no doubt he would be wasting away in a jail cell somewhere in Africa. Due to
his station and a plea bargaining agreement, Thatcher pleaded guilty to negligence,
was fined $500,000, and received a three year suspended sentence (meanwhile,
British SAS officer Simon Mann, suspected of leading the mercenaries, was jailed
for seven years in Zimbabwe for illegally trying to buy weapons). “Both
Thatcher and Spicer belonged to a gang of English white guys out to plunder
Africa,” Sean
Mc Manus, President of the Capitol Hill-based Irish National Caucus, commented
earlier this year.
Now Tim Spicer is plundering the American taxpayer while his goons shoot up
Iraqi cars with Elvis Presley’s Mystery Train playing in the background.
As noted at the outset, it should come as no surprise high-paid mercenaries
are killing innocent Iraqis. “Foreign mercenaries make up the third biggest
‘coalition partner’ in Iraq after the United States and Britain,”
writes Aaron Glantz.
“Many of them are from former secret police agencies of since-overthrown
police states like Pinochet’s Chile and apartheid South Africa. These
mercenaries guard contractors working for international firms like Halliburton
and Bechtel.” In fact, these mercenaries are so out of control they not
only shoot Iraqis, but take pot shots at U.S. troops, according to Iraq’s
interior ministry. “The marines say one of their combat teams came under
fire from guards in a convoy of four-wheel-drives belonging to Zapata Engineering,
a firm based in North Carolina that is involved in reconstruction projects,”
the UK
Telegraph reported. “The Zapata employees have admitted firing at
civilian vehicles but deny targeting marines.”
In other words, according to Zapata Engineering, it’s okay to kill innocent
Iraqi civilians. “The Army Corps of Engineers says that Zapata is doing
an outstanding job on a dangerous and urgently needed mission,” Kevin
Begos and Phoebe Zerwick wrote for the Winston-Salem Journal on February
13th, 2005. “But the shift to private contractors has raised complicated
questions about accountability.”
Obviously, if there was accountability, the sadistic goons of Aegis wouldn’t
be killing Iraqi motorists and Tim Spicer wouldn’t be pocketing $293 million
of American taxpayer money.
It can be argued, however, Spicer and crew are doing precisely what the Pentagon
hired them to do—kill and terrorize Iraqis and send them a message: resistance
to the Bush Borg Hive of Faux Democracy will not be tolerated.
Read - From Loooking Glass News
Shooting Iraqi civilians for fun?
http://www.lookingglassnews.org/viewstory.php?storyid=3716