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Yesterday I received an email from the journalist Mike Whitney informing
me that if he does not remove a statement he made about Blackwater and the so-called
Abu Ghraib scandal the mercenary corporation will sue him for defamation.
Apparently Blackwater expects Whitney to contact all websites, blogs, and forums
on the internet that reposted his article–or even made reference or linked
to it—and ask them to remove the offending remark, a completely unreasonable
request. Mike’s retraction runs as follows:
A few months ago I wrote an article “The Second American Revolution”
that was published on a number of web sites. The article contained the following
paragraph: “Blackwater’s record in Iraq is a grim testimonial
of criminal excess. They have been directly connected to the abusive treatment
of prisoners at Abu Ghraib, the random killings and brutalizing of Iraqi civilians,
and the extortion of information from resistance suspects.”
These claims cannot be substantiated and although other security firms have
been accused of serious criminal conduct, Blackwater has not. Blackwater was
not involved in the Abu Ghraib scandal at all and I seem to have completely
muddled my facts.
I sincerely regret whatever harm I may have caused to either Blackwater or
to the various web sites that, through no fault of their own, trusted me to
do a better job of fact checking.
Reference to this article appeared on my blog in a comment posted on September
15th. As requested, I have removed the comment. That said, it should be noted
that I did not check the factual veracity of every post on my blog, numbering
in the thousands. I have since closed down the comment feature of my blog, mostly
due to the massive amount of bandwidth it consumed and also because I was unable
to moderate comments, the latter a full-time job.
As Mike noted, he should have checked his facts more closely, or at least used
a noun such as “allegation” when writing his article. I wonder if
Blackwater contacted the Washington Post and threatened to sue them after Ariana
Eunjung Cha and Renae Merle wrote the following: “Now, with allegations
that contractors may have allowed or instructed soldiers to abuse detainees
at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, there are questions about their accountability
in a place where laws are still being written.”
Of course, the journalists used the aforementioned noun and, besides, the Washington
Post is a large corporate newspaper with undoubtedly any number of lawyers on
staff.
I believe I can state, without the threat of lawsuit, that Blackwater USA is
in the habit of hiring fascist thugs—for instance, Chilean commandos,
“many of who had trained under the military government of Augusto Pinochet,”
according to Blackwater head honcho Gary
Jackson—who have “behaved brutally, with impunity, in Iraq,”
according to Michael
Ratner, president of the Center for Constitutional Rights, and were “deputized
by the governor of Louisiana,” as Jeremy
Scahill told Amy Goodman, and tasked with “stopping criminals”
(a job for the National Guard, but then they were in Iraq), that is to say the
desperate thirsty and hungry people of New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane
Katrina. I won’t say Blackwater participated in the federal confiscation
of legal weapons in New Orleans because I have no direct evidence of this and,
besides, I can’t afford a fancy lawyer.
Finally, although Whitney apparently got some his facts wrong, he is spot on
in his characterizations of the Virginia-based mercenary for hire racket: “Blackwater
represents the globalization of repression; a free-market progeny that is transforming
the people’s army into privately-owned militias for multi-national corporations.
The deployment of these armed-units is a clear and present danger to both personal
liberty and democratic institutions.”