Winter Soldier: Jeremy Scahill discusses why no
presidential candidate plans on fully leaving Iraq
Transcript:
MATTHEW PALEVSKY, TRNN
JOURNALIST: I'm at Winter Soldiers, standing outside the conference hall
where people are currently testifying, and I'm standing with Jeremy
Scahill, the author of Blackwater, a book about the Blackwater contractors
and the contractors currently in Iraq and Afghanistan. So, Jeremy, can you
tell us about how this has played out in the elections going on right
now?
JEREMY SCAHILL, JOURNALIST: I mean, for most of the election
campaign, private contractors, whether they be armed security contractors
like Blackwater or the larger army of 180,000 contractors hasn't been an
issue at all. None of the candidates have really been asked about it in
the debates. Occasionally they've been asked about it by voters, but it
really hasn't become a premiere issue. About two weeks ago I did a story
about Barack Obama's position on contractors called “Obama's Mercenary
Position” for The Nation magazine. And basically what I did was I
interviewed senior foreign policy advisors to Barack Obama and said to
them, “What are you guys going to do about the contractors?” And what I
found out is that Barack Obama's people are saying that they will not rule
out the use of private security contractors like Blackwater in Iraq, and
that Barack Obama will not sign on to legislation seeking to ban them or
to force them out of Iraq. And the reason is actually kind of complicated.
Barack Obama has been, actually, a leader on the issue of contractor
reform in the Senate: he introduced legislation to try to regulate and
oversee them months before the Nisour Square massacre happened in Baghdad
in September of 2007. But his people realized that because they have an
Iraq plan that requires keeping 40,000 to 80,000 US troops in Iraq and a
massive diplomatic force, they're going to need these forces. So they
don't want to be nailed on this later. So they were quite honest about
their intent to use it. Hillary Clinton has been eight years on the Armed
Services Committee. She's never done anything to try to crack down on
contractors, never made any statements, except condemning Blackwater after
Nisour Square, which everyone and their grandmother did. The day after my
story comes out, which hit Obama pretty hard, Hillary Clinton released a
statement saying that she's going to cosponsor legislation that Bernie
Sanders had introduced last November that would seek to ban Blackwater and
force them all out of Iraq within six months. So she now becomes the most
significant political figure in the US to call for a ban on Blackwater,
and she did it after Barack Obama's people came out and said, “Yeah, we're
probably going to be forced to use them.”
PALEVSKY: And has this
swayed Obama at all, her coming out against contractors?
SCAHILL:
Look, I mean, Barack Obama has a perfect sort of response to her on this:
where have you been? For the past five years of occupation, where have you
been on this issue, when you were a key member of a key Senate committee
that deals with these issues of war and war contracting? Where were you
after Nisour Square when 17 Iraqis were killed by Blackwater? And where
have you been on this issue? Obama actually introduced the legislation in
the Senate on this eight months before Nisour Square. So I don't think
it's actually going to become a major campaign issue. I think Hillary
Clinton did this in the lead-up to Ohio and Texas as just sort of a way to
curry some favor with the antiwar movement, because this has actually been
a major issue in the antiwar movement. I can't imagine that her staff
thought this through too deeply, because she has stuck her neck way
further out than anyone else in the Senate besides Bernie Sanders on this
issue. It's quite astonishing. Hey, I'm looking forward to seeing how much
of a legislative priority it's going to be for her to ban
Blackwater.
PALEVSKY: But one of the major problems with military
contractors is that they're hard to hold accountable, that they're
basically under no law, US law or Iraqi law. Have either of them or has
John McCain taken up that issue of not using them or not using them, but
using them while holding them accountable?
SCAHILL: Barack Obama's
legislation, which he introduced in February 2007—and I should say I'm
actually very critical of Barack Obama on this issue, but just to talk in
very mainstream political terminology about this, Barack Obama introduced
legislation in February 2007 that basically seeks to do the following:
make it so that all contractors, whether they work for the Pentagon or the
State Department, as Blackwater works for the State Department, will be
held accountable under US civilian law. In other words, if they commit a
murder or another crime in Iraq, they can be arrested and brought back to
the United States and put on trial for that murder in Iraq. That has a
likelihood of passing, probably. It's Obama in the Senate, David Price in
the House. It passed the House; it's now being discussed in the Senate. It
could well pass. The problem with that is that it's ridiculous—it cannot
be enforced. How on earth are you going to oversee an army of over 180,000
private contractors? The military, with all its bureaucracy, can't even
oversee 150,000 soldiers effectively. So it's sort of like it's a game
that we're playing. Do they try to have something that looks good on the
books? Absolutely. Is it like a fairytale? Absolutely. It's not
enforcible.
PALEVSKY: And many people support Barack Obama saying
he's stronger antiwar than Hillary Clinton. But if he's saying that he's
going to pull out the troops and replace them with military contractors,
does anything change?
SCAHILL: He's not saying he's going to pull
out the troops or replace them with military contractors. What Obama is
saying is that he's going to keep in place the Green Zone, the US embassy,
and the Baghdad airport, three of the largest sites for the use of private
contractors, and he's actually calling for an increase in funding of the
State Department division that employs them. But what's disturbing about
Obama's Iraq plan, as well as Hillary Clinton's, is that both of them have
plans that would keep 40,000 to 80,000 troops in Iraq. It's based on the
Iraq Study Group, the Baker-Hamilton report, and the 2007 defense
supplemental that was portrayed as the Democrats' withdrawal plan. That's
not a plan to end the occupation; it's a plan to continue it through the
use of residual forces. I actually believe, and former senior military
officials' who've reviewed Barack Obama's plan have said this too, that
he's misleading voters with his rhetoric of ending the war. He's not going
to end the war, end the occupation; he's going to withdraw some combat
brigades and then maintain a force that is going to be repackaged as a
counterterrorism strike force and a protection force for US diplomats. The
reality is you have 500 US soldiers in Iraq; you're going to have a major
resistance against them.
PALEVSKY: So do any of the candidates we
currently see running for president offer real change when it comes to the
contractors that are hired in Iraq and Afghanistan?
SCAHILL: Well,
I mean, I think third-party candidates, you know, who stand absolutely no
chance of winning have been clear on this. But of the viable candidates,
John McCain, Hillary, Clinton, and Barack Obama, there's a difference in
the sense that John McCain is basically campaigning on four more years of
Bush-type policies. He wants soldiers in Iraq to be there basically until
they're basically as old as he is right now. But Barack Obama and Hillary
Clinton, I think in a way it's even more insidious, because people
actually with good faith believe that by supporting their campaigns
they're supporting an end to the war in Iraq, and it's a ruse, it's just
not true. And so I think there's something that's even more insidious
about it. I mean, at least John McCain is clear where he stands. These
guys sort of send one message, and behind the scenes put together these
plans that are war by other means.
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