By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and ERIC SCHMITT from Baghdad
Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki is filling a void left by the United States military.
Iraqi
authorities have detained a few hundred foreign contractors in recent weeks,
industry officials say, including many Americans who work for the United States
Embassy, in one of the first major signs of the Iraqi government’s asserting
its sovereignty after the American troop withdrawal last month.
The
detentions have occurred largely at the airport in Baghdad and at checkpoints
around the capital after the Iraqi authorities raised questions about the
contractors’ documents, including visas, weapons permits and authorizations to
drive certain routes. Although no formal charges have been filed, the
detentions have lasted from a few hours to nearly three weeks.
The
crackdown comes amid other moves by the Iraqi government to take over functions
that had been performed by the United States military and to claim areas of the
country it had controlled. In the final weeks of the military withdrawal, the
son of Iraq’s prime minister began evicting Western companies and contractors
from the heavily fortified Green Zone, which had been the heart of the United
States military operation for much of the war.
Just
after the last American troops left in December, the Iraqis stopped issuing and
renewing many weapons licenses and other authorizations. The restrictions
created a sequence of events in which contractors were being detained for
having expired documents that the government would not renew.
The
Iraqi authorities have also imposed new limitations on visas. In some recent
cases, contractors have been told they have 10 days to leave Iraq or face
arrest in what some industry officials call a form of controlled harassment.
Latif
Rashid, a senior adviser to the Iraqi president, Jalal Talabani, and a former
minister of water, said in an interview that the Iraqis’ deep mistrust of
security contractors had led the government to strictly monitor them. “We have
to apply our own rules now,” he said.
This
month, Iraqi authorities kept scores of contractors penned up at Baghdad’s
international airport for nearly a week until their visa disputes were
resolved. Industry officials said more than 100 foreigners were detained;
American officials acknowledged the detainments but would not put a number on
them.
Private
contractors are integral to postwar Iraq’s economic development and security,
foreign businessmen and American officials say, but they remain a powerful symbol
of American might, with some Iraqis accusing them of running roughshod over the
country.
An
image of contractors as trigger-happy mercenaries who were above the law was
seared into the minds of Iraqis after several violent episodes involving
private sector workers, chief among them the 2007 shooting in Baghdad’s Nisour
Square when military contractors for Blackwater killed 17 civilians.
Iraq’s
oil sector alone, which accounts for more than 90 percent of the government’s
budget, relies heavily on tens of thousands of foreign employees. The United
States Embassy employs 5,000 contractors to protect its 11,000 employees and to
train the Iraqi military to operate tanks, helicopters and weapons systems that
the United States has sold them.
The
United States had been providing much of the accreditation for contractors to
work in Iraq. But after the military withdrawal, contractors had to deal with a
Iraqi bureaucracy at a time when the government was engulfed in a political
crisis and Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, fearing a coup, was moving
tanks into the Green Zone.
The
delays for visa approvals have disrupted the daily movement of supplies and
personnel around Iraq, prompting formal protests from dozens of companies
operating in Iraq. And they have raised deeper questions about how the Maliki
government intends to treat foreign workers and how willing foreign companies
will be to invest here.
“While
private organizations are often able to resolve low-level disputes and
irregularities, this issue is beyond our ability to resolve,” the International
Stability Operations Association, a Washington-based group that represents more
than 50 companies and aid organizations that work in conflict, post-conflict
and disaster relief zones, said in a letter on Sunday to Secretary of State
Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Doug
Brooks, president of the organization, said in a telephone interview that the
number of civilian contractors who have been detained was in the “low
hundreds.” He added in an e-mail on Sunday, “Everyone is impacted, but the
roots have more to do with political infighting than any hostility to the U.S.”
As
Iraqi and American officials were negotiating last summer to keep American
troops in Iraq into 2012, the Iraqis refused to grant American troops immunity
from Iraqi law, in large part because of violent episodes like the one in
Nisour Square. Although the contractors working for the embassy are doing many
of the same jobs American troops had, including training, logistics,
maintenance and private security, they are not protected from Iraqi law
Mr.
Rashid, the adviser to Mr. Talabani, said Iraqis are fed up with foreign
contractors. “The Iraqi public is not happy with security contractors. They
caused a lot of pain,” he said. “There is a general bad feeling towards the
security contractors among the Iraqis and that has created bad feelings towards
them all.”
Mr.
Rashid said that traveling to the United States to work was no different.
“Every time I go to the airport in New York they open my suitcase three times,”
he said. “How long does it take to get an American visa?”
An
adviser to Mr. Maliki said that as part of the current agreement between the
United States and Iraq, no Americans should be in the country without the
permission of the Iraqi government.
“Iraq
always welcomes foreigners into the country, but they have to come through
legally and in a way that respects that Iraq now has sovereignty and control
over its land,” said the adviser, Ali Moussawi.
Last
month, two Americans, a Fijian and 12 Iraqis employed by Triple Canopy, a
private security company, were detained for 18 days after their 10-vehicle
convoy from Kalsu, south of Baghdad, to Taji, north of the capital, was stopped
for what Iraqi officials said was improper paperwork.
One
of the Americans, Alex Antiohos, 32, a former Army Green Beret medic from North
Babylon, N.Y., who served in the Iraq war, said in a telephone interview Sunday
that he and his colleagues were kept at an Iraqi army camp, fed insect-infested
plates of rice and fish, forced to sleep in a former jail, and though not
physically mistreated were verbally threatened by an Iraqi general who visited
them periodically. “At times, I feared for my safety,” Mr. Antiohos said.
In
a statement, Triple Canopy, which denied any problems with documents, said that
during the detention period, company officials were in contact with employees
by cellphone, and brought them food, blankets, clothing, medical supplies and
cellphone batteries. All were released unharmed on Dec. 27.
The
detention drew the ire of Representative Peter T. King, a New York Republican
who heads the House Homeland Security Committee. His office was contacted by
Mr. Antiohos’s wife on Dec. 19 seeking help to get the employees released. Mr.
King criticized the United States Embassy in Baghdad for failing to help
release the contractors caught in a drama that he said might have resulted in
part from rival Iraqi ministries’ battling for political primacy.
“They
could have been held as power plays by one Iraq department against another, but
what adds to the problem is that it does not appear that the State Department
is doing anything near what they could be doing,” Mr. King said in a telephone
interview.
The
United States Embassy in Baghdad, as well as senior State Department and
military officials, say that no Americans are currently being detained, and
they insist the detentions and visa delays are more the result of bureaucratic
inexperience than malevolent intentions.
“The
embassy has pushed for consistency and transparency in the government of Iraq’s
immigration and customs procedures and urged American citizens to review their
travel documents to ensure that they comply with Iraqi requirements to help
avoid such incidents,” an Embassy spokesman said in a statement.
One
senior American military official said that the current disconnect between the
Iraqis and the contractors was “primarily an adjustment of our standard
operating procedures as we adapt our people and they adapt their security
forces to the new situation.”
-This report was published in The Newyork Times on 16/01/2012
-Michael S. Schmidt reported from Baghdad, and Eric Schmitt from Washington
-Michael S. Schmidt reported from Baghdad, and Eric Schmitt from Washington
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