The Iraqi parliament will soon vote on a measure to cancel all immunity for US contractors. Although this is a great sign that the Iraqi government is “standing up” so we can leave, we don’t have the flower petals ready for throwing around in gratitude.
“There’s no question it’s a disaster if this got passed,†said Carter Andress, one of an estimated 8,500 private security contractors guarding diplomats, convoys and reconstruction sites for the U.S. He is not willing to let his employees be subject to arrest by an Iraqi police force he believes is riddled with corruption and infiltrated by enemy fighters.
“How do we determine in that situation whether or not it’s legitimate use of the rule of law or whether or not this is someone trying to kidnap one of us and take advantage of the situation,†he said.
Despite troubles caused by out-of-control contractors American officials say they are indispensible to U.S. operations in Iraq. They’re counting on the Iraqi parliament not to ratify the law. But Andress, who knows first hand the public anger triggered by last September’s infamous Blackwater shooting, is not so sure.
“This may be the first law that parliament gets passed,†he said. “Here’s one they can all agree upon.â€If the parliament strikes back, the shooting, which left 17 Iraqis dead could end up killing off the entire network of private contractors on which the U.S. depends.
Be careful what you wish for and all that.
