The News-Times

Pardons in killings of Iraqi civilians stir angry response

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WASHINGTON — The courtroom monitors carried the image of a smiling 9-yearold boy as his father pleaded for the punishment of four U.S. government contractor­s convicted in shootings that killed that child and more than a dozen other Iraqi civilians.

“What’s the difference,“Mohammad Kinani al-Razzaq asked a Washington judge at an emotional 2015 sentencing hearing, “between these criminals and terrorists?”

On Tuesday President Donald Trump pardoned 15 people, including Dustin Heard, Evan Liberty, Nicholas Slatten and Paul Slough, the four former government contractor­s convicted in the 2007 massacre in Baghdad that left more a dozen Iraqi civilians dead and caused an internatio­nal uproar over the use of private security guards in a war zone.

The news comes at a delicate moment for the Iraqi leadership, which is trying to balance growing calls by some Iraqi factions for a complete U.S. troop withdrawal from Iraq with what they see as the need for a more gradual drawdown.

“The infamous Blackwater company killed Iraqi citizens at Nisoor Square. Today we heard they were released upon personal order by President Trump, as if they don’t care for the spilled Iraqi blood,”

said Saleh Abed, a Baghdad resident walking in the square.

The United Nations’ Human Rights office said Wednesday that it was “deeply concerned” by the pardons, which it said “contribute­s to impunity and has the effect of emboldenin­g others to commit such crimes in the future.” The Iraqi Foreign Ministry said the pardons ”did not take into account the seriousnes­s of the crime committed,“and that it would urge the U.S. to reconsider.

Al-Razzaq, the father of the slain boy, told the BBC that the pardon decision “broke my life again.”

Lawyers for the contractor­s, who had aggressive­ly defended

the men for more than a decade, offered a different take.

They have long asserted that the shooting began only after the men were ambushed by gunfire from insurgents and then shot back in defense. They have pointed to problems with the prosecutio­n — the first indictment was dismissed by a judge — and argued that the trial that ended with their conviction­s was tainted by false testimony and withheld evidence.

Though the circumstan­ces of the shooting have long been contested, there is no question the Sept. 16, 2007, episode — which began after the contractor­s were ordered to create a

safe evacuation route for a diplomat after a car bomb explosion — was a low point for U.S.-Iraqi relations, coming just years after the Abu Ghraib torture scandal.

The FBI and Congress opened investigat­ions, and the State Department — which used the Blackwater firm for security for diplomats — ordered a review of practices. The guards would later be charged in the deaths of 14 civilians, including women and children, in what U.S. prosecutor­s said was a wild, unprovoked attack by sniper fire, machine guns and grenade launchers against unarmed Iraqis.

 ?? Associated Press ?? This combinatio­n made from file photos shows Blackwater guards, from left, Dustin Heard, Evan Liberty, Nicholas Slatten and Paul Slough.
Associated Press This combinatio­n made from file photos shows Blackwater guards, from left, Dustin Heard, Evan Liberty, Nicholas Slatten and Paul Slough.

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