WikiLeaked: Ex-Blackwater ‘helps regime change’ in Syria
Published: 21 March, 2012, 09:59
Edited: 21 March, 2012, 14:45
Edited: 21 March, 2012, 14:45
A US government-contracted private security firm is helping the
Syrian opposition to overthrow the Bashar al-Assad regime, leaked
Stratfor emails indicate. The same firm earlier operated extensively in
Libya.
The private military company SCG International had been contracted to
engage the Turkey-based Syrian opposition, according to correspondence released by WikiLeaks.
Their assignment was called a “fact finding mission”, but “the true mission is how they can help in regime change,”an email addressed to Stratfor VP for counter-terrorism Fred Burton says.
The
source reporting the info is most reliable – it is SCG Chief Executive
James F. Smith, who used to be director of notorious company Blackwater, now known as Academi. In a separate message Smith introduces himself to Stratfor as having background in CIA and heading a company “comprised of former DOD, CIA and former law enforcement personnel.”
SCG’s mission with the Syrian opposition is said to have “air cover from Congresswoman [Sue] Myrick,”
a Republican lawmaker from North Carolina, who is a member of the US
House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. The body is charged
with overseeing the American intelligence community.
The email adds that Smith “intends to offer his services to help protect the opposition members, like he had underway in Libya.”
Smith
has an extensive record of sharing intelligence with Stratfor,
according the Al-Akhbar, the Lebanese daily newspaper, which is one of
the media outlets chosen by WikiLeaks as an information partner for
disclosure of private Stratfor emails.
The security contractor provided insider data on services he provided to members of the Libyan National Transitional Council during the 2011 uprising, the search for the portable surface-to-air missiles that went missing during the civil war there, and the assassination of Muammar Gaddafi, among other things.
The
trail on email ends in mid-December, days before Stratfor mail servers
were reportedly hacked by the hacking group Anonymous. The WikiLeaks
whistleblower website began publishing the emails, apparently handed over to it by the hacker team, in late February.
The
US has been increasingly dependent on private contractors like SCG,
outsourcing functions to them that were previously fulfilled by regular
troops. Employees of these “modern mercenaries” provide services like
personal and area security, intelligence gathering and recruit training
in countries like Iraq and Afghanistan.
Critics of the practice
say such firms lack accountability and allow the government to carry out
“black op” tasks while being able to deny any involvement.
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