Results tagged “BBC” from SpyTalk
Reports
that the Blackwater private security company had deployed an anti-pirate vessel
to the waters off Somalia are premature, a company spokeswoman says.
The 183-foot, helicopter-equipped McArthur remains at anchor in Virginia Beach, Va., said Blackwater spokeswoman Anne E. Tyrrell in a brief phone interview.
But it's ready to sail on a
moment's notice.
"There
is some talk of getting it over there now in anticipation of security
contracts, since it takes 28 days to get to Somalia," she said.
Blackwater's
proposals to shipping companies in London in early December were "favorably
received," she said, but have yet to yield any contracts.
The company's reputation suffered another blow on
Monday, Dec. 15, when five of its former security guards were indicted on voluntary manslaughter and other charges in
connection with killings in Iraq
Founded by former Navy SEALs, Blackwater faces a
multimillion-dollar fine for allegedly shipping hundreds of automatic weapons
to Iraq without the necessary permits, McClatchy newspapers reported last month.
"Some of the weapons are thought to have ended up on the
country's black market ... but no criminal charges have been filed in the case," the
Washington bureau's Warren Strobel reported.
Today, the U.N.Security Council approved a U.S. resolution allowing countries to
pursue Somali pirates on land as well as at sea.
The resolution gives its
member countries the right to use "all necessary measures" by land or
air to stop anyone using Somali territory to plan, help or carry out acts of
piracy and armed robbery at sea, the BBC reported.
Tyrrell
said she was "not aware" of any interest from governments in
hiring Blackwater to help provide
security for its flagged vessels in the pirate-infested region.
The
North Carolina-based company has made proposals to private shippers to deploy
the McArthur and its 14-member crew as a "deterrent" against pirate attacks,
Tyrrell said.
Despite all the warm fuzzies between Condoleezza Rice and Muammar el-Qaddafi in Tripoli last week, there can be little optimism that Libya will make final payments to relatives of the hundreds of Americans killed in the PanAm 103 and LaBelle discotheque terrorist attacks anytime soon.
The Bush administration has said repeatedly that Libya's bizarre dictator must finish making promised payments to the families before normal relations can resume.
The Comprehensive Claims Settlement Agreement that Secretary of State Rice negotiated with the erstwhile rogue obligates Libya to put up $1 billion in compensation to the families in return for the normalization of relations with Washington.
But the agreement has no timetable or deadline. And none of the funds, which Libya originally promised to pay in 2003, have shown up.
There's little reason to be optimistic they will anytime soon. Qaddafi has a history of discarding his promises once he gets what he wants.
And now he's laughing about it.
After he renounced his nuclear weapons program in 2006 -- which a number of experts say was going nowhere anyway -- the Bush administration announced it was removing Libya from its list of state sponsors of terrorism. Qaddafi promptly ditched a near-agreement with a lawyer for families of the LaBelle discotheque bombing for final payments.
When the State Department moved last summer to exempt Libya from suits filed by victims of its terrorist attacks, critics cried that the Bush administration was systematically removing incentives for Qaddafi to pay up.
Meanwhile, even before Rice and Qaddafi were televised beaming at each other last week, the dictator's son, a powerful official in his own right, was denying any responsibility for the bombing of Pan Am 103, which was blasted out of the air over Lockerbie, Scotland in 1989, killing all 270 aboard, including 180 Americans.
Saif al-Islam Qaddafi said Libya had accepted responsibility for the attack -- but only to get international sanctions lifted.
"It doesn't mean that we did it, in fact," he told the BBC in a little-noted program broadcast Aug. 31, calling the victims' families "very greedy" for pursuing their claims.
"They were asking for more money and more money and more money," said Junior, who is expected to succeed his father on the throne someday.
Only months earlier Muammar Qaddafi himself had bragged publicly that he'd squeezed as much money out of American oil companies for the rights to drill in Libya as he'd paid out in claims.
"We have paid off the compensations to the victims' families but the US oil companies, which wanted to enter our country had to pay such fees that they brought this money back to Libya," he said in a speech. "So, what we gave with the right hand was later taken with the left."
A State Department spokeswoman, Ann Somerset, told me Monday that the department remains "optimistic" that Qaddafi will pay up, emphasizing that the normalization of relations with Libya, with all its commercial and political benefits, will not go forward "until the entire amount" has been paid.
