Except for the alleged eyewitness reports.
The second-hand "eyewitness" reports. That say nothing beyond they shot first and too much. There was nothing describing the situation. The car could have been speeding towards them, the situation may have been more chaotic. The report makes it sound like he was just driving along and they opened fire. There must have been some reason they thought they needed to.
Doesn't this statement kind of discredit this one:
How valuable can they be if they're that incompetent?
No, not really. They are incompetent at doing things above what they are supposed to be doing. Driving off to "assist" the military they apparently have a problem with easily doing. They are there to be the security guards for buildings, man checkpoints, etc. So that the US military can be a mobile force to do things like raids/etc. Since they are former/retired soliders, special ops guys, etc. they are like most men and feel they need to involve themselves, they just are not equipped or prepared to do so.
(Oh my, all those etc.)
There is a parallel with security guards, but there are also fundamental differences. With a few exceptions (armored-car drivers for banks, for example), security guards are not generally subject to anywhere near the amount of potentially life-threatening situations that Blackwater employees would be. As you said, the level stress would be much more intense, thereby significantly heightening the potential for such situations as the one cited in the article.
Well, I meant they are tasked to provide security guard type situations. But they are a company that has a "force" that can provide more for advanced security situations like the one in Iraq, or in other locations. Their role is clearly not to assist the military, but to provide security the military would otherwise be tasked to do. Something they are apparently good at. (Although, like all things government pays for, clearly not worth the payment they are getting.)
Additionally, I'd say that if the US needs to rely on private contractors in order to successfully wage a war, perhaps they shouldn't enter into such a war.
It is not using contractors to wage war, it is using them for security purposes. The UN does the same. There are numerous private contractors who do things better than the government providing various support over there to not just the US, but Iraqi government, etc. The US military is an offensive force, it is not one designed for day-to-day security. These type of private contractors have been used seemingly forever, they just never had global reach and their own personal logistics until the recent technological revolutions.
Why does Blackwater get a relatively free pass, when all other invading combatants must be under the strict rule of the military?
They are not getting a free pass, they simply cannot be held ultimately accountable to Iraqi law without consent of the US, just like members of the military. The FBI is investigating, and I assume that means they have decided they have legal jurisidiction over the matter, which likely means the individuals not get a free pass.
I believe the Geneva Conventions could consider the security contractors like Blackwater to be "unlawful combatants" if they were captured in combat so they likely do not have a free pass there either. I am sure however that Donald Rumsfeld knows more than I on this:
Bateman: "There are currently thousands of private military contractors in Iraq and you were just speaking of rules of engagement in regards to Iraqi personnel and US personnel. Could you speak to, since the private contractors are operating outside the Uniform Code of Military Justice, could you speak to what law or rules of engagement do govern their behaviour and whether there has been any study showing that it is cost-effective to have them in Iraq rather than US military personnel. Thank you."
Rumsfeld: "Thank you. It is clearly cost-effective to have contractors for a variety of things that military people need not do and that for whatever reason other civilian government people cannot be deployed to do. There are a lot of contractors. A growing number. They come from our country - but they come from all countries; and indeed sometimes the contracts are from our country, or another country, and they employ people from totally different countries; including Iraqis and people from neighbouring nations. And there are a lot of them and it's a growing number. And of course we've got to begin with the fact that, as you point out, they're not subject to the uniform code of military justice; we understand that. There are laws that govern the behaviour of Americans in that country - the Department of Justice oversees that. The [long hesitation] there is an issue that is current as to the extent to which they can or cannot carry weapons and that's an issue. It's also an issue of course with the Iraqis but, if you think about it, Iraq is a sovereign country, they have their laws and they're going to govern. The UN resolution and the Iraqi laws, as well as US procedures and laws, govern behaviour in that country depending on who the individual is and what he's doing, but I'm personally of the view that there are a lot of things that can be done on a short time basis by contractors that advantage the United States, and advantage other countries who also hire contractors. Any idea that we shouldn't have them I think would be unwise."
It also appears that there has already been a law change since that response in 2005, likely in result to Blackwater's actions prior to this specific event.
"SEC. 552. CLARIFICATION OF APPLICATION OF UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE DURING A TIME OF WAR. Paragraph (10) of section 802(a) of title 10, United States Code (article 2(a) of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is amended by striking `war' and inserting `declared war or a contingency operation'."
That seems to have closed the only loophole they had in regards to protection from US law. It appears they would be subject to a military court, although I assume the military would hand them off to DOJ as it does not like to deal with civilians.
I do not see what there really is to talk about here. Some people may have done some bad things and should be punished if they did. That does not condemn all private contractors. But we all know that, so again I do not really know where there is to jump off and discuss. I do not think any rational person would demand a forced withdrawl of all private contractors in all the nations of the world because of one incident. Nor that they would believe private contractors should not exist. So unless it is just to rail against an easy target, I guess do not see the point?