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Rice orders team to Iraq on Blackwater       Send a link to a friend

[September 28, 2007]  NEW YORK (AP) -- Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has ordered a review board to visit Iraq next week to assess U.S. diplomatic security practices there following a deadly Baghdad shooting incident involving private Blackwater USA guards protecting a U.S. Embassy convoy.

Led by Patrick Kennedy, one of the most senior management experts in the U.S. foreign service, the panel will leave early next week and present an interim report by Oct. 5, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said Thursday.

Kennedy's team will "begin establishing some baseline set of facts about these contractor operations" and report back to Rice, McCormack said.

He quoted Rice as saying she wanted Kennedy's assessment to "be 360 (degrees), to be serious, and to be really probing."

His announcement was posted to the State Department's new Internet blog, "Dipnote," (http://www.blogs.state.gov/). He then confirmed the comments to The Associated Press.

McCormack also said the department soon would name several outside independent experts to join Kennedy's review board.

"Based on Pat's work, as well as their own assessments, the independent panel will then make a set of recommendations to Secretary Rice several weeks from now," he said.

McCormack did not identify the independent experts to be tapped, but said they could be named as early as Friday.

Several former senior diplomats and military officers have been approached about joining the panel, officials said.

Rice set up the review board last week in the wake of the Sept. 16 incident involving security guards from private contractor Blackwater USA in which at least 11 Iraqis, including civilians, were killed. Blackwater is the largest of three private companies contracted by the State Department to provide security for U.S. diplomats in Iraq.

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There are several separate investigations now under way into the Baghdad incident amid widely divergent witness accounts of what happened.

American witnesses, including the Blackwater guards, insist the convoy was attacked before the protective detail opened fire while Iraqi witnesses say the gunshots were unprovoked.

To straighten out the details, the State Department's Bureau of Diplomatic Security, to which Blackwater reports, is conducting one probe. Iraqi authorities are conducting another.

A joint U.S.-Iraqi commission has been created to try to come up with a common set of facts about the incident and look at ways to clarify the regulations under which private security guards operate in Iraq.

Kennedy's review is broader and will look beyond the Sept. 16 incident to assess what general changes need to be made to the State Department's security program, including the rules of engagement that govern private contractors.

[Associated Press; by Matthew Lee]

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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