Audiolibro: Report of the Inquiry into the Role and Oversight of Private Security Contractors in Afghanistan
Report of the Inquiry into the Role and Oversight of Private Security Contractors in Afghanistan
1 - 01 - Executive Summary
- Download 01 - Executive Summary audio
- Download 02 - Conclusions audio
- Download 03 - Introduction audio
- Download 04 - Background, 8/21/08, Contractor Personnel audio
- Download 05 - ArmorGroup Hires, Ambush on Mr White, IED Kills Local Guard audio
- Download 06 - Pink Murders, Killing Has Impact, Fallout audio
- Download 07 - ArmorGroup meets, Feud Continues, Pink is Now audio
- Download 08 - ArmorGroup Mine Action, AGMA Identifies audio
- Download 09 - Weapons Confiscated, Lead Up, The Azizabad Raid audio
- Download 10 - Reaction, Reports Claim, AGMA Finds audio
- Download 11 - White III's Men Observed, Improvised Explosive Devices, ArmorGroup and ArmorGroup Mine Action Wind Down audio
- Download 12 - EODT Relies on Local Strongmen to Staff U.S. Contract audio
- Download 13 - Wahab, Haji Dawoud audio
- Download 14 - Commander Blue, US Military Oversight audio
- Download 15 - The Need For Government Oversight, Government Oversight audio
- Download 16 - Rules Governing Armed Private Security Contractors audio
- Download 17 - Arming Authority audio
- Download 18 - Training audio
- Download 19 - Performance audio
- Download 20 - Private Security Personnel and Military Functions, Accuracy, Reliability, and Completeness, DOD Database audio
- Download 21 - Private Security Contracting and Long-Term Stability audio
- Download 22 - Task Force Established, Committee Action, Additional Views audio
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Descripción
The Inquiry into the Role and Oversight of Private Security Contractors in Afghanistan, which reported in September 2010, was precipitated by events in August 2008, when US forces bombed the Afghan village of Azizabad. This gave rise to a public dispute between the US Government and the United Nations about the level of fatalities caused by the attack and about whether those killed had been civilians or Taliban-linked insurgents. Allegations soon emerged that the attack had been based on false information deliberately fed to the US military by Afghan employees of ArmorGroup, a private security contractor, and that these employees were engaged in murder and anti-coalition activities. A key local contact of ArmorGroup, who they dubbed "Mr Pink", was subsequently convicted of espionage and sentenced to death, but was later freed.
According to the committee's chair, Carl Levin, the investigation "uncovered a significant amount of evidence that a number of security contractors working under Department of Defense contracts and subcontracts funneled US taxpayer dollars to Afghan warlords and strongmen linked to murder, kidnapping and bribery, as well as to Taliban and anti-coalition activities".
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