We’ve helped train some of the forces involved. But in August, Erinys Iraq took over the security for the pipelines.
Here’s occupation watch’s comments on Erinys: occupationwatch.org
Erinys is founded, financed and run by the friends and family of the INC.
Here’s an excerpt from the Dope:
Where do the INC’s prodigal Iraqis “normally reside”?
Erinys is a non-Iraqi PMC in Iraq reportedly based in London and Johannesburg. It’s a prime contractor to the Gulf Regional Division of the United States Army Corp of Engineers supplying security details, is contracted to the Iraqi Ministry of Oil for security for Iraq’s oil infrastructure, and is subcontracted to protect Kellogg, Brown and Root.
Erinys Iraq was financed by Abul Huda Farouki’s Nour USA. Nour is a joint venture partner with Erinys on the “oil police” contract. Jordanian court records from Ahmed Chalabi’s Petra Bank embezzlement trial show bankrupt Farouki companies owed Petra more than $12 million.
The relationship between Farouki and Chalabi highlights conflict of interest and bid fixing concerns regarding the $327 million contract, (temporarily), awarded Nour to outfit the new Iraqi army. Industry experts contend the equipment alone costs more than $500 million. Nour USA lacks experience with similar contracts as required by bid guidelines.
Faisal Daghistani, founder and director of Erinys Iraq, is the son of INC official Tamara Daghistani, a long-time friend of Ahmed Chalabi key in the creation of the INC, and alleged getaway driver when Chalabi fled prosecution for embezzling. Mr. Daghistani said US-trained Iraqi Free Forces who entered Iraq with Chalabi are now Erinys recruits. Vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Gen. Peter Pace, said Iraqi Free Forces would “become basically the core of the new Iraqi army once Iraq is free.”
Erinys’s counsel in Baghdad Ahmed Chalabi’s nephew Salem Chalabi.
An Iraqi Governing Council member accuses the Iraqi National Congress of undermining central authority by using a private military company to secure the oil sector. There’re concerns that Erinys is Chalabi’s private militia.
that may’ve been bandied about a bit on talk radio, but it was never a realistic option. Iraq’s debt is massive. Even without it though, most all of Iraq’s income woud still go to merely running the country for years to come.
Bean Counting in Baghdad: Debt, Reparations, Reconstruction, and Resources
Strategic Insights published by the Center for Contemporary Conflict (CCC), research arm of the National Security Affairs Department at the Naval Postgraduate School
What I find interesting are the cities that we and our coalition patrners lost cotrol of.