About UPI  |  My Account  |  UPI en Español
Free News Update:
Sign up
United Press International - News. Analysis. Insight.™ - 100 Years of Journalistic Excellence
  • Home
  • Top News
  • Entertainment
  • Odd News
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Science
  • Health
  • Analysis
    • Energy Resources
    • Security Industry
    • Emerging Threats
  • Video
  • News Photos
Search:
Go
Bookmark this Page
You are here:  Home / Top News / Blackwater Baghdad gassing a 'mistake'

Top News

View archive | RSS Feed

Blackwater Baghdad gassing a 'mistake'

Published: Jan. 10, 2008 at 11:06 AM
Order reprints  |  Print Story  |  Email to a Friend  |  Post a Comment
Related Stories
  • Analysis: U.S. lost Fallujah's info war
  • Iraq security firm warnings unheeded
  • State Dept. inspector general resigns
  • State, Defense OK contractor memorandum
  • Blackwater denies its guards use steroids
  • Possible interest conflict at Blackwater
  • Fear drove Blackwater gunner to shoot
  • FBI: Blackwater shootings 'unwarranted'
WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 (UPI) -- The release of riot-control gas in 2005 from a helicopter and vehicle in Baghdad by the private U.S. security firm Blackwater was a mistake, the company said.

The May 2005 incident came to light recently detailing how at least 10 U.S. soldiers at a checkpoint and an unknown number of civilians were gassed by a Blackwater helicopter and a second time from a Blackwater armored vehicle, The New York Times (NYSE:NYT) reported.

None of the soldiers required medical treatment for exposure to CS gas, which temporarily blinds people, causes skin irritation, coughing and choking, the report said.

Anne Tyrrell, a spokeswoman for Blackwater, told The Times in an e-mail message the attacks were human error by staff.

"Blackwater teams in the air and on the ground were preparing a secure route near a checkpoint to provide passage for a motorcade," Tyrrell wrote. "It seems a CS gas canister was mistaken for a smoke canister and released near an intersection and checkpoint."

The U.S. military can use riot-control gas in a war zone only under the strictest circumstances, which various soldiers said didn't exist that day, the Times said.


News Photos Slideshows
Photos of the Day
Week in Photos
News
Entertainment
Sports
Features
Most Popular
Stories
Photos
Videos
1.
Video games help sex predators meet kids
2.
Study: Gentrification benefits many blacks
3.
Hospital worker admits oral sex on patient
4.
Report: Mugabe plans more violence
5.
Researchers find Washington's boyhood home
Advertise on UPI.com
Videos
Enlarge Video
Get the Flash Player to see this player.
Bush signs war spending bill
Friday, July 4
Young Americans speak out about D.C. voting rights
Young Americans speak out about D.C. voting rights
Thursday, July 3
Home funerals: Tending to their own
Home funerals: Tending to their own
Thursday, July 3
Students say 'I do' to wedding class
Students say 'I do' to wedding class
Tuesday, June 10
© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
United Press International, UPI, the UPI logo, and other trademarks and service marks, are registered or unregistered trademarks of United Press International, Inc. in the United States and in other countries.
Search: Go
Official_Government_Wires  |   About UPI  |   Site Map  |   Terms of Use  |   Privacy Policy  |   Advertise Online  |   Contact Us
Sponsored Links: Auto Dealers - College Football Tickets - prom dresses - Prom dresses and gowns - tattoos - Wedding and Honeymoon Experts - Conventions - Trade Shows - Conferences - Motivational Sports Speakers Bureau - Press Release Services - Real Estate Properties in the world