If you’re as obsessed with foreign affairs, the continuing
wars in the Middle East, Afghanistan, and the “war on terror” more generally as I am,
then you might just remember the name Raymond Davis. In January 2011, he was
involved in a shootout on the streets of Lahore which left two Pakistani men
dead in the road. A contractor with the US embassy, his car was soon surrounded
by a mob and he summoned help. A 4x4 driven by two other contractors on the way
to rescue him collided with a motorcyclist, leaving another Pakistani dead. The
4x4 withdrew and Davis was arrested. The result? A diplomatic crisis with Davis
held in a Pakistani prison for almost three months.
There has been a lot written about Raymond Davis in the
years since. As well as various newspaper articles, he features in two well-received
books written by highly respected journalists: The Way of the Knife, by Mark
Mazetti, and Dirty Wars, by Jeremy Scahill. Both these titles examine the CIA
and Pentagon’s involvement in paramilitary action post 9-11. The consensus in all
this work – the articles, the books - is that Davis was a CIA paramilitary
officer, either directly employed by the CIA, or via a Private Military
Corporation, and that his role was either intelligence gathering, or perhaps, the
targeting of militants for assassination.
Davis rejects those assertions in The Contractor, claiming
that he was employed simply as a bodyguard, a personal protection officer for
diplomats and US State Department officials. In fact, he expresses great anger
at the allegations made in the US press, saying that while he can understand
the Pakistani media repeating such fabrications, the US media’s willingness to
repeat them without any evidence while he was still in detention endangered his
life.
Unfortunately, Davis does little to rebut the picture painted
of him so far, as The Contractor focuses almost entirely on his time in
detention. With a sub-heading that reads: “How I landed in a Pakistani prison
and ignited a diplomatic crisis”, this perhaps should not have come as a
surprise. But, I thought and hoped that there might be some context. Don’t get
me wrong, The Contractor is a good book; it’s well written and gives a good
insight into both the conditions he was held in and what it’s like to find
oneself suddenly helpless, at the mercy of a foreign judicial system, at the
centre of diplomatic and media storms.
But I couldn’t help but find myself intrigued by the few
hints he did give as to his life before. For example, he tells the story of how
he was on Hamid Karzai’s protection detail when they rolled into the compound
of an Afghan warlord only to find themselves in a Mexican standoff with the
Warlord’s men. It’s a great anecdote and made me wonder what other tales he has
to tell. Perhaps Davis is holding them back for another book? If so, great, I
will read that also. The problem is that until that is published, there is so
little in The Contractor about what he was doing in Pakistan on the fateful day
of the shootout that led to his gaoling, that it is inevitable the vacuum will
be filled with speculation. Perhaps baseless speculation, but speculation
nonetheless.
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