Erik Prince Proposes Blackwater Become Big Oil’s Enforcer

Jeremy Scahill reports on a recording that was liberated from a recent Erik Prince talk in which Prince talks about all the great roles he thinks Blackwater should play in protecting Big Oil. Mind you, he didn’t call it Big Oil. But he proposed sending Blackwater to a number of countries to (seemingly) counteract Iran’s challenge of Saudi hegemony in the Middle East.

Prince painted a global picture in which Iran is “at the absolute dead center… of badness.” The Iranians, he said, “want that nuke so that it is again a Persian Gulf and they very much have an attitude of when Darius ran most of the Middle East back in 1000 BC. That’s very much what the Iranians are after.” [NOTE: Darius of Persia actually ruled from 522 BC–486 BC]. Iran, Prince charged, has a “master plan to stir up and organize a Shia revolt through the whole region.” Prince proposed that armed private soldiers from companies like Blackwater be deployed in countries throughout the region to target Iranian influence, specifically in Yemen, Somalia and Saudi Arabia. “The Iranians have a very sinister hand in these places,” Prince said. “You’re not going to solve it by putting a lot of uniformed soldiers in all these countries. It’s way too politically sensitive. The private sector can operate there with a very, very small, very light footprint.” In addition to concerns of political expediency, Prince suggested that using private contractors to conduct such operations would be cost-effective. “The overall defense budget is going to have to be cut and they’re going to look for ways, they’re going to have to have ways to become more efficient,” he said. “And there’s a lot of ways that the private sector can operate with a much smaller, much lighter footprint.”

In addition to his plot to use Blackwater to counter Iranian power, Prince also called to send Blackwater to Nigeria, in what would amount to propping up a corrupt (but US-friendly) government to beat back the indigenous opposition to the abuse, environmental degradation, and corruption related with the oil industry in that country.

Prince also proposed using private armed contractors in the oil-rich African nation of Nigeria. Prince said that guerilla groups in the country are dramatically slowing oil production and extraction and stealing oil. “There’s more than a half million barrels a day stolen there, which is stolen and organized by very large criminal syndicates. There’s even some evidence it’s going to fund terrorist organizations,” Prince alleged. “These guerilla groups attack the pipeline, attack the pump house to knock it offline, which makes the pressure of the pipeline go soft. they cut that pipeline and they weld in their own patch with their own valves and they back a barge up into it. Ten thousand barrels at a time, take that oil, drive that 10,000 barrels out to sea and at $80 a barrel, that’s $800,000. That’s not a bad take for organized crime.” Prince made no mention of the nonviolent indigenous opposition to oil extraction and pollution, nor did he mention the notorious human rights abuses connected to multinational oil corporations in Nigeria that have sparked much of the resistance.

Scahill doesn’t say it explicitly (nor did Prince), but this amounts to a plan to use mercenaries to shore up the hegemonic system the US build on big oil.

Scahill describes a lot more of Prince’s braggadocio in his post. But I, for one, am particularly intrigued by Prince’s naked aspirations to become Big Oil’s privatized enforcer.

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30 replies
    • BoxTurtle says:

      If blackwater were a legit company and the oil companies weren’t hand-in-hand with some of the worlds worst governments, this would be a logical business move. You’re a security company, go where the security need is.

      I’m sure the governments and Oil Companies have looked carefully at Blackwaters record and decided that Blackwater is simply zealous in protecting their clients interests.

      Boxturtle (They’d be more use to BigOil if they had a few dozen skimmers)

  1. JThomason says:

    Is it just me or is there a subtext of assassination in this talk of “lighter foot prints” and “efficiency.”

    • skdadl says:

      That’s pretty much how I read it too, JT. It actually loomed at me.

      It’s bad enough that they’re anywhere, but my heart aches especially for Somalia. They had a chance, and not so long ago.

      • fatster says:

        Ackerman (Attackerman) has an update on Khadr trial. Delay of about a month. If you haven’t, do go read it.

        • skdadl says:

          Thanks, dear fatster. I clicked through to Spencer’s piece at the Independent, very informative, and I’ll say something about Parrish (and the charming prosecutor) tomorrow, but I shouldn’t cut loose this late at night.

          Jeff? You see that? Battling psychologists? A prosecutor who uses those kinds of metaphors wants Khadr subjected to another (unnecessary) interrogation? Gah.

          See? I told you I shouldn’t get started. Email still semi-broken; I receive, but I can only send from a secret hidey-hole. Woe is me, or as they said in the C14, wysty is here. (That’s ME for “It is desolate here.”)

  2. Jim White says:

    Prince is hedging his bets. The US gummint is low on money these days and big oil (except BP, possibly) seems to be printing money.

  3. Jkat says:

    yeah .. you go erik .. let’s empower [even more] the damn [spit!] wahabbi’s … yeee-haww … lock-n-load ..

  4. jdmckay0 says:

    The Lord does work in mysterious ways.

    Does kind’a makes me wonder about efficacy of a “security” company that can’t keep a recorder out of the room.

  5. harpie says:

    Governments [including US] acknowledge duty to control private military and security companies; 9/19/08
    http://www.icrc.org/web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/htmlall/montreux-document-feature-170908?opendocument
    [includes link to document]

    A meeting in the Swiss town of Montreux has reaffirmed States’ obligations regarding private military and security companies in war zones. Two key points of a document agreed by 17 nations are that delegating tasks to a contractor does not relieve a State of its responsibilities, and that governments should not let contractors take part in combat operations.

    FAQ: International humanitarian law and private military/security companies; 9/15/08
    http://www.icrc.org/web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/html/pmsc-faq-150908

    More info:
    http://www.eda.admin.ch/psc

    • fatster says:

      “delegating tasks to a contractor does not relieve a State of its responsibilities, and that governments should not let contractors take part in combat operations.”

      Good. Now if only the agreement holds and the states abide by it . . .

      • harpie says:

        Yes, but it’s difficult to have much hope…though I do try not to be cynical…it just doesn’t always work.

  6. Hmmm says:

    Is there perhaps some little teensy nugget of buried good news there, in that Erik The Insider evidently thinks the US is going to have a significantly reduced defense budget in the near-term-ish future?

      • Hmmm says:

        True, though not if (1) this story getting out manages to kill that deal-in-the-offing, or (2) the Arab nations pay for it themselves.

  7. bobschacht says:

    “And there’s a lot of ways that the private sector can operate with a much smaller, much lighter footprint.”

    Yeah, right. I remember how well that worked out in Iraq. All the Iraqis loved them, didn’t they? They showed such restraint, and all. /S

    Bob in AZ

  8. fatster says:

    Medic at Guantanamo hearing says Khadr chained to door

    “A former U.S. Army combat medic testified Monday that he once found Canadian teen captive Omar Khadr chained by the arms to the door of a five-foot-square cage at a U.S. lock-up in Afghanistan, hooded and weeping.”

    LINK.

  9. fatster says:

    [UK] Judges ban secret evidence in Guantánamo compensation case

    “Ministers and the security services were blocked today from using secret information to defend a damages claim by six former Guantánamo Bay detainees.”

    LINK.

  10. AZ Matt says:

    They will kill alot of people, many innocent, and then they will be killed. And Prince make big $’s.

  11. strangelyenough says:

    Why limit it to just Big Oil? Insurance and PhRMA have huge profits to protect. Wall Street, too. And they’re just as corrupt and hated. Prince needs to think bigger. America is a soft target-rich theater…

    • JamesJoyce says:

      The individual health insurance mandate under fear of tax penalty imposed by IRS to coerce compliance, comes to mind. Leverage economic servitude to corporate slime is not liberty or freedom! Fuck Prince and his slime balls…….

  12. Jeff Kaye says:

    Oh, I would say Prince is quite specific about “a plan to use mercenaries to shore up the hegemonic system the US build on big oil.”

    Prince proposed that armed private soldiers from companies like Blackwater be deployed in countries throughout the region to target Iranian influence, specifically in Yemen, Somalia and Saudi Arabia…. In addition to concerns of political expediency, Prince suggested that using private contractors to conduct such operations would be cost-effective. “The overall defense budget is going to have to be cut and they’re going to look for ways, they’re going to have to have ways to become more efficient,” he said. “And there’s a lot of ways that the private sector can operate with a much smaller, much lighter footprint.”

    So, we know where Jack Bauer goes when the 24 series run ends this month ;-)

    This just breaking, Erik Prince has new intel he gained by peering over the Iranian border with special, new high-tech field glasses. Below is a picture snapped from the new-fangled device. It’s classified, but I’m releasing the bifocal image here:

    $$$$        $$$$

  13. onitgoes says:

    Unsurprising and probably already has come to pass. Prince is just floating out there what the corporations intentions are. We, the voters, really have no say anymore, so I guess, like the serfs that we are, we should be ever so grateful that Prince actually deigned to inform the hoipolloi of what they’re actually doing… as in: now, today and even yesterday and last year.

    Blackwater thugs roam the globe raping and pillaging where they want. It’s like Ghengis Kahn on steroids.

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