The Nation
December 24, 2007 issue
Rather than hiding out and hoping for the scandals to fade, the
Bush Administration's preferred mercenary company has launched a major
rebranding campaign, changing its name to Blackwater Worldwide and
softening its logo: once a bear paw in the site of a sniper scope, it's
now a bear claw wrapped in two half ovals--sort of like the outline of
a globe with a United Nations feel. Its website boasts of a corporate
vision "guided by integrity, innovation, and a desire for a safer
world."
Blackwater mercenaries are now referred to as "global
stabilization professionals." Blackwater's 38-year-old owner, Erik
Prince, was No. 11 in Details magazine's "Power 50," the men "who
control your viewing patterns, your buying habits, your anxieties, your
lust.... the people who have taken over the space in your head."
In
one of the company's most bizarre recent actions, on December 1
Blackwater paratroopers staged a dramatic aerial landing, complete with
Blackwater flags and parachutes--not in Baghdad or Kabul but in San
Diego at Qualcomm Stadium during the halftime show at the San Diego
State/BYU football game.
The location was interesting, given that
Blackwater is fighting fierce local opposition to its attempt to open a
new camp--Blackwater West--on 824 acres in the small rural community of
Potrero, just outside San Diego. Blackwater's parachute squad plans to
land at the Armed Forces Bowl in Texas this month and the Virginia Gold
Cup in May.
The company recently sponsored a NASCAR racer, and it has
teamed up with gun manufacturer Sig Sauer to create a Blackwater
Special Edition full-sized 9-millimeter pistol with the company logo on
the grip. It comes with a Limited Lifetime Warranty. For $18, parents
can purchase infant onesies with the company logo.
In recent
weeks, Blackwater has indicated it might quit Iraq. "We see the
security market diminishing," Prince told the Wall Street Journal in
October. Yet on December 3 Blackwater posted job listings for "security
specialists" and snipers as a result of its State Department diplomatic
security "contract expansion."
While its name may be mud in the human
rights world, Blackwater has not only made big money in Iraq (about $1
billion in State Department contracts); it has secured a reputation as
a company that keeps US officials alive by any means necessary. The
dirty open secret in Washington is that Blackwater has done its job in
Iraq, even if it has done so by valuing the lives of Iraqis much lower
than those of US VIPs. That badass image will serve it well as it
expands globally.
Prince promises that Blackwater "is going to
be more of a full spectrum" operation. Amid the cornucopia of scandals,
Blackwater is bidding for a share of a five-year, $15 billion contract
with the Pentagon to "fight terrorists with drug-trade ties." Perhaps
the firm will join the mercenary giant DynCorp in Colombia or Bolivia
or be sent into Mexico on a "training" mission.
This "war on drugs"
contract would put Blackwater in the arena with the godfathers of the
war business, including Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and Raytheon.
In addition to its robust business in law enforcement, military
and homeland security training, Blackwater is branching out. Here are
some of its current projects and initiatives:
- Blackwater
affiliate Greystone Ltd., registered offshore in Barbados, is an
old-fashioned mercenary operation offering "personnel from the best
militaries throughout the world" for hire by governments and private
organizations. It also boasts of a "multi-national peacekeeping
program," with forces "specializing in crowd control and less than
lethal techniques and military personnel for the less stable areas of
operation."
- Prince's Total Intelligence Solutions, headed by
three CIA veterans (among them Blackwater's number two, Cofer Black),
puts CIA-type services on the open market for hire by corporations or
governments.
- Blackwater is launching an armored vehicle
called the Grizzly, which the company characterizes as the most
versatile in history. Blackwater intends to modify it to be legal for
use on US highways.
- Blackwater's aviation division has some
forty aircraft, including turboprop planes that can be used for
unorthodox landings. It has ordered a Super Tucano paramilitary plane
from Brazil, which can be used in counterinsurgency operations. In
August the aviation division won a $92 million contract with the
Pentagon to operate flights in Central Asia.
- It recently
flight-tested the unmanned Polar 400 airship, which may be marketed to
the Department of Homeland Security for use in monitoring the US-Mexico
border and to "military, law enforcement, and non-government
customers."
- A fast-growing maritime division has a new, 184-foot vessel that has been fitted for potential paramilitary use.

Meanwhile,
Blackwater is deep in the camp of GOP presidential candidate Mitt
Romney. Cofer Black is Romney's senior adviser on counterterrorism. At
the recent CNN/YouTube debate, when Romney refused to call
waterboarding torture, he said, "I'm not going to specify the specific
means of what is and what is not torture so that the people that we
capture will know what things we're able to do and what things we're
not able to do. And I get that advice from Cofer Black, who is a person
who was responsible for counterterrorism in the CIA for some
thirty-five years."
That was an exaggeration of Black's career at the
CIA (he was there twenty-eight years and head of counterterrorism for
only three), but a Romney presidency could make Blackwater's business
under Bush look like a church bake sale.
In short, Blackwater
is moving ahead at full steam. Individual scandals clearly aren't
enough to slow it down. The company's critics in the
Democratic-controlled Congress must confront the root of the problem:
the government is in the midst of its most radical privatization in
history, and companies like Blackwater are becoming ever more deeply
embedded in the war apparatus. Until this system is brought down, the
world's the limit for Blackwater Worldwide--and as its rebranding
campaign shows, Blackwater knows it.