In all matters of opinion, our adversaries are insane.
Oscar Wilde

Is Blackwater A Viabl Solution To Aid Darfur?

By: Pam On: Jul/29/08 - 1 Comment

This sure beats what the world is doing now!

Enter Erik Prince, the chairman and CEO of Blackwater Worldwide. Yes, that Blackwater. Most of the attention the company has attracted has been for its security work in protecting U.S. diplomats in Iraq. But much more of their work is training: from border and narcotics police in Afghanistan to police and maritime forces in countries ranging from the United States and Japan, to nations in Africa and South America.

Mr. Prince says that the 9,000 or so African Union soldiers in Darfur, as part of the United Nations peacekeeping force, are a good start. But he says that to be effective they need better training, communications and equipment. That is more or less the same message from a report released yesterday by the Darfur Consortium, a coalition of 50 African-based and Africa-focused NGOs. “One year ago the U.N. Security Council stood unanimous and promised Darfurians the strongest and largest protection force ever,” says a coalition spokesman. “Today that force is just over a third deployed, lacks even the most basic equipment and is unable to protect itself let alone civilians.”

Mr. Prince has a remedy. He believes that with 250 or so professionals, Blackwater can transform about a thousand of the African Union soldiers into an elite and highly mobile force. This force would also be equipped with helicopters and the kind of small planes that missionaries use in this part of the world. It would be cheaper than the hundreds of millions we are spending to set up a larger AU/U.N. force. And he says he’d do it at cost.

Blackwater would not do the fighting. Its people would serve as advisers, mechanics and pilots. Aid workers and villagers would be equipped with satellite telephones that include Global Positioning Systems. When they call in, the troops would respond.

“I’m so sick of hearing that nothing can be done,” he says. “The Janjaweed is a truly unfettered bully. No one has stood up to them. If they were met by a mobile quick reaction force of African Union soldiers, the Janjaweed would quickly learn their habits were not sustainable.” And to ensure accountability, he says, the U.S. could send 25 military officers to observe how Blackwater is doing and serve as liaisons.

At this moment, the U.N. is again debating a resolution on Darfur. Others are still hoping for a boycott of next month’s Summer Olympics, hoping to pressure Beijing to pressure Mr. Bashir, who supplies the Chinese with a healthy percentage of their oil. Still others are working to tighten sanctions.

But nothing appears to have had much of an effect on Mr. Bashir’s behavior. And if we are honest with ourselves, nobody really expects any of this activity ever will.

Then again, that’s the point: Strongly worded resolutions, sanctions and boycotts are generally what you do in place of decisive action. I understand that the whole idea of Blackwater helicopters flying over Darfur probably horrifies many of the same people frustrated by Mr. Bashir’s ability to game the system. But it’s at least worth wondering what that same Blackwater helo might look like to a defenseless Darfur mother and her daughters lying in fear of a Janjaweed attack.

Posted on: July 29, 2008 |

Posted in: National News

One Response to “Is Blackwater A Viabl Solution To Aid Darfur?”

  1. FrmrArtyOffcr
    August 2, 2008 - 05:28 PM on August 2nd, 2008

    There are a few things that really need to be put out about Blackwater.

    First. Erik Prince was a Navy Seal while on active duty. If he gives you an assessment of a tactical situation, you might just want to listen to it.

    Second. Blackwater did not initially go into the security contractor business. It was initially and still remains a tactical training facility, now with multiple locations. The entire concept for Blackwater came about because Prince was tired of training in lousy facilities. He decided when he got out, he would take his inheritance and build a better tactical school. His level of success indicates he has done so.

    Third. Blackwater went into the security business after being asked to do so by the government. They have also NEVER lost a protectee. They only hire experienced professionals who can pass a background check. When they advertise for pilots, they want people who have flown for Special operations units.

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