Behind the Bastards - Part One: Erik Prince: The Rich Kid Who Bought An Army
Episode Date: September 25, 2018Have you ever heard of a guy named Erik Prince? In episode 23, Robert is joined by Miles Gray (The Daily Zeitgeist) and they discuss the life of Erik Prince the man who wants his own Air Force. Lea...rn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hello Internet and welcome back. I am Robert Evans and this is Behind the Bastards,
the show where we tell you everything you don't know about the worst people in history.
Today our subject is a little guy named Eric Prince.
Miles, what do you know about Eric Prince?
I know they started Blackwater.
I know he's the brother of Betsy DeVos.
And I just know about how generally Blackwater is evil and there's some fucking involved.
But aside from that, I just know Eric Prince equals Blackwater equals military contractors equals war crimes.
Okay, yeah, that's a good basic line.
Well, Eric was born on June 6th, 1969.
D-Day?
Yes, but 1969.
Yeah, which sounds pretty cool.
D-Day of the Summer of Love.
I don't know why I'm obsessed with D-Day.
It's a good day.
Yeah, it was. I think it's Private Ryan actually.
Yeah.
He was born in Holland, Michigan.
His father was Edgar Prince, an entrepreneur who built a billion-dollar company,
the Prince Machine Corporation from the ground up.
His company built a type of illuminated mirror that's common in cars today.
So his family got super rich.
Wait, what do you mean an illuminated, like a backlit mirror?
Yeah, exactly, so that you can see it in the mirror at night or whatever.
Oh, and they're living off that invention basically?
Well, that's how his family got rich.
Right, right, right.
His dad was like a legitimate, started making 40 cents an hour
and created a business, got super rich.
And then with his money decided he should do some good in the world.
But his version of good was founding the Family Research Council.
You know what the Family Research Council does?
I know they were spreading some kind of really bad misinformation back in the day.
Yeah, back in the now too.
Oh.
One of their staffers wrote in 1999 that gaining access to children
was a long-term goal of the homosexual movement.
So it's that kind of like anytime there's family.
You mean facts?
Yeah.
I really, I shout out to the Family Research Council for their,
wow, so that was his version that he wanted to spread.
That's what he wanted to do with his money.
Evil fucking conspiracy, okay.
Yeah, Eric's mother, Elsa, donated $75,000 to a campaign
to stop same-sex marriage in 2004.
Clearly worked.
Elsa and Edgar also formed the Prince Foundation so that they could
use their family's wealth to advance general right-wing causes
like abstinence-only education, state-sponsored prayer,
and the fight against abortion.
In order to get around restrictions on lobbying,
the princes reclassified their lobbying as prayer warrior networks.
So basically they said like, we're not lobbying politicians.
We're asking them to pray over certain issues.
So we're not saying vote against abortion.
We're saying pray against abortion.
And that's different so we can spend our money with less restrictions.
So they were registered as lobbyists before?
Yeah, and there's more restrictions on how lobbyists can spend your money.
So they were like, we're not lobbyists.
We're prayer warriors.
Oh, so they just kind of do that thing where a lot of people with dark
money groups just become 501c4s?
Yeah, it was something like that.
Yeah, like those non-profits that don't have to disclose any of their
origins of their money so they can do whatever?
Yeah, they found a shady way to make themselves less accountable
for millions or millions of dollars that they were spending on garbage.
You obviously heard that Eric's sister is Betsy DeVos.
It's probably won't surprise you to know that he grew up religious,
conservative, and rich.
No.
He donated $15,000 to the Republican Party when he was 19.
I'm sorry, $15,000 when he was 19?
So he's a normal guy.
Yeah, I know.
For a second, I forgot that you said he grew up rich and I was like,
what kind of job did he have in high school that he had that 120?
But you're rich.
Yeah, his job was being a rich kid.
Or his parents just used him to make as much of a max-out donation to the
party.
They love to do that.
Just like, get the kids to donate and we can give you a lot more money.
Right, donate a lot of money.
Suddenly a 19-year-old has $15,000.
Yeah, but he was a normal down-to-earth kid.
Like most people, he got his pilot's license before he got his driver's
license, that old canard.
He attended a Christian high school in Holland, but Holland, Michigan.
Not the cool Holland.
Not the Netherlands.
Yeah.
He went to the Naval Academy, but according to one of his professors,
he did not think it was conservative enough, so he left to attend Hillsdale
College.
That the military wasn't conservative enough?
The Naval Academy is a bastion of left-wing nutjobs.
Yeah, I know.
It's a bunch of cucks and hippies with long hair.
That almost seems like he's trying to impress someone by being like,
oh, the Navy wasn't conservative enough for me, so I had to leave.
Well, Eric denies that that's why he left the Navy.
One of his professors is the one saying he was pissed off because we,
the Navy professors, weren't conservative enough for him.
Oh, gotcha.
Yeah, right.
He didn't want people to expand his way of thinking.
Yeah, yeah.
That's what it seems like.
So do you know anything about Hillsdale College?
No, I don't know anything about Hillsdale College.
Hillsdale College is like one of the rightest-wing colleges in the country.
They basically worship the economic theories of Ein Rand for some sort of color
on what the schools like in 2015, their school chaplain sent this email
out to students and faculty, hey friends, exclamation point.
Just to give you a heads up, ugly things are happening in the Supreme Court right now.
Justice Anthony Kennedy is seen as the quote, swing vote,
and if that is the case, he will have the power to legalize same-sex marriage
all caps nationwide.
Yeah, I do not even think we can imagine the effects this would have on our nation,
the church, and families.
So we are praying for God to give the justices and the courts wisdom,
courage, and discernment for evil to be revealed and destroyed,
and for a heart of love and sound mind.
So we want to destroy the gays with a heartful of love.
I love when conservatives sort of sound the war drums of like,
the gays might be able to have rights,
and I'm always curious how they play that out in their head.
That leads to exactly what, I really want to know if they have a very clear vision
of what that looks like when the LGBTQ community has like,
un-disturbed rights, like do they think, I don't know.
I mean, it always seems like very aggressive what they think will happen.
Well, if we let gays marry, then we could wind up with a country where like,
the president sleeps with porn stars and pays them $130,000 to be quiet.
Right.
And that would be just...
It would be a post-morality America.
Yeah, exactly.
Where is Hillsdale College?
It's in Michigan.
Oh, so he's not leaving home.
He's a Michigan boy.
Well, at least he was a Michigan boy.
Right.
So he's all about his comfort zone.
Yeah, at this point in his life, that's kind of where Eric is.
And yeah, so in 1990, he gets a sweet job becoming an intern
in George H.W. Bush's White House,
which you'd think would be like this kid's dream job.
Yeah.
Super conservative president.
Not conservative.
Not conservative work for him.
Yeah, exactly.
Oh, really?
Eric gets pissed off that George H.W. Bush's administration is not conservative enough.
Quote, I saw a lot of things I didn't agree with.
Homosexual groups being invited in.
The budget agreement.
The Clean Air Act.
I mean, that's...
What the fuck?
I don't understand what that means.
Is that like his sort of like, you know, big government philosophy?
Is that what he sort of...
Yeah.
You know, the Clean Air Act is anti-business because it wants people to be able to breathe
and like...
Right.
It's better for business if people can't breathe.
I mean, that's basic capitalism.
Because yeah, Christ professed his love for capitalism.
Hated air.
Yeah.
Hated air because he didn't need it because he's Christ.
Yeah, exactly.
So why should anyone else?
Like that's...
I'm trying to be more like Christ and not breathe air.
Mm-hmm.
Tuffing your lungs up.
Right.
Walk on some water.
After his time as an intern, Eric got a gig as a volunteer firefighter.
So that's nice.
Until in 1992, he joined the Navy Seals.
He was apparently good at his job.
He was deployed to Bosnia, Haiti in the Middle East.
But tragically for Eric, his service came during a time of unprecedented peace and prosperity,
and he never saw combat.
Oh, he didn't?
No.
That's a shame.
Oh, that's the shittiest kind of Navy SEAL too.
Yeah, that's the garbage Navy SEAL.
Yeah, like you don't even have a fucking good story at a bar when someone's like,
Yeah, man, what'd you see?
Have you seen G.I. Jain?
I went to Haiti.
You did some fucked up shit in Haiti.
No, we kind of did a lot of push-ups.
Yeah.
We kind of just moving potable water around.
But yeah, wow, that must have been heartbreaking for him because he seems like somebody who
would have gotten like a war boner.
No, but he's just, I mean, basically, if you're a Navy SEAL and you don't fight,
you're just a really good swimmer.
Right.
Yeah.
And like future fitness instructor.
Yeah.
And I'm sure in fairness to Eric, I'm sure he's a great swimmer.
Oh, yeah.
This dude can tear up an electric pool.
No matter what your politics are, your body and your physical fitness is at another level
as a Navy SEAL.
Yeah.
And yeah.
I have the body of just a Harbor SEAL.
So Eric leaves the Navy SEALs early in 1995 because his dad dies of a heart attack and
he's got to deal with that, deal with the family money.
They sell the company and they make like 1.3 billion.
It gets split up between him and the rest of his family members.
He gets it with a second tragedy when his wife gets breast cancer.
She was able to have two kids, but she died not that long after.
But Eric, you know, settled down to a quiet life of being incredibly wealthy and he started
a 6,000 acre training facility for security operators.
He named this base Blackwater.
It was a place where, you know, you could go if you were a military unit or a police
unit, a SWAT team would do training.
They had like a fake high school there so that you could practice like dealing with a
Columbine situation where they had like recorded screens.
Or perpetrating one.
Or perpetrating one.
Right.
This is a crisis actor conspiracy theory thing.
Like Robert, when you're on my podcast, we'll talk about crisis acting.
It's called Inside the Crisis Actors Studio.
And we just talk about the craziest conspiracy in everyone's a crisis actor.
No, I'm not.
No, I don't mean to cast as persons on that person.
But yeah.
Wait, so Black.
Oh, so in a way, he was just kind of like, I want to create like the gym for cops and
military people to beef up there.
It's not an unreasonable thing to do.
Right.
Like people who are in SWAT teams and whatever need like fake schools to practice.
And that's the thing they might have to do.
So he's providing that so far, relatively reasonable.
Right.
But over the next couple of years, Prince shifted Blackwater from a training facility
to a company that also provided security personnel for the US government.
One of Blackwater's first contracts was actually in China guarding North Korean defectors that
the government was afraid the Chinese would abduct to send back to North Korea.
So they didn't want to put US soldiers or CIA guys on these guys because that could be
a diplomatic incident.
So they have private security to get them out of the country and stuff.
That they were extracting them from China?
Yeah.
That's what I understand was sort of the situation at that point.
So again, not an unreasonable thing.
The government always needs a couple of kind of deniable assets.
Of course.
You can do that stuff with.
So pretty low level, low key.
That's kind of what he's moving into.
But it's not total darkness yet, but I'm starting to see the sun start to go down.
Yeah.
Sun's definitely setting.
Right, right.
We're past 4 p.m. here.
So, you know, 9-Eleven happens after that.
I'm sorry.
What was 9-Eleven?
Oh, I feel like we should stop and pull a Wikipedia page over you.
Yeah.
Can we pull something up?
Oh, that.
Yes.
Okay.
I'm on board.
Also, jet fuel can't melt steel beams.
Yeah.
You say that a lot.
Hey, look, what happened to Building 7?
That's my question.
Anyway.
So 9-Eleven goes great for Eric Prince.
He's on The Bill O'Reilly Show not that long after, and he notes that his phone is ringing
off the hook.
He attempts to join the CIA, but he fails to pass their polygraph test.
Whoa.
Yeah.
Do you know what kind of stuff they ask you in a polygraph?
No.
I mean, I know in general polygraph tests, but I don't know what the CIA was asking him.
Well, clearly, it must not be good to be hooked up to a truth machine and tell lies to the
CIA.
Although, polygraph tests have been kind of, people say they're dubious a little bit, right?
They're supposed to be pretty sketchy.
I don't know what's going on there.
I'm not here to defend Eric Prince, but yes.
Right.
Yes.
He tries to get into the CIA, and the CIA is like, you're a little too shady for us.
We're going to go continue to smuggle crack into the inner cities.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So Eric isn't going to let the little thing like the CIA stop him from living out his dream
of walking around with guns in foreign countries.
He forms Blackwater Security Consulting, and he moves his company into the business of selling
mercenaries to the government.
His hope was that Blackwater would, quote, do for national security apparatus what FedEx
did for the Postal Service.
Hold on.
Let me process this.
Yeah.
That what?
That he wants to do for the national security apparatus what FedEx did for the Postal Service.
Wow.
Like, let me take a little burden off you and also do it in a crazy aggressive way.
I want to be the FedEx of shooting people.
Yeah, right?
Yeah.
Exactly.
Like, look, of course, the US didn't kill those people.
You know, just US contractors did.
Okay.
Yeah, so this is where we're going.
Yeah, he's a visionary.
He's a visionary.
Starting to see the vision.
So 2001, Blackwater has a total of about $730,000 in federal contracts, right?
So kind of small beans at this point.
In 2004, less than a year into the Iraq war, they had $48 million in contracts.
By 2007, they'd made more than a billion dollars in federal contracts.
By 2007?
Yeah.
Wait, when did it start again?
I'm sorry.
2001 is when he started doing the whole mercenary thing.
And then by 2007, he turned that into a billion dollars.
So, pretty good rate of return.
Yeah.
How do I invest in Blackwater?
You probably don't.
Am I getting into it?
You don't now.
Yeah.
2001 was the time.
Yeah.
No, 2000 was the time.
Yeah, that was the day.
August of 2001.
God.
September 10th was really the time you wanted to get money into mercenaries.
Yeah.
So, after the invasion of Iraq, Eric volunteers to provide the government with hundreds and
eventually thousands of contractors, his men carried guns and guarded high value government
officials and convoys.
Since they were private civilians who regularly got into gunfights and war zones for money,
some people call Blackwater's contractors mercenaries.
This makes Eric very angry.
Here's a quote from a Newsweek article titled, Profile, Blackwater's Eric Prince.
Quote, that's a slanderous term, an inflammatory word they used to malign us, says Prince.
Mercenaries, he says, are professional soldiers who work for a foreign government.
Blackwater's men are Americans working for the American government.
Okay, semantics, man.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
So, this is Eric's point of view on the mercenaries he's providing to the U.S. government.
Yeah.
They're not mercenaries because they're American and so is the government.
You're still a sell sword, though.
Yeah, you're still selling your ability to kill people for money.
Right.
Yeah.
In a way, it's shittier because you couldn't even make the real team.
It'd be like an actual military personnel.
It's like, I guess I'll do the mall cop version of being a cop, which is a Blackwater guy.
Yeah.
It's like one of the things that's respectable about the military is like, oh, you know,
you're not making that much money.
Right.
There's got to be some degree of like, something you want to do or like, there's some degree
of idealism as opposed to like, no, I'm making a quarter of a million bucks a year to go shoot people.
Yeah.
Because you can argue that someone in the military, like they're sort of North stars being patriotic
or being nationalistic or whatever.
Yeah.
Versus like, yeah, you're Blackwater.
I'm here for the check and I get to shoot people for a lot more money than I did when
it was not honorable.
I'm making eight times as much money to do the same job and I don't have to follow the
rules.
Because a lot of their guys are ex-military, right?
Yes.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
So a guy can't just be like, hey, I'm here for the Blackwater Trials.
We'll get to that a little bit.
Okay.
So in actuality, because he was just saying, you know, his men are Americans working for
the American government.
In actuality, many of Prince's employees in Iraq were from Pakistan, Yemen, and other
countries, collectively known as Not America.
A State Department investigation found that these, quote, third world nationals were often
forced to live in horrifying conditions, three people to a tiny room with no better air conditioning.
So this actually speaks to a big misconception.
When we think of Blackwater, we think of like big, burly mercenaries with beards and machine
guns.
Right.
They have those guys.
That's a big part of what they do.
But they also, and all of the contracting companies in Iraq and Afghanistan, most of the
people they provide are like poorly paid foreigners from Southeast Asia or the Middle
East to like run the kitchens and drive trucks and convoys to transport food and ammunition.
And so like those guys are doing horribly dangerous jobs and a lot of them die.
But if they die, the US government doesn't have to say anyone died.
So it's like, oh, six Bangladeshis died driving MREs to troops in this base.
Nobody needs to know.
Yeah.
No US soldiers died.
Yeah.
No Americans died.
So that's a lot of what Prince is doing.
So and even then, he's even hiring people in like not combat roles necessarily, but
just to do sort of other legwork.
Yeah.
But they're going to get shot and they're not in armored vehicles right there.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's really messed up.
So Blackwater's armed contractors who are the guys who made the company famous were
good at protecting their clients.
They never lost a client in Iraq, but they were bad at the winning hearts and minds thing.
So one of their favorite tactics was to drive on the opposite side of the road as fast as
they could and shoot above any vehicle that didn't drive away fast enough, which they
said protected their convoys and which Iraqis said was fucking terrifying.
Wait.
They drove in the opposite direction of traffic and shot above the cars that were coming towards
them?
Yeah.
If anyone got too close, they would shoot above them.
Just be like, get the fuck out of the way.
Yeah.
I know I'm driving on the wrong side of the road.
Yeah.
This is Blackwater.
Yeah.
Now, in a little bit of fairness to Blackwater, so like one of the traffic is really bad.
Well, it's not entirely unheard of in Iraq to direct traffic with guns.
When I was there last time, I kind of made friends with a guy, an Iraqi army guy who
was directing traffic at this checkpoint in Mosul and whenever he'd get to an argument
with somebody, he would shoot next to their head with his M16.
And I was like, what are you, that seems really messed up.
Really aggressive, yeah.
Well, yeah, but like I'm doing this 12 hours a day and if I yell at everybody, I'm not
going to have a voice and I got to be out here all the time.
So it's just easier to shoot next to them.
Wow.
Just fucking shots like that.
Yeah.
He said he'd spent about 180 rounds a day doing that, just like pop, pop.
Of rather than talking, I'll just squeeze off 180 shots.
Well, just one or two at a time, but a lot of people are coming.
But Blackwater, you know, it's the driving on the opposite side of the road thing.
That's the most controversial thing.
So here's what one Baghdad housewife told a French journalist about them.
They sail off the roads and drive on the wrong side.
They simply kill.
That Newsweek profile on Eric quoted an advisor for the coalition forces who had traveled
with both Blackwater guys as her guards and American soldiers as her guards.
And she said that Blackwater guys had explained their attitude towards the Iraqis as, our
mission is to protect the principle at all costs, if that means pissing off the Iraqis
too bad.
So, right.
In September of 2006, a Blackwater convoy driving down the wrong side of the road struck
an Iraqi car and sent it careening into a telephone pole.
The car caught fire, Blackwater drove without rendering aid, and the driver died.
It's not the only time that happened.
That's just a time that happened.
Yeah, right, right.
Because they're just always driving on the other side of the road, super fast shooting
at people.
Oh, right.
They're like, you don't even know what the right side of the road is.
We just know the Blackwater side.
Yeah.
Here's another quote from a Baghdad traffic cop.
They are impolite and do not respect people.
They bump other people's cars to frighten them and shout at anyone who approaches them.
Two weeks ago, guards of a convoy opened fire randomly and that led to the killing of two
policemen.
So yeah, another journalist who spent a lot of time with them, Robert Young Pelton, noted
that they use their machine guns like car horns.
So.
Wow.
Eric, you've got a great group of employees here.
It's funny because I only just know of isolated incidents here or there, or that I was familiar
with during the Iraq war about hearing about Blackwater and the kind of shit they did.
When you really start to, as you're revealing it to me now, realize they're like frat bros
in a war zone.
It's great that you bring up frat bros.
We've got a break for commercials, but once we come back, we're going to talk about Blackwater's
drunken shenanigans in Iraq, and then we're going to move on to Eric Prince's new job
in China.
So all that after some ads.
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He's a shark.
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The problem with forensic science in the criminal legal system today is that it's an awful
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And we're back and we're about to talk about the frat bro aspect of Blackwater's history.
I can feel it.
I can feel it.
I can feel it coming.
I do want to note I found a lot of these quotes in a really good Brookings Institute article
called The Dark Truth About Blackwater, so if you're looking for more info on these fucks,
that's a good source.
In 2004, Blackwater won an exciting new contract to help deliver kitchen equipment in Fallujah.
They were eager to impress the Emirati company that hired them and they rushed the delivery.
Now, I don't know if Prince was eager to impress this company, but he was the guy running the
whole company at this time.
So somebody from Blackwater Topside said, get this kitchen equipment to its source as
quick as possible, and the people whose job it is to determine how to do things were like,
okay, well, we need at least six armed men and they should all be in armored vehicles.
And whoever was in charge of the mission was like, no, we'll have four guys and we'll drive
normal cars.
There'll be four guys in a VW bus.
And they were supposed to let the U.S. Marines who were in charge of Fallujah at the time
know that they were going to be there in case they needed backup, it's a good thing to let
the Marines know.
Yeah, that someone might be operating that they need help.
They didn't.
So these four guys get ambushed and killed.
And a quote, enraged mob drags their burnt bodies through the streets and hangs their
corpses from a bridge.
Oh, I remember this.
Yeah, you do.
That whole incident sparked the battle of Fallujah, which is one of the bloodiest fights of the
entire Iraq war.
Around a thousand or so civilians died, it's hard to say, along with 95 U.S. soldiers.
Wow.
The kitchen equipment was never delivered.
Yeah.
Someone's got a nice kitchen, though.
Somebody's got a great kitchen or it all got burnt.
I don't think Blackwater impressed the company.
No, not at all.
I guess, and they really did try and do their FedEx thing also where they're like, yeah,
and we'll get it there in record time because they'll be so understaffed.
Well, you know, I've lost count of how many times I've ordered something through FedEx
and their employees been ambushed and hung from a bridge and sparked a brutal month-long
siege of the city.
Yeah.
That's why I don't order from Crate and Barrow anymore because they use FedEx.
Yeah.
It's just too many deaths.
It's messy.
It really is.
Yeah.
Tragic.
So, the high-profile murder of four employees did not exactly lower Blackwater's tempo
in regards to flipping out at any Iraqis who came near them.
In 2005, the Brigadier General, responsible for security in Baghdad, noted that in two
months, contractors were involved in 12 shootings that resulted in at least six civilian deaths.
On Christmas Eve, 2006, a Blackwater employee got shit-faced and started wandering around
the green zone.
He staggered up to the Iraqi vice president's house, got into an argument with his bodyguards,
and shot one of them to death.
What the fuck?
Next, this brave patriot ran back to a checkpoint guarded by another group of contractors and
told them he'd been in a firefight with Iraqis.
He was clearly drunk and waving a gun around.
They disarmed him and tried to question him, but he was just way too hammered to be questioned.
So Blackwater fired the man, flew him home, and paid $15,000 to the family of the dead
guard.
It was a tragic incident, but not, they assured, a sign that their employees were a bunch of
irresponsibly violent cowboys.
Holy shit, how is that not an indication that they're a bunch of irresponsible cowboys?
Hey, you know what?
The guy, he got fired.
And, you know, it took him- And $15,000 to that family?
I mean, I get it that in Iraq, that could be a lot of money, so that's like that, maybe
that's the going rate that Blackwater deems as like, you know, consolation pay, but-
Well, this gets into a really messed up area, but like the initial amount the U.S. government
suggested they give the family was $250,000, but then other people within the government,
so this isn't Blackwater, we're like, well, if we give that much money to the family of
the dead Iraqi- We're gonna be broke.
Well, no, people are going to get their relatives killed to get money from us.
That was their fear.
Oh.
Not that that ever happened, because I don't know that it did, but like, yeah.
But of course, it's like how all people think when you're talking about destitute communities,
like, well, they're gonna find a way to take advantage of this.
Yeah, but they learned how to, yeah, exactly.
And they'll self-murder and, you know, frame us and they're gonna-
Yeah, they're kids murdered for cash.
Right.
Holy shit.
And that was the government.
That's not on Blackwater.
Right, right.
Yeah.
The murders on Blackwater.
Well, absolutely.
Yeah.
But, you know, you'll be happy to know that the employee he was fired, he was sent back
to the U.S. and it took him two months to get another job at a private security firm
and wind up in Kuwait.
With a gun.
Jesus, right back.
Yeah.
You can only fail up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Or at least laterally.
Yeah.
And now I think he's Ryan Zinke, right?
The Interior Secretary.
Yeah.
In August of 2007, the State Department decided they should investigate Blackwater, because
of everything.
Yeah, naturally.
Right?
That I've said so far.
Yeah, they came up with a bunch of fun incidents once they started asking around.
One of the things they found is that several Blackwater employees had gotten hammered as
fuck and stolen $180,000 armored vehicle and driven it to a party where they accidentally
crashed it into a concrete wall.
Wow.
What the fuck?
It's so weird to like hear this, right?
Because like on one side, it's just like deeply troubling, evil, tragic shit that they do.
And the other side is not that it's funny, but it's so reckless that you can't believe
that, well, I guess you can, because I've never, you know, I feel like all the things
we hear about how the United States operates outside of this country is just in a very
sort of haphazard way or irresponsible way.
So yes.
Okay.
Go on.
Let this uncomfortable laughter continue.
So the investigation did find that Blackwater had been cutting corners.
They regularly reduced the number of their men guarding high-profile people without actually
charging for fewer guards.
Automatic weapons were found stored in private residences, which that's supposed to do.
Blackwater employees were found to drink heavily, party with prostitutes, and regularly failed
to qualify on their weapons.
They were also found to carry weapons like grenade launchers that they were not certified
to use.
What?
Wait.
So they're drunk as fuck.
And then they're like, yo, where did you get that M203 grenade launcher?
And they're like, hey, I just, I bought it on eBay to use it over here.
Oh man, you hope it's a M203.
I think we're talking about like the automatic grenade launchers that you mount on the top
of a vehicle.
Oh, right.
Like the big sort of murder cannons.
Yeah.
Okay.
I don't, I think that's called like an MK, I don't know, like someone on top of a vehicle.
No, I've seen them shoot a couple of times.
They're definitely fun looking, but you know, maybe qualify.
Wait.
So how are they getting it though?
Do you know, like, are they self supplying it?
And they're just simply like, you're actually not supposed to be using this.
And the Blackwater has, is able to, as one of these companies, they're able to buy that
sort of equipment to use in these war zones.
It's just that there are certain standards that like the military has for anyone who's
going to be using that shit in a war zone.
Like if you're carrying that weapon in your marine or whatnot, you've done certain things
right.
Clearly.
These guys are required to qualify on those weapons too, if they're going to carry them
in war zones and they're not.
Well, Blackwater is basically not holding its people to the same standard as the military.
Right.
And they're treating it like, yo, I just put rims on my dad's fucking navigator.
Let's take it out for a spin, except this time it's a, it's a rocket launcher and you're
in a war zone.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Um, so in response to this, uh, so the State Department, you know, does this investigation
and finds out Blackwater is fucking up all over the place.
So the State Department investigator, you know, sitting down and talking to the guy, Eric
Prince, appointed to run Blackwater's operations in Iraq, uh, and this conversation turns heated
and the Blackwater guy threatens to murder the State Department investigator and says,
quote, no one could or would do anything about it as we were in Iraq.
It's the State Department guy, we're calling the conversation.
It's basically like, I'm going to murder you if you don't stop investigating Blackwater
and we're in Iraq, so nobody's going to give a shit.
Right.
In space, no one can hear you scream in Iraq.
I can murder, you know, undisturbed and no one will do anything about it.
And you know I can because you just investigated all the times by companies murdered people
here.
Yeah.
Without any kind of repercussion.
Yeah.
Uh, you would expect all of this to have some consequences, um, but the US military, well,
government mainly was kind of an abind when it came to Blackwater and other contractors.
So in 2007, there were at least 160,000 contractors in Iraq.
This means they equalled and perhaps, since they weren't required to disclose their true
numbers, perhaps exceeded the numbers of the US military in the country.
Um, so, Eric Prince's pitch at the start of the whole fighting thing, which the Bush
administration had bought Hookline and Sinker, was that contractors would allow the government
to vastly increase their presence in the country without paying a political price for it.
So Bush can say, we only need 160,000 troops to keep Iraq safe.
But thanks to contractors, they've got 300,000 plus guys in the country.
Right.
Um, the government also loved contractors and needed them because their deaths were easy
to ignore.
By 2007, at least 1,000 contractors had been killed and 13,000 wounded.
Nine per day were dying at the height of the surge.
Many of those people were the third world nationals we talked about earlier.
Right.
Absolutely.
Because we don't actually know how many contractors died.
It could be even higher.
And we don't know where any of them came from because none of that is required to be reported
to anybody.
And none of those deaths go on the official tallies of US losses in the war on terror.
So the government knows Blackwater is fucking up and they're ruining the hearts and minds
thing, which is a critical part of beating an insurgency, but also they can't function
the way that they've come used to functioning in Iraq without these guys because they're
most of the effort now.
Right.
Yeah.
And so a lot of these people who you're saying who are like the third world nationals, are
they coming with any kind of military training?
Most of them aren't doing...
I mean, so most of...
Are those people getting killed in sort of non-combat roles?
Exactly.
Whenever you've got the military occupation, like when the US military is in Iraq, there's
160,000 service members in Iraq.
Most of them aren't kicking indoors and getting into gunfights.
Most of them are maintaining vehicles and doing, you know, putting up communications
equipment and all that stuff.
It's the same with the contractors.
Most of them are driving trucks or cooking for people or maintaining building spaces.
What do you think the...
How does that percentage you think, or what's the ratio to like...
I'm going to guess most of the people dying are driving trucks.
Wow.
Because there's constant streams of trucks all throughout the country.
And it's being ambushed, right?
And those guys...
Yeah, those trucks aren't armored.
Right.
Because fuck it.
We don't have to do anything because they're third world nationals who are just a digit
on a paper or a spreadsheet.
If they die, it doesn't hurt us politically.
Which isn't being asked to account for dead, you know, foreign national contractors.
How many Bangladeshis were killed?
Yeah, exactly.
I don't fucking know.
I fooled me once, man.
You're not going to fool me again.
Yeah.
So, despite the rough patches, the first four years of the Iraq war went pretty well for
Eric Prince.
It is possible that some of this went to his head.
In mid-2007, he gathered a bunch of contractors at Blackwater's headquarters in North Carolina
and, man, did they swear an oath of allegiance.
Okay.
I think the text of the oath said a lot about, you know, swearing to fight the war on terror
and, you know, loyalty to the principles of America and stuff.
But a former employee, an actual Blackwater armed contractor, told the New York Times,
it kind of felt like pledging allegiance to Eric.
That's how a lot of us interpreted it.
Wow.
Yeah.
He...
I mean, he has such a weird origin story, too.
Like, to now watch it starting off as a rich kid who, for whatever reason, was like...
I mean, I don't know, whatever reason, probably his upbringing was hyper-conservative and
now turned into, like, this sort of demigod...
Yeah.
Like, mini little dictator.
Yeah.
His own little fiefdom army thing.
Yeah.
So, a couple of weeks after he has them all pledged loyalty, disaster strikes when Blackwater
employees freak out and start firing machine guns and grenade launchers into a crowd at
Baghdad's Niswar Square.
They killed at least 17 people, wounded dozens more, and one of the people they killed was
a nine-year-old boy.
He was like burnt to the bodies of his parents in a car, it was horrible.
Blackwater's immediate response to the massacre was to take down their website and refuse
all interviews.
The company spokesperson sent out an email in English, only to Americans, that said,
the civilians reportedly fired upon by Blackwater professionals were, in fact, armed enemies.
This contrasts with the opinion of the U.S. military, who found no evidence of insurgent
activity in the square that day.
But, I mean, that's just the military.
Right, right.
Yeah, what do they know about insurgents?
Yeah.
Right.
Let the contractors do the real work.
That's insane.
And so their account to defend themselves for slaughtering a bunch of innocents was that...
Was there any in the reporting of it anything that someone could even perceive to be as
a threat, or do people just think they're so unprofessional that they got spooked and
just fired on a bunch of civilians?
So I can tell you that when you hang out in crowded Iraqi cities, especially when there's
a lot of unrest, you're going to hear gunfire regularly, my guess from what I've read is
that somewhere else in the city there was some shooting, or maybe even a fucking backfiring
car.
There might have been a bomb that went off somewhere else in the city, and these guys
got spooked.
Oh, right.
Maybe they saw a guy who looked shady, and they heard a sound that was shady, and at
the same time, and people just started firing.
And maybe a couple of the bullets ricocheted past, and that made them keep firing.
It's hard to say, but the military says there's no evidence that they were under fire at all,
that there was any insurgent activity.
After releasing the statement, Blackwater put their website back up, they made no mention
of the massacre, and continued to sell Blackwater branded t-shirts, baseball caps, and baby
clothes.
Your strategy is literally putting their fingers in their ears by taking their website down.
We'll just wait for this to pass, but let's make sure we're getting the merch out there.
Get the merch out there.
I mean, I've ordered some of the baby clothes for Jack.
I feel like it's a good gift.
I think Jack is wearing the Blackwater hoodie you got him.
Jack loves Blackwater fashion.
He's big into contract or wear.
I mean, if Jack, I think he should really be thinking about in terms of his own powerful
ascension, he should have a private army too.
Everyone needs a private army.
Nobody's disagreeing with that.
We're talking about Jack O'Brien.
Jack O'Brien.
If you know about this podcast, you know what universe you're in.
The only Jack there is is Jack O'Brien, Blackwater enthusiast.
We could keep talking about Blackwater for several podcasts.
There's so much that I just didn't even include, but the Eric Prince story is much bigger and
dumber than that, and so we have to move on.
Oh, okay.
That was an amuse-bouche for the main course?
Well, there's just a lot to cover here.
After that whole massacre thing, some people go to jail, although their convictions were
overturned last year.
What?
Yeah.
Again, it's a lot of stories here, but Prince changed the company's name to XE from Blackwater
to avoid the bad press, and then he sold the company in like 2010.
It's now called Academy with an I because I don't really know why.
Blackwater is no longer Blackwater.
Prince was no longer with Blackwater.
He was still devoted to the company, and one of the last things he did was work with the
games developer to make a Blackwater video game.
According to Prince, the game's purpose was to, quote, give players the chance to experience
what it is like to be on a Blackwater team on a mission without being dropped into a
real combat situation.
We already have games for that, sir.
They're every other video game.
Yeah, exactly.
They just want to kill people randomly and whatever.
Okay.
It was like a connect motion game.
I haven't actually played it.
It was?
No.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
It was a connect motion video game where you're a Blackwater fucking person.
Where you're a Blackwater guy.
It was apparently very bad.
All of the reviews I've read are terrible.
Yeah, because I can't imagine like people, I found a lot like people who are sort of
like in the very conservative side of things, they tend to not have the best taste in creatives
that they work with.
So, I'm sure they probably just found some kid who's like, you know, it's like they
went to Infinity Ward who made like Call of Duty and like, hey, we need you for the new
Blackwater game.
They didn't pull all the stops out for this.
Are the gestures like, ah, anyway, I'll have to, I'll have to read some of these.
I've got a couple, there's a quote from IGN that could double as a review for the actual
company Blackwater.
They said, it employs nothing but bad ideas and it fails to do anything exciting with
any of them.
Another reviewer from Giant Bomb noted that the game presents Blackwater employees as
quote, a bunch of selfless, good nature, totally not mercenaries who save hostages and deliver
food and totally don't kill civilians.
How could they when there are literally no civilians anywhere in this game?
No margin for error in that one, yeah.
Kill them all.
Yeah.
So, I know what you're thinking.
Isn't it sad that poor Eric Prince had to give up on his dreams of having his own private
armies?
Well, don't worry.
Eric does not give up on his dreams.
He's not that kind of man.
After selling Blackwater, he relocated to Dubai.
The Emirati police ponied up $529 million for him to create an 800-man foreign fighting
force.
Because, you know, they have internal revolts to suppress.
The Emirates are filled with crowded labor camps.
That's who builds all those fancy buildings in Dubai.
Right, no, it's slave labor.
Right, slave labor.
Slave labor from Southeast Asia at best a half step up from abject slavery.
Right.
And there's a lot of unrest there.
So, the UAE was like, Eric Prince, would you make us an army of foreign soldiers that
we can use to brutally suppress the people?
Yeah, I need something to quell the revolts that are impending with your professional
killer groups.
Yeah, Eric Prince was just the guy to make that happen.
The whole operation was almost certainly illegal.
American citizens are not allowed to train foreign soldiers without permission from the
State Department.
During his last year in charge of Blackwater, the company had paid a $42 million fine for
illegally training troops in Jordan.
So, this is like a pattern with Eric Prince's illegally training foreign troops.
In order to sidestep any problems this time, Prince just pretended he wasn't involved.
He adopted the code name Kingfish, so no one would know that he was committing blatant
international crimes.
Wait, what do you mean the code name?
Like, just like on transmission?
People called Kingfish in all of the documents.
Oh, so they would never, the words Eric Prince wouldn't show up.
There was a company like RS2 or something like that was the name of the company doing
the training and Prince was connected to them and owned them, but like didn't, like it's
one of those like when you've got enough lawyers and stuff, you can figure out the layers of
it, there's been some great journalists, particularly with the Intercept who have spent years sort
of unpeeling the onion of Eric Prince's.
Right.
Just showing, yeah, like sort of the mechanics of his plausible deniability machine, basically.
Yeah, exactly.
But Kingfish is what he goes by at this time.
Of course, yeah.
Not no longer Princefish.
Yeah.
He's become King.
He's a Kingfish.
Yeah.
So, rather than hiring US Special Forces veterans, which remember is what he promised to do
and why he said that he wasn't a mercenary warlord, because he was.
Oh, right.
Because I hire American people.
Yeah, yeah.
Right.
He opted to bring in soldiers from Columbia because they were cheaper.
The project immediately encountered problems when it turned out that many of these soldiers
had never even fired a weapon.
Prince initially hoped that this battalion would be the first of many, but after numerous
problems the force was reduced in size to 580 men, men who actually served in the battalion
reported being locked indoors all day and being incredibly bored.
The boredom was only broken up by occasional trips paid for by the company to divide to
fuck prostitutes.
Wow.
Otherwise, they're just, like, barred, slave kill squad just had to hang out in a room
until it was prostituted.
Yeah, they would do some running and training, but then they were locked in a room, but every
now and then they got some prostitutes.
So that's sweet.
What the f...
Okay.
Well, okay, Eric Prince.
Yeah.
This all seems aboveboard.
So, yeah.
I mean, at this point, Eric Prince's first army had committed numerous war crimes and
his second army seemed to be on its way to fizzling out.
So in 2014, Eric Prince decided to take a break from making armies to try a bold new
business strategy, making his own air force.
Whoa.
What the fuck?
So that year, Eric Prince gets, because he's up with an investment firm called the CITIC
Group and founded a company named Frontier Logistics Group.
Now CITIC Group is an investment company that is owned by the Chinese government.
So this meant Eric Prince was either in business with or straight up working for China now.
Wow.
So he doesn't...
He does not give a fuck.
Do you think he's a patriot in any way?
Or he's just like pure reptilian brain, like, I'm just going to do what I want.
I know nothing else, but for me to obtain what I want.
I am sure he would consider himself a patriot and have a justification.
What kind of mental gymnastics do you think he's doing to say, like, oh, I made a, you
know, like a kill squad for the UAE and now I'm making a weird private Chinese air force?
The UAE are sort of allies of the United States.
He's not making an air force for China.
We're about to get into that.
He's just...
So the Frontier Logistics Group is supposed to be just a logistics company.
The people you call, if you're a corporation, you're like, we've got a bunch of diamonds
in this country.
I've got to get them shipped here.
Right, right, right, right.
Can you help us arrange that?
Or we've got sick executives in Central Africa.
Can you get a Medevac?
We're building an oil field in this country.
Help us figure out how to set it up and organize.
So that, like, that's a perfectly legitimate business.
Somebody needs to do that work if you're, like, in that industry.
Right.
So secretly, without getting the approval of the rest of the company, Eric Prince also
started trying to use FLG to build his own private air force, which he could then run
out to small African nations who needed to suppress insurgencies.
So the Chinese, as far as we know, have no idea he's doing this, and neither do the other
people he's working with at FLG.
He has his own tiny team within the company, and he decides we're going to build an air
force and not tell anyone.
How do you fucking hide your...
It's like you're making a bong in your room as a teenager, and I was like, what are you
doing in there?
You're like, nothing.
I'm just, like, playing with this cup.
It's like, I smell fire.
I smell plastic melting.
It's like you're building a straight up rental air force, and you can keep it under wraps.
Well, you can't keep it under wraps.
Right.
I guess in his mind.
We've got some commercials, and after that we're going to talk about how Eric tried to
hide his private air force and how it didn't quite work out the way he planned.
Oh, big surprise.
All of that after some capitalism ditties.
During the summer of 2020, some Americans suspected that the FBI had secretly infiltrated
the racial justice demonstrations, and you know what?
They were right.
I'm Trevor Aronson, and I'm hosting a new podcast series, Alphabet Boys.
As the FBI, sometimes you got to grab the little guy to go after the big guy.
Each season will take you inside an undercover investigation.
In the first season of Alphabet Boys, we're revealing how the FBI spied on protesters
in Denver.
At the center of this story is a raspy-voiced, cigar-smoking man who drives a silver hearse.
And inside his hearse was like a lot of guns.
He's a shark, and not in the good and bad ass way.
He's a nasty shark.
He was just waiting for me to set the date, the time, and then for sure he was trying
to get it to heaven.
Listen to Alphabet Boys on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
What if I told you that much of the forensic science you see on shows like CSI isn't based
on actual science?
The problem with forensic science in the criminal legal system today is that it's an awful
lot of forensic and not an awful lot of science.
And the wrongly convicted pay a horrific price.
Two death sentences and a life without parole.
My youngest, I was incarcerated two days after her first birthday.
I'm Molly Herman.
Join me as we put forensic science on trial to discover what happens when a match isn't
a match and when there's no science in CSI.
How many people have to be wrongly convicted before they realize that this stuff's all
bogus.
It's all made up.
Listen to CSI on trial on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
I'm Lance Bass, and you may know me from a little band called NSYNC.
What you may not know is that when I was 23, I traveled to Moscow to train to become the
youngest person to go to space.
And when I was there, as you can imagine, I heard some pretty wild stories.
But there was this one that really stuck with me about a Soviet astronaut who found himself
stuck in space with no country to bring him down.
It's 1991 and that man, Sergei Krekalev, is floating in orbit when he gets a message
that down on Earth, his beloved country, the Soviet Union, is falling apart.
And now he's left defending the Union's last outpost.
This is the crazy story of the 313 days he spent in space, 313 days that changed the
world.
Listen to The Last Soviet on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
We're back, and we are talking about Eric Prince's noble quest to build his own private
air force without anyone knowing.
So I probably shouldn't have to say it, but I will, it is illegal to make your own air
force.
The US government doesn't allow that.
You just mean like creating a collection of fighter jets or planes?
Of armed planes meant to murder people from the sky.
Can you even buy an armed plane?
No.
No, you cannot.
So you need the cover of a government to even obtain a kill plane?
There are ways for private companies to deploy air assets that can attack people and provide
close air support.
There are companies that do that, but there's like a, like you have to get a lot, like the
government has to issue you a bunch of shit.
It's a thing.
Like some of Prince's competitors were able to get government approval to provide close
air support and have small fleets of aircraft, but like, you know, you agree to government
inspections, you get a bunch of, and Eric Prince is not a big fan of licenses or qualifications
or not breaking international law.
What are you doing in your room?
Nothing, mom.
It's not an airport force, I swear.
So Eric Prince, so just to catch you up, he starts a company with the Chinese government
called Frontier Logistics Group that's supposed to like help companies, particularly working
like Africa and Southeast Asia, you know, get stuff from A to B.
Right.
Because China's got their eye on Africa right now.
China's got their eye on a lot of places.
Yeah.
Well, I think they're smart.
It's funny.
When I was in Ghana, like in 2008, they were, the African Cup of Nations was happening and
they had to build a bunch of new stadiums there.
And when I was like, oh, wow, like this is crazy, like these are huge modern stadiums
and one of the locals were like, yeah, they're all Chinese prisoners building it.
And then I was like, whoa, what?
And I was like, yeah, they use these guys because if they try and escape, they're in
the middle of Africa and they're just going to be like, have you seen the Chinese guy?
And they can like, they just know they don't really have to put them under much, you know,
surveillance.
But I mean, at least that could have been a myth.
But I feel like, and also a lot of the consumer goods, I was surprised how much of it came
from China.
But I guess they see a market.
So yeah, what Prince tells Citigroup, which is the Chinese company that owns Frontier
with him, what Prince tells them is that, you know, he thinks there's a market where
they can make some quick cash if they have a couple of moderately armored planes with
sensors on them.
So that like, if a company has a mine somewhere and they're worried that insurgents are going
to rob the mine, you know, the government can pay us to surveil the area to let them
know if an attack's coming.
That's legal.
There's nothing illegal about, you know, a government paying you to provide aerial surveillance
for an area like a mine.
So that's what Prince says he's doing to his backers in China and to his other American
friends who work in Frontier with him.
Without telling them, he buys 25% of another company, an Austrian company called Airborne
Technologies, so he becomes an owner in this company, and he uses them to start producing
an aircraft.
They take an old Thrush 510 crop dusting plane and they turn it into an engine of war.
Now at this point, and for most of the Air Force stuff here, I'm quoting from a fabulous
article in The Intercept called Echo Papa Exposed.
Now here's a quote describing the airplane he has built.
In addition to surveillance and laser targeting equipment, Airborne had outfitted the plane
with bulletproof cockpit windows, an armored engine block, anti-explosive mesh for the
fuel tank, and specialized wiring that could control rockets and bombs.
The company also installed pods for mounting two high-powered 23mm chain guns.
So to maintain secrecy, Prince does his best to keep his name out of this project.
So the people at Airborne, other than like a couple of their top people don't know
Ms. Eric Prince, he's referred to in all of their papers as Echo Papa.
But he purchased or bought a stake in it as Echo Papa?
Yeah, essentially.
That's the only name he's known by in any of the documents the engineers see.
So the engineers see that someone with a code name Echo Papa is ordering them to build
a military aircraft.
That doesn't seem weird to them initially because they've done some contracts that are
secret for the German government and the Swiss government, so they think, okay, this is probably
a government thing.
Yeah, because we've done this kind of work before.
Our bosses assure us it's on the up and up, we're not breaking any laws.
But they knew they were getting into bed with Eric Prince though, right?
A couple of people at the top of the company knew.
The people actually building the plane think they're working for the German government
or something.
But yeah, to buy a 25% stake in a company, obviously the people at the top are going
to know, oh, I see who this person is.
So yeah, one day near the end of finishing this plane, Eric Prince comes by the hangar
to inspect it and one of these engineers recognizes him and knows who he is and is
like, oh, fuck, we're building a military aircraft for Eric Prince.
And so these guys go to their bosses and they're like, we're pretty sure we're committing
an international crime by making this thing.
But management assures them things will be fine if they keep their mouth shut.
Everything will be fine if you keep your mouth shut.
It's not like say anything, it's not illegal.
It's everything will be fine if you can keep your mouth shut.
You don't tell anyone, we won't get in trouble for building a bomber.
The plane you're talking about that they retrofitted, you said it's a crop dusting plane?
It's a crop dusting plane.
Is it a prop, like a propeller plane?
No, I think it's got like engines and stuff, it doesn't look like a prop plane.
Okay, because in my mind, a crop dusting plane is like, you know, like the old propeller
plane, like a, like a Wright Brothers plane.
No, I think it's like a nice crop dusting plane.
Oh, gotcha.
But they had a bunch of problems because like it wasn't made to have thousands of pounds
of armor.
Right.
They had to build so like the things that bombs hang on on a plane are called pylons.
And they're either like made for US munitions or Warsaw packed, you know, Russian munitions.
And so these guys even designed pylons that could fit both because Eric didn't know what
kind of bombs he was going to be able to get.
Yeah, where I can get that stock from.
Yeah.
So like this is the kind of thing he has made and before the planes even finished, Eric
goes out to a bunch of prospective clients, mainly people that we would call warlords
or dictators and tries to sell them on his sexy new murder engine.
He told his partners in Frontier, including the CEO, that they were not running a security
company.
You know, again, they just thought they were buying surveillance planes.
So nobody knows, but Eric Prince and a couple of his close people, what he's doing.
Yeah.
For the other people, they just think, oh, we've got a surveillance plane.
And he's like, I've got something that can do it all, baby.
Yeah.
So that's, that's the situation.
Nobody but Prince knows that he's planning to put missiles on this plane and use it to
murder dissidents.
So having his own Air Force to track back of it has been a goal of Eric since at least
2008 when he purchased an unarmed attack aircraft that he later leased to the Pentagon to use
in Afghanistan to test it out to see if it would be good for the Afghan Air Force.
In Iraq, he tried and failed to sell a contract providing close air support to the CIA.
Also in Iraq, Blackwater had a feat of tiny helicopters.
Prince would have men with machine guns hang off them and shoot at people.
Those helicopters came to be known by the Iraqis as little birds.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But those are unarmored helicopters.
Unarmed helicopters.
Yeah.
But that's a specific kind of helicopter though, the little bird, right?
It may be.
You know, it's not like a Huey or the other ones, but it looks a little bit like a Huey,
but even tinier.
Yeah.
Right.
I just think of it because I know like, I read a lot about like Somalia 93 kind of
stuff and that was like, those were like a lot of the other guys were in like those
little bird helicopters.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Those little guys.
The one from the video games I always hop in.
Yeah.
I've never gotten to order his own private military aircraft to bomb insurgents and that's,
it was his dream.
And in 2014, it seemed like it was finally going to come true.
So the Austrians finished this thing and they taken on the practice flight and it dozens
of problems pop up.
Of course.
Because that's supposed to put armaments on a crop duster.
So they fix whatever they can, but Prince rushes them and says, basically, I need this
thing in two days.
I've already promised it to somebody and it needs to be right.
Oh my God.
What the fuck is wrong with this guy?
So during the plane's first flight, it's grounded for a faulty fuel pump that's eventually
fixed and the plane makes it to Juba, South Sudan, where it was expected to help with
a civil war.
Unfortunately for Eric Prince, but thankfully for humanity, some random guy in Greece took
picture.
You know, there's this random guy in Greece whose hobby is taking pictures of planes
that take off.
Right.
Right.
Right.
He's just one of those nerds and he takes a picture of this thing as it lifts off from
Greece.
Oh, because that's how they were getting it into Sudan is taking off from like they were
taking off from Greece and the plane was registered in San Marino, which is a tiny microstate
in like Northern Italy in that area.
So this thing takes off.
This guy uploads a picture.
It gets back to the authorities in San Marino who realized that the plane that Eric Prince
had registered bore no resemblance to the plane on that runway, which is clearly a military
aircraft.
Oh, right.
He's like, hi, I want to register my nice little crop duster plane.
It's a hobby plane, nothing to see here.
Right.
And they're like, those are missile pylons on the bottom.
Oh, no, no, no, those are fun holders.
So credit to the government of San Marino.
They pull his registration.
The plane had to be flown to another hangar in a different East African nation and it's
probably still there right now.
The whole project fell apart and Eric Prince never got to bomb anyone.
Oh, yeah.
He really is like a tortured guy with a war boner who never got to get his war penis off,
basically.
Yeah.
And credit to airborne technology.
And credit to the engineers who worked on the plane that leaked this story to the Intercept
or at least leaked a big part of it to the Intercept who was like, this is fucked up.
I'm OK making a plane for the German government.
I really don't want to make one for this guy.
God, that must have been such a moment though too when he realized it's Eric Prince.
Yeah.
He looks him up on his phone and is like, oh, shit.
Like in a movie, like he's holding it up next to him just like going back and forth.
It's the guy.
Yeah.
This isn't going to be good for my resume.
OK, so they clearly say, uh-uh-uh, you made a kill jet.
But is there any trial?
So does anyone get in trouble?
Did anyone have to release a statement or anything?
No.
As far as I understand at this point, airborne denies making a fighter jet, FLG denies that
the fighter jet was made with their money, Prince just doesn't talk about it.
The reason we know about this is the Intercept report.
When they have everything, if you go read Echo Papa Exposed, they have like advertising
documents he built for this attack craft.
Like you can see like a brochure.
Like his marketing materials.
Yeah, you can see his marketing materials.
It's very well documented.
Right.
He's like, this could be yours for, yeah.
If they were just making it up for some reason, all of these companies would have sued them
to shit, but nothing's happened.
Like that's the way it went.
Nothing has happened.
The plane is still sitting in a hangar somewhere in East Africa as far as we know it was never
used.
So that's exactly where the situation is.
Is there any like conspiracy or logic to why we think like he has never had to answer
for that?
Like clearly those are international crimes.
If he's creating an armed aircraft, that's probably in violation of many laws.
Well, because what they have is the picture, which is why San Marino pulled his registration.
But they don't have, like you don't have hard documented evidence outside of like what
the journalists put up about how it was made or about exactly who ordered it.
Like Prince doesn't have his name tied to it in legal documents.
These are allegations in a news report that has a significant amount of backing to it.
But also it's not like he was caught bombing civilians in Sudan.
Right.
It got stopped before that point.
So it's just sort of fizzled out.
It's like being called like a homemade gun or something.
Yeah.
Well, it's like Prince didn't get in trouble when, like when he was found illegally training
troops for a foreign country, his company got a $42 million loss, like had to pay $42
million in fines, but he didn't get charged with anything.
And then they consider that an operating cost.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Well, I mean, they made billions at this point.
Right.
What's 42 million?
Yeah.
What's 42 million?
It's like when you sue Purdue Pharmaceuticals for, you know, marketing illegally and hiding
like the truth about the painkillers they were selling, like they pay one and a half
percent of the profits that they've made and fines and they're like, yeah, it's fine.
Whatever.
Cost of doing a business.
Yeah.
It's not like Eric Prince was flying a jet and dropping bombs on people himself.
He had shell companies set up through all this and the plane never actually got to drop
anything.
So he's, he's in the clear.
Right.
And it's, it's murky enough that people can just point fingers at thin air and no one
really has to take the, hold the back.
You can see the plane and you can trace its registration back and you can like, it's.
Can I see a picture of the plane?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's all pretty well documented.
If you go to Echo Papa exposed on the intercept, it'll be there.
Well, I wonder if too, if because the government has done so much business with him, it's like
better to be like, dude, we don't even need to dig that whole part up.
It's possible that if the government filed a case against him, he would win in court
because he's a billionaire with a lot of lawyers and he's, I mean, it's not like he
just like did this haphazardly.
He sat down with lawyers every step of the way.
How does this have to be structured to minimize my risk?
How does this like what do we do to reduce my exposure?
So Eric Prince is still keeping busy today.
His current project involves working with the Chinese government co-owner of his company
to set up a forward operating base in the Yunnan province of China as part of a Chinese
government initiative to help remake the Silk Road.
Prince's quote about the matter is we're not helping to serve Chinese foreign policy
goals.
We're helping to increase trade.
It is possible.
That's true.
The basis stated goal is to quote provide logistics and unarmed security training services to
facilitate Chinese trade throughout Southeast Asia.
So I'm sure that's all in the up and up and this mercenary warlord won't try to hide
committing war crimes in the guise of a legitimate business venture with the same company twice
in a row.
So his other hobby right now is trying to convince the US government to hand the war
in Afghanistan over to an army of private contractors.
Right.
I remember this.
Yeah.
Yeah.
About 6,000 mercenaries ought to be enough to really get Afghanistan under control.
Yeah.
One in five, 6,000.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then this thing in the bud.
And to make sure nothing terrible happens, these guys, they're not going to be lawless
out there.
They're going to be commanded by someone Prince think should be put in charge of the Afghanistan
effort and he calls the guy a visoroi.
So that's a good idea.
Like we should go back to that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love that.
Yeah.
Back when vice versa.
That's really one.
That's a time we all miss.
The world was great.
Yeah.
So that's it.
Simple man.
So far the Pentagon hasn't bitten.
And in fact, all of like Mattis and all of the generals in the world are like, fuck
no.
Right.
Yeah.
They're like, I've been around these assholes.
Yeah.
They can't even drive on the right side of the road.
Yeah.
But if I know Eric a little thing like, you know, complete lack of interest isn't going
to stop him from trying.
Clearly not.
Yeah.
He's going to keep plugging away that.
He's going to keep making that bong in his room.
Yeah.
Even when his mom asks.
No.
He's got an act of life.
You know, several days before the 2016 election, Prince showed up on Breitbart Radio to claim
that Hillary Clinton and Bill Clinton laundered money and regularly visited a quote sex island
with quote underage sex slaves.
And in January of 2017, Prince met with a guy named Kirill Dmitriev, a Russian businessman
with strong ties to Vladimir Putin.
They met in Seychelles?
Right.
Seychelles?
Yeah.
He said the trip was just for business purposes and had nothing to do with the Trump campaign.
But earlier this year, George Nader, a guy who helped organize the meeting, told a grand
jury that it was quote, an effort to establish a back channel between the incoming administration
and the Kremlin.
It's also worth noting that Prince donated about 250,000 to the Trump campaign and group
supporting Trump during the election.
Right.
Wasn't Nader, he represents interest of like the UAE too, doesn't he?
Probably.
I think because that was like the connection because now that makes sense to me when you're
saying that he created a mercenary army with them, that they've already done business.
But also he's like an easy go between.
Yeah.
And Prince was also regularly in contact with Steve Bannon throughout the transition
where while he's having this meeting with Kirill Dmitriev.
I just love the conspiracy about the sex island because it goes back to sort of this bizarre
form of what a conservative thinks is like, you know, the most evil shit.
It's like a sex island.
I mean, if Hillary Clinton had a sex island, she would not have lost the election.
No.
She would.
There would have been some flavor in that pudding.
There would.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's not, that is someone who I don't even think has been to an island, even a restaurant
called Islands.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So anyway, that's where we are right now.
The whole incident is of extreme interest to Robert Mueller because it might be proof
that Kushner was trying to establish a back channel and a legal back channel to Russia.
So we'll be hearing more about Eric Prince in the future, probably before the time this
podcast drops possibly.
Um, yeah, I, again, it's crazy.
I mean, it's not crazy to me, right, because we've, we see people like this all the time,
but like that this is the guy who has constantly just been trying to make his secret little
play army and do all the fun stuff that he maybe was never able to do.
He's clearly like haunted, you know, from his like familial life.
I'm also curious to know what that, what that upbringing was like, like what that household
must have been a lot of fun.
Yeah.
As a kid.
And there's no, there's nothing that I would call like trustworthy information out about
like what that upbringing was like, like, like a lot of these guys, you know, we're able
to talk a little bit about like the abuse that Saddam Hussein endured.
I don't know what, I don't know, it's possible.
He had great parents who were just crazy far right nut jobs.
And so Prince grew up because maybe he's just a happy guy being a billionaire nut job.
Right.
Also, he's a billionaire now.
It's like worth two and a half billion dollars.
Yeah.
So this has all worked out great for Prince.
And is there, is there, do you think the closest he would come to any kind of liability legally
would be through the probe, the Russia probe?
I mean, at this point, aside from the litany of so many international crimes and never
gotten in trouble in a meaningful way, I have trouble believing that anything is going to
happen that puts this guy away.
Yeah.
God, being a rich white guy is the best shit ever.
It's like getting the suit, like the star in Mario.
You know.
Yeah.
He's always got that flashing and vulnerability thing on him.
Most of the people we talk about on this podcast have been dead for a while.
But Eric is still alive.
And yeah, I'd be down with him spending the rest of his life in prison.
Like that'd be great.
Yeah.
That'd be the bee's knees.
But he'll probably just keep on making more armies.
And I got a feeling one of these days he's going to get his own air force.
Right.
Oh, God.
I mean, I believe it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I hope probably.
I don't know.
It's probably for Russia or something weird.
You're just going to have a dream and a hope and billions of dollars in a rich white family
that's heavily connected to the US president.
Yeah.
That's all you need.
And you can do anything.
Anything.
Guys, don't go to college.
Miles.
Yes.
Thank you so much for your help today.
You've been wonderful.
No, thank you for illuminating this for me.
Yeah.
You got some plugs you want to plug in the plug zone.
Do I want to plug anything?
Yes, I do.
There's a little podcast I do every day with Jack O'Ryan called The Daily Zeitgeist, but
you probably knew that, right?
Because everybody knows is the most famous podcast out there.
Not really.
But please listen to that.
We talk about the news and have fun and we always have funny comedians and just try and
make the news of the day bearable.
And you can follow me on social media and on, you know, all that Twitter, Instagram at
Miles of Grey.
And you can find us on all of the various social media platforms as Bastards Pod or at behindthebastards.com,
our home on the worldwide internet web.net.
Peace.
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