Blackwater speaks…
… and I find it painful to listen. We’ve been "grossly misunderstood," protests Erik Prince, the chief executive of Blackwater Worldwide, in an op-ed piece in today’s Wall Street Journal. He says his mercenaries should be seen as volunteers in a noble cause. What he doesn’t say: They were operating outside military discipline and jurisdiction. ...
... and I find it painful to listen.
… and I find it painful to listen.
We’ve been "grossly misunderstood," protests Erik Prince, the chief executive of Blackwater Worldwide, in an op-ed piece in today’s Wall Street Journal. He says his mercenaries should be seen as volunteers in a noble cause.
What he doesn’t say: They were operating outside military discipline and jurisdiction. Iraqis tend to hate them. And American commanders disliked having armed men operating in their areas of responsibility.
When the history of this war is written, one of the anomalies I am sure historians will look at is the U.S. government’s heavy use of mercenaries.
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