
‘Maga since forever': mercenary mogul Erik Prince pushes to privatize Trump deportation plans
Prince is the most famous mercenary of the contemporary era and the founder of the now defunct private military company Blackwater. For a time, it was a prolific privateer in the 'war on terror', racking up millions in US government contracts by providing soldiers of fortune to the CIA, Pentagon and beyond.
Now he is a central figure among a web of other contractors trying to sell Trump advisers on a $25bn deal to privatize the mass deportations of 12 million migrants.
In an appearance on NewsNation, he immediately tried to temper that his plan had any traction.
'No indications, so far,' said Prince about a federal contract materializing. 'Eventually if they're going to hit those kinds of numbers and scale, they're going to need additional private sector.'
But the news had people wondering, how is Prince going to factor into the second Trump presidency?
Sean McFate, a professor at Georgetown University who has advised the Pentagon and the CIA, said: 'Erik Prince has always been politically connected to Maga, the Maga movement, and that's going back to 2015.'
Prince, himself a special forces veteran and ex-Navy Seal, is a known business associate of Steve Bannon, the architect of Trump's first electoral win. Prince even appeared with him last July at a press conference before Bannon surrendered to authorities and began a short prison sentence for defying a congressional subpoena.
'He comes from a wealthy Republican family,' said McFate, who has authored books on the global mercenary industry and is familiar with Prince's history. 'His sister, Betsy DeVos, is the former education secretary, and he's been a Maga, not just a Maga, he's been a Steve Bannon, Maga Breitbart Republican, since forever.'
Beginning during the two Bush administrations, Blackwater was a major recipient of Pentagon money flowing into wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But a massacre in Baghdad at the hands of some of his contractors led to prison sentences, congressional inquiries and blacklistings of the firm.
Years later, Trump would come to the rescue: pardoning all of the Blackwater mercenaries involved in the massacre.
Now, with the current administration, which is doling out free advertising to Elon Musk and other Maga loyalists, Prince has a new and familiar ally in Washington.
'This is a big market time for him,' said McFate. 'He's very quiet when there's a Democrat in the White House and gets very noisy when a Republican, especially Trump, is in the White House; I expect this to be one of many things he will try to pitch.'
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McFate said Prince is nothing if not an 'opportunist' and an 'egotist' with a penchant for getting into media cycles.
'If Trump or somebody says 'That's an interesting idea,' he will pump out a PowerPoint slideshow proposing an idea, whether or not he can do it,' he said. Prince also has the ear of Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, and was a character witness for her Senate confirmation.
There's no denying Prince is a relentless pitchman, offering world governments billion-dollar plans to privatize wars or other less expensive espionage activities. For example, he was recently named to the advisory board of the London-based private intelligence firm Vantage Intelligence, which advises 'sovereign wealth funds' and other 'high-net-worth individuals'.
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Post-Blackwater and under new companies, he has proposed missions in Afghanistan, Ukraine, Congo, Libya and, purportedly, Venezuela – a country he often mentions as ripe for overthrow on his podcast, Off Leash.
A senior commander in an alliance of former Venezuelan soldiers who defected from the Chavista regime told the Guardian his organization has been asking Prince for help against the country's current president, Nicolás Maduro.
'We have sent messages to Mr Erik Prince to try to see if we can meet,' said Javier Nieto Quintero, a Florida-based former captain in the Venezuelan military and leader of the Venezuelan dissident organization Carive. 'If he wants, we can provide help, support in terms of information, intelligence, or any other area based on the freedom of our country.'
Nieto Quintero, who said Prince has yet to respond, and Carive was used in a failed operation against Maduro in 2020 led by a former Green Beret. In what is notoriously known as the 'Bay of Piglets', six of Nieto Quintero's men were killed and close to 100 captured, including two former US servicemen recruited for the job who were freed two years ago from a Caracas prison.
Prince's eye has undoubtedly been focused on Venezuela, a country with vast oil reserved that has long been in the crosshairs of Trump's retinue. In recent months, Prince has supported a Venezuelan opposition movement called Ya Casi Venezuela, claiming to have raised more than $1m for it over the summer. The Maduro regime is now investigating Prince's links to the campaign, which it paints as a sort of front for western governments fostering its downfall.
Venezuela has reason to fear Prince and his connections to American spies: the CIA, with a rich history of covert actions in Latin America, was at least aware of a plot to overthrow Maduro's predecessor Hugo Chávez in 2002.
'We were in contact with Ya Casi Venezuela, but a meeting never took place,' said Nieto Quintero. 'We have continued to grow and strengthen our ranks and our doctrine, our plans, our institutional, military, security and defense proposals.'
Prince is officially active in the region. Last week, Ecuador announced it would be partnering with Prince in a 'strategic alliance' to reinforce the country's controversial 'war on crime' with his expertise.
Prince did not respond to a request for comment sent through his encrypted cellphone company, Unplugged. Ya Casi Venezuela did not answer numerous emails about its relationship with Prince. As of now, no business deal between the Trump administration and Prince has been signed or publicly disclosed.
But across his career as both a shadowy contractor and a political figure, who just graced the stages of the latest Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) to applause and then spoke to Harvard Republicans, the public and private sides of Prince remain somewhat antithetical.
'He likes to be in the news, which makes him a very bad mercenary,' said McFate. 'Frankly, most mercenaries I talk to in Africa, the big ones, despise him.'
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