Patriots, you will recall that Richard Nixon also mulled over forming his own private army. Many years ago in Washington I knew a man that Nixon asked to form his private army.
I must say I am suspicious of Jesuit educated Erik Prince, pictured above, who is rumored to be Opus Dei and a Knight of Malta. If you use my blog's search engine you will find articles and videos I have presented in the past on Blackwater and Erik Prince.
As some of you know, rumors have been circulating for months about rogue operations or a counter coup against the intelligence establishment in Langley, Virginia and elsewhere. I think this article and others to follow provides a little insight into what is going on inside the "military industrial complex" as Ike called it or what we now call the "deep state" or "establishment".
Is the Trump considering a set of proposals developed by
Blackwater founder Erik Prince and a retired CIA officer — with assistance
from Oliver North, a key figure in the Iran-Contra scandal — to provide
CIA Director Mike Pompeo, pictured above, and the White House with a global, private spy network
that would circumvent official U.S. intelligence agencies, according to several
current and former U.S. intelligence officials and others familiar with the
proposals. The sources say the plans have been pitched to the White House as a
means of countering “deep state” enemies in the intelligence community
seeking to undermine Donald Trump’s presidency.
The
creation of such a program raises the possibility that the effort would be used
to create an intelligence apparatus to justify the Trump administration’s
political agenda.
“Pompeo
can’t trust the CIA bureaucracy, so we need to create this thing that reports
just directly to him,” said a former senior U.S. intelligence official
with firsthand knowledge of the proposals, in describing White House
discussions. “It is a direct-action arm, totally off the books,” this person
said, meaning the intelligence collected would not be shared with the rest of
the CIA or the larger intelligence community. “The whole point is this is
supposed to report to the president and Pompeo directly.”
Oliver North, pictured above, who appears frequently on Trump’s favorite TV network, Fox News, was
enlisted to help sell the effort to the administration. He was the “ideological
leader” brought in to lend credibility, said the former senior
intelligence official.
Some
of the individuals involved with the proposals secretly met with major Trump
donors asking them to help finance operations before any official contracts
were signed.
The
proposals would utilize an army of spies with no official cover in several
countries deemed “denied areas” for current American intelligence personnel,
including North Korea and Iran. The White House has also considered creating a
new global rendition unit meant to capture terrorist suspects around the world,
as well as a propaganda campaign in the Middle East and Europe to combat
Islamic extremism and Iran.
“I
can find no evidence that this ever came to the attention of anyone at the NSC
or [White House] at all,” wrote Michael N. Anton, pictured above, a
spokesperson for the National Security Council, in an email. “The White House
does not and would not support such a proposal.” But a current U.S.
intelligence official appeared to contradict that assertion, stating that the
various proposals were first pitched at the White House before being delivered
to the CIA. The Intercept reached out to several senior officials that sources
said had been briefed on the plans by Prince, including Vice President Mike
Pence. His spokesperson wrote there was “no record of [Prince] ever having met
with or briefed the VP.” North did not respond to a request for comment.
According
to two former senior intelligence officials, Pompeo has embraced the plan and
lobbied the White House to approve the contract. Asked for comment, a CIA
spokesperson said, “You have been provided wildly inaccurate information by
people peddling an agenda.”
At
the heart of the scheme being considered by the White House are Blackwater
founder Erik Prince and his longtime associate, CIA veteran John R. Maguire,
who currently works for the intelligence contractor Amyntor Group. Maguire also
served on Trump’s transition team.
Michael
Barry, who was recently named NSC senior director for intelligence programs,
worked closely with Prince on a CIA assassination program during the Bush
administration.
Prince
and Maguire deny they are working together. Those assertions, however,
are challenged by current and former U.S. officials and Trump donors who
say the two men were collaborating.
As
with many arrangements in the world of CIA contracting and clandestine
operations, details of who is in charge of various proposals are murky by
design and change depending on which players are speaking. An Amyntor official
said Prince was not “formally linked to any contract proposal by Amyntor.”
In an email, Prince rejected the suggestion that he was involved with the
proposals. When asked if he has knowledge of this project, Prince replied: “I
was/am not part of any of those alleged efforts.”
The
former senior intelligence official with direct knowledge of the efforts
scoffed at Prince’s denials. “Erik’s proposal had no company names on the
slides,” this person said, “but there is no doubt that Prince and Maguire were
working together.”
Prince and Maguire have a long professional
relationship. Maguire recently completed a stint as a
consultant with Prince’s company, Frontier Services Group, a Hong Kong-based
security and logistics company partially owned by the Chinese government. FSG
has no known connections to the private spy plan.
Prince
has strong ties to the Trump administration: His sister Betsy DeVos is
secretary of education, he was a major donor to the Trump
election campaign, and he advised the transition team on intelligence and
defense appointments. Prince has also
contributed to Pence’s campaigns.
Maguire, pictured above, spent more than two decades as a paramilitary officer in the CIA, including
tours in Central America working with the Contras. He has extensive
experience in the Middle East, where he helped plan the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Maguire
and Prince met together in September with a senior CIA official at a
Virginia restaurant to discuss privatizing the war in Afghanistan.
Prince
told a top fundraiser that Maguire was working on part of his Afghanistan plan,
characterizing it as the first part of a multi-pronged program. The
fundraiser added that Prince never directly asked him for money. But sources
close to the project say Maguire did seek private funding for Amyntor’s efforts
until a CIA contract materialized. “They’ve been going around asking for a
bridge loan to float their operations until the CIA says yes,” said a person
who has been briefed on the fundraising efforts.
Beginning last
spring and into the summer, Maguire and a group of Amyntor representatives
began asking Trump donors to support their intelligence efforts in Afghanistan,
the initial piece of what they hoped would be a broader program. Some Trump
fundraisers were asked to provide introductions to companies and wealthy
clients who would then hire Amyntor for economic intelligence contracts.
Maguire explained that some of the profit from those business deals would fund
their foreign intelligence collection. Others were asked to give money
outright.
“[Maguire]
said there were people inside the CIA who joined in the previous eight years
[under Obama] and inside the government, and they were failing to give the
president the intelligence he needed,” said a person who was pitched by Maguire
and other Amyntor personnel. To support his claim, Maguire told at least two
people that National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster, in coordination with a top
official at the National Security Agency, authorized surveillance of Steven
Bannon and Trump family members, including Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump.
Adding to these unsubstantiated claims, Maguire told the potential
donors he also had evidence McMaster used a burner phone to send
information gathered through the surveillance to a facility in Cyprus owned by
George Soros.
Amyntor
employees took potential donors to a suite in the Trump Hotel in Washington,
which they claimed was set up to conduct “secure communications.” Some White
House staff and Trump campaign supporters came to refer to the suite as “the
tinfoil room,” according to one person who visited the suite. This account was confirmed
by another source to whom the room was described. “John [Maguire] was certain
that the deep state was going to kick the president out of office within a
year,” said a person who discussed it with Maguire. “These guys said they were
protecting the president.”
Maguire
and others at Amyntor have boasted that they have already sent intelligence
reports to Pompeo.
Prince, Maguire and North have long shared a common frustration
over the failure of the U.S. government to bring two suspects from a
high-profile terrorist event in the 1980s to justice. Last summer,
Maguire discussed rendering the suspects with White House
officials after learning the men had been located in the Middle East.
Despite having no U.S. government approval, associates of Maguire began working
on a snatch operation earlier this year, according to a former senior U.S.
intelligence official and a former Prince colleague.
Maguire,
concerned that the FBI would not take action, made an offer to senior
White House officials. The message, according to a person with direct
knowledge of the rendition plan, was: “We’re going to go get these guys and
bring them to the U.S. Who should we hand them over to?”
The rendition
plan was meant to be a demonstration that Maguire and his associates
had an active intelligence network and the capability to grab suspects
around the world. Prince maintains he has nothing to do with that plan. But
according to a source with extensive knowledge of Prince’s networks,
Prince was working in parallel to assemble a team to help apprehend the men.
According
to two people who have worked extensively with Prince in recent years, Prince
has been contacting former Blackwater personnel who worked on a post-9/11
era CIA assassination program targeting Al Qaeda operatives. That program,
which the Bush White House prohibited the CIA from disclosing to congressional
intelligence committees, was revealed to Congress in 2009 by then-CIA Director
Leon Panetta. The CIA says the program did not result in any
assassinations.
Among
the capabilities Prince offers is a network of deniable assets — spies,
fixers, foreign intelligence agents — spread across the globe that could be
used by the White House. “You pick any country in the world Erik’s been in, and
it’s there,” said a longtime Prince associate. “They’re a network of very
dark individuals.” The associate, who has worked extensively with Prince, then
began rattling off places where the private spies and paramilitaries already
operate — Saudi Arabia, Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, “all across
North Africa.”
Opaque
contracting arrangements are typical for Prince, who became a lightning
rod in his Blackwater days and now prefers to minimize controversy by operating
in the shadows, disguising his involvement in sensitive operations with layers
of subcontractors and elaborately crafted legal structures. “That’s his exact
MO,” said the longtime Prince associate, adding that Prince consistently
attempts to ensure plausible deniability of his role in U.S. and foreign
government contracts.
“I
have zero to do with any such effort and saying that I did/do would be
categorically false,” Prince said in his email to The Intercept. “Knowingly
publishing false information exposes you to civil legal action. The only effort
I’ve quite publicly pitched is an alternative to Afghanistan.”
The intelligence and covert action program would mark an unorthodox
return to government service for Prince, the onetime CIA contractor who built a
mercenary force that became notorious during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
It would also raise new questions about Prince’s foreign entanglements since he
sold Blackwater.
In
addition to Prince’s former assassination network, the hidden cadre of spies
with no official cover — NOCs in CIA jargon — includes the assets of another
key player in the Iran-Contra affair, CIA Officer Duane Clarridge, who died in
2016. Maguire, who worked under Clarridge as a young CIA paramilitary in
Central America during the mid-1980s, took over the network of contract spies,
who operate mostly in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Last
summer, as Prince pushed his public proposal to privatize the war in
Afghanistan, he and Maguire had broader ambitions, according to a person
involved in the discussions. “The goal was to eventually get their network of
NOCs worldwide, but they initially started with Afghanistan and Pakistan.”
“Prince
seems to be firing on a lot of cylinders and pitching overt and covert plans,”
said a current intelligence officer who has closely monitored Prince’s career
and been briefed on several of Prince’s recent efforts, including the proposals
to Pompeo. The official declined to discuss details of the plans but pointed to
Prince’s much-discussed pitch to privatize the war in Afghanistan as a
smokescreen for offering other more controversial programs and operations.
Prince’s
Afghanistan plan, which received substantial media attention and got a hearing
at the highest levels of the Trump administration, “was brilliant because it
changed the narrative and made him relevant,” the officer said, referring
to Prince’s scandal- and investigation-plagued career at Blackwater. The
officer also added that the very public Afghanistan pitch, replete with cable
news interviews and op-eds, provided a legitimate reason “to justify meeting
with people” at the White House, CIA, or other government agencies.
“Erik
has no hobbies,” said the longtime Prince associate. “Counterterrorism is his
hobby.”
In
some ways, these plans mirror operations Prince led during the Bush-Cheney
administration. When Prince was running Blackwater, he and a former CIA
paramilitary officer, Enrique Prado, set up a global network of foreign
operatives, offering their “deniability” as a “big plus” for potential
Blackwater customers, according to internal company communications obtained by
The Intercept.
In
a 2007 email, with the subject “Possible Opportunity in DEA—READ AND DELETE,”
Prado sought to pitch the network to the Drug Enforcement Administration,
bragging that Blackwater had developed “a rapidly growing, worldwide network of
folks that can do everything from surveillance to ground truth to disruption
operations.” He added, “These are all foreign nationals (except for a few cases
where US persons are the conduit but no longer ‘play’ on the street), so
deniability is built in and should be a big plus.”
The
longtime Prince associate said that the nexus of deniable assets has never gone
away. “The NOC network is already there. It already exists for the better part
of 15 years now,” he said.
Prince
has long admired North and viewed his role in Iran-Contra as heroic, said the
Prince associate. In 2007, Prince testified defiantly before Congress following
the Nisour Square massacre in Baghdad, in which Blackwater operatives gunned
down 17 Iraqi civilians, including women and children. Shortly after his
testimony, Prince’s longtime friend, conservative California Rep. Dana
Rohrabacher, praised the Blackwater chief. “Prince,” Rohrabacher said, “is on
his way to being an American hero just like Ollie North was.”
North,
a Marine lieutenant colonel on the Reagan National Security Council,
oversaw a scheme to divert proceeds from illicit arms sales to Iran to Contra
death squads in Nicaragua. The resulting scandal became known as the
Iran-Contra affair, and North was convicted of three felonies, though these
convictions were later thrown out.
Both
North and Maguire attended a small reception in 2014 celebrating Prince’s
third marriage — to his former spokesperson Stacy DeLuke. “It was an intimate
affair,” said the Prince associate. “Only Erik’s closest friends were invited
to that reception.” On election night in 2016, DeLuke posted photos on social
media from inside Trump headquarters.
On
November 30, Prince testified behind closed doors before the House Intelligence
Committee about his January trip to the Seychelles to meet with Mohammad bin
Zayed, crown prince of Abu Dhabi, and a Russian fund manager close to Vladimir
Putin. According to the Washington Post, Prince
presented himself as an unofficial envoy of President-elect Trump. The
Intercept reported last week
that the fund manager was Kirill Dmitriev, head of the Russian Direct
Investment Fund. Prince repeatedly said that he did not
remember the identity of the Russian, but on Thursday, in testimony before the
House Intelligence Committee, Prince admitted that he did
in fact meet with Dmitriev.
Prince
may have revealed part of his strategy in a July 2016 radio interview with
Steve Bannon, when he proposed recreating the CIA’s Phoenix Program, an
assassination ring used in the Vietnam War, to battle the Islamic State. Prince
said in the interview that the program would be used to kill or capture “the
funders of Islamic terror, the wealthy radical Islamist billionaires funding it
from the Middle East.”
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