Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis is out.
Mattis' resignation comes amid news that President Donald Trump has directed the drawdown of 2,000 U.S. forces in Syria, and 7,000 U.S. forces from Afghanistan, a U.S. official confirmed to Military Times, a story first reported by the Wall Street Journal.
This month, in the January/February print issue of the gun and hunting magazine “Recoil,"
the former contractor security firm Blackwater USA published a
full-page ad, in all black with a simple message: “We are coming.”
Is the war in Afghanistan — and possibly elsewhere ― about to be privatized?
If Blackwater returns, it would be the return of a private security
contractor that was banned from Iraq, but re-branded and never really
went away. By 2016 Blackwater had been re-named and restructured several
times, and was known at the time as Constellis Group, when it was
purchased by the Apollo Holdings Group. Reuters reported earlier this
year that Apollo had put Constellis up for sale, but in June the sale
was put on hold.
A representative for Constellis told Military Times late Friday that while it had acquired the former Blackwater training center in the 2016 purchase, it has no affiliation with the former security firm. It did not retain Blackwater’s founder and former CEO Erik Prince and has no current connection to him, or the firm’s former management structure.
The Recoil ad suggests Blackwater is making a resurgence on its own,
but it was not clear in what form. The public affairs firm that handles
Prince’s media engagements told Military Times Friday that he would not
be able to speak beyond what was in the media “at this stage.”
Prince has courted President Donald Trump’s administration since he took office
with the idea that the now 17-year Afghan War will never be won by a
traditional military campaign. Prince has also argued that the
logistical footprint required to support that now multi-trillion dollar endeavor has become too burdensome. Over the summer and into this fall Prince has engaged heavily
with the media to promote the privatization; particularly as the Trump
administration’s new South Asia Strategy, which was crafted with Mattis,
passed the one-year mark.
Constellis, which had maintained a footprint at Camp Integrity
by the Kabul Airport through its previous iteration as “Academi." The
firm no longer trains there, the Constellis spokesman said...
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