yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Why Blackwater cannot be the future of U.S. warfare | Sean McFate | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 3, 2024

The United States has stopped winning wars. It has stopped winning wars since World War II. And the question is, why have we stopped winning wars? We have the best troops, we have the best equipment, we have the best technology, we have the most money. So what's the problem?

But since World War II, you know, Korea is a stalemate, Vietnam went communist. There's Afghanistan, Iraq these are failures. We must be honest with ourselves, these are failures. But this is not just a US problem. The West, quote unquote, writ large, does not know how to win wars anymore.

Look at France in Indochina and Algeria; the British in Palestine and Cyprus; the Soviets in Afghanistan; Israel against Hezbollah in Lebanon. The question is, what does it mean if the West can no longer win wars? It's an obvious question, but nobody wants to ask it because the implications are too terrifying to behold.

And the answer is: war has moved on. War has changed. It has new rules, and it looks nothing like World War II, which is our model, our strategic paradigm. And as long as we keep this up, we will continue to have forever wars.

One of the new rules of war is that we will see the return of mercenaries, of private force, of private warfare. You know, they say mercenary is the second oldest profession. Private war has been around for a very long time, but we've forgotten it. Mercenaries have only been sort of underground for 150 years. Now they're coming back.

And most of military history is private military history. The reason it's come back is because the US resurrected it, ironically, with the Iraq and Afghan wars. The US—it's ironic because it's the superpower that did this. It wasn't small states with money who needed an army that didn't have it; it was the United States of America.

And the reason the US did this is because they initially, policymakers thought the Iraq war and the Afghanistan war would be very short, easy wars. And we remember Secretary Defense Rumsfeld saying that these wars would take days, weeks at most, certainly not months. Now it's nearly 20 years later, and we're still mired in these quagmires.

We're still stuck in these entrenched places in South Asia and the Middle East. One of the solutions that's being considered is replacing all American troops in Afghanistan by mercenaries. This is currently what President Trump is considering doing, led by Erik Prince.

Erik Prince is the founder of Blackwater. Blackwater was a large private military company that, in 2007, massacred 17 civilians in Baghdad, and it became one of the low points of the Iraq war. He is the sister of Betsy DeVos, the Secretary of Education, and is using political connections for the biggest paycheck of his career.

Now, this would normally be a laughable situation, right? Replacing, you know, American troops with mercenaries. What makes it even more laughable and even dangerous is that he thinks that 6,500 mercenaries can fix Afghanistan.

Now, at the height of the Afghan war, there were 140,000 NATO troops in Afghanistan, which couldn't do anything, really, in Afghanistan. And now, the Taliban control more of Afghanistan. So what is Erik Prince going to do with 6,500? That's a good question.

What is even more dangerous, though, is what happens to war when you privatize it.

More Articles

View All
What if?
[Music] Foreign Ferdinand of Austria and his wife Sophie were on an official visit to Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina. As they traveled and inspected the land, Cabrillo Princip, a 19-year-old Serbian nationalist, shot the royal couple at p…
Pitch Practice with Paul Buchheit and Sam Altman at Startup School SV 2016
All right, so up next we’re going to do pitch practice. This is something that we invented by accident a couple of years ago. One of our speakers had to cancel at the last minute, so we just threw together this idea: let’s bring up some startups. This is …
Why you should always do business face to face and not over the phone!
I don’t care if I get in front of somebody for 20 minutes; I could have talked to him for 5 years on the telephone, and that 20 minutes face to face is going to change my relationship dynamic over any kind of telephone call. Being in front of the customer…
Why Capitalism is the BEST System | Kevin O'Leary
Last week, Kevin, I discussed an Oxfam report that contained a startling statistic: that the world’s richest 85 people hold precisely the same wealth as the three and a half billion poorest people. Now, if you saw the show, you won’t be surprised to hear …
This 18th Century Gold Rush Changed How the World Pans for Gold | National Geographic
Gold is the most powerful metal on earth, and Russia is one of the world’s leading suppliers of it. It all began in 1745 when a peasant named Tiara Fade Markov, while looking for crystal, found something else: a tiny gold speck inside a piece of quartz. H…
Perfect progressive aspect | The parts of speech | Grammar | Khan Academy
Hello, grammarians! Previously, I had covered three of the basic aspects of English, and that’s simple, perfect, and progressive. So, there’s just one more, and it’s a combination of the last two, and it’s called the perfect progressive. To recap what t…