Pentagon Mercenaries:
Blackwater, Al-Qaeda… what’s in a name?
By
Finian Cunningham
February 21, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"RT"
-
CIA-linked
private “security” companies are fighting in
Yemen for the US-backed Saudi military campaign.
Al-Qaeda-affiliated mercenaries are also being
deployed. Melding private firms with terror
outfits should not surprise. It’s all part of
illegal war making.
Western
news media scarcely report on the conflict in
Yemen, let alone the heavy deployment of Western
mercenaries in the fighting there. In the
occasional Western report on Al-Qaeda and
related terror groups in Yemen, it is usually in
the context of intermittent drone strikes
carried out by the US, or with the narrative
that these militants are “taking advantage”
of the chaos “to expand” their presence
in the Arabian Peninsula, as reported
here by the Washington Post.
This
bifurcated Western media view of Yemen belies a
more accurate and meaningful perspective, which
is that the US-backed Saudi bombing campaign is
actually coordinated with an on-the-ground
military force that comprises regular troops,
private security firms and Al-Qaeda type
mercenaries redeployed from Syria.
There
can be little doubt in Syria – despite Western
denials – that the so-called Islamic State (IS,
formerly ISIS/ISIL)) jihadists and related
Al-Qaeda brigades in Jabhat al-Nusra, Jaish al-Fateh,
Ahrar ash-Sham and so on, have been infiltrated,
weaponized and deployed for the objective of
regime-change by the US and its allies. If that
is true for Syria, then it is also true for
Yemen. Indeed, the covert connection becomes
even more apparent in Yemen.
Last
November, the New York Times
confirmed what many Yemeni sources had long
been saying. That the US-backed Saudi military
coalition trying to defeat a popular uprising
was relying on mercenaries supplied by private
security firms tightly associated with the
Pentagon and the CIA.
The
mercenaries were
recruited by companies linked to Erik
Prince, the former US Special Forces
commando-turned businessman, who set up
Blackwater Worldwide. The latter and its
re-branded incarnations, Xe Services and Academi,
remain a top private security contractor for the
Pentagon, despite employees being convicted for
massacring civilians while on duty in Iraq in
2007. In 2010, for example, the Obama
administration awarded the contractor more than
$200 million in security and CIA work.
Erik
Prince, who is based primarily in Virginia where
he runs other military training centers, set up
a mercenary hub in the United Arab Emirates five
years ago with full support from the royal
rulers of the oil-rich state. The UAE Company
took the name Reflex Responses or R2. The NY
Times reported that some 400 mercenaries were
dispatched from the Emirates’ training camps to
take up assignment in Yemen. Hundreds more are
being trained up back in the UAE for the same
deployment.
This is
just one stream of several “soldiers of
fortune” going into Yemen to fight against
the uprising led by Houthi rebels, who are in
alliance with remnants of the national army.
That insurgency succeeded in kicking out the US
and Saudi-backed president Abed Rabbo Mansour
Hadi in early 2015. Hadi has been described as a
foreign puppet, who presided over a corrupt
regime of cronyism and vicious repression.
Since
last March, the Saudis and other Persian Gulf
Arab states have been bombing Yemen on a daily
basis in order to overthrow the Houthi-led
rebellion and reinstall the exiled Hadi.
Washington and Britain have
supplied warplanes and missiles, as well as
logistics, in the Saudi-led campaign, which has
resulted in thousands of civilian deaths. The
involvement of Blackwater-type mercenaries –
closely associated with the Pentagon – can also
be seen as another form of American contribution
to the Saudi-led campaign.
The
mercenaries sent from the UAE to Yemen are
fighting alongside other mercenaries that the
Saudis have reportedly enlisted from Sudan,
Eritrea and Morocco. Most are former soldiers,
who are paid up to $1,000 a week while serving
in Yemen. Many of the Blackwater-connected
fighters from the UAE are recruited from Latin
America: El Salvador, Panama and primarily
Colombia, which is considered to have good
experience in counter-insurgency combat.
Also
among the mercenaries are American, British,
French and Australian nationals. They are
reportedly deployed in formations along with
regular troops from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain
and the UAE.
In
recent months, the Houthi rebels (also known as
Ansarullah) and their allies from the Yemeni
army – who formed a united front called the
Popular Committees – have inflicted heavy
casualties on the US-Saudi coalition.
Hundreds of troops have been reportedly
killed in gun battles in the Yemeni
provinces of Marib, in the east, and Taiz, to
the west. The rebels’ use of
Tochka ballistic missiles has had
particularly devastating results.
So much
so that it is
reported that the Blackwater-affiliated
mercenaries have “abandoned the Taiz front”
after suffering heavy casualties over the last
two months. “Most of the Blackwater
operatives killed in Yemen were believed to be
from Colombia and Argentina; however, there were
also casualties from the United States,
Australia and France,” Masdar News reports.
Into
this murky mix are added extremist Sunni
militants who have been dispatched to Yemen from
Syria. They can be said to be closely related,
if not fully integrated, with Al-Qaeda or IS in
that they profess allegiance to a
“caliphate” based on a fundamentalist
Wahhabi, or Takfiri, ideology.
These
militants began arriving in Yemen in large
numbers within weeks of Russia’s military
intervention in Syria beginning at the end of
September, according to Yemeni Army spokesman
Brigadier General Sharaf Luqman. Russian air
power immediately began inflicting severe losses
on the extremists there. Senior Yemeni military
sources said that hundreds of IS-affiliated
fighters were flown into Yemen’s southern port
city of Aden onboard commercial aircraft
belonging to Turkey, Qatar and the UAE.
Soon
after the militants arrived, Aden residents said
the city had descended into a
reign of terror. The integrated relationship
with the US-Saudi coalition can be deduced from
the fact that Aden has served as a
key forwarding military base for the
coalition. Indeed, it was
claimed by Yemen military sources that the
newly arrived Takfiri militants were thence
dispatched to the front lines in Taiz and Marib,
where the Pentagon-affiliated mercenaries and
Saudi troops were also assigned.
It is
true that the Pentagon at times wages war on
Al-Qaeda-related terrorists. The US
airstrike in Libya on Friday, which killed
some 40 IS operatives at an alleged training
camp, is being trumpeted by Washington as a
major blow against terrorism. And in Yemen since
2011, the CIA and Pentagon have killed many
Al-Qaeda cadres in drone strikes, with the
group’s leader being
reportedly assassinated last June in a US
operation.
Nevertheless, as the broader US-Saudi campaign
in Yemen illustrates, the outsourcing of
military services to private mercenaries in
conjunction with terrorist militia is evidently
an arm of covert force for Washington.
This is
consistent with how the same groups have been
deployed in Syria for the purpose of regime
change there.
The
blurring of lines between regular military,
private security contractors with plush offices
in Virginia and Abu Dhabi, and out-and-out
terror groups is also appropriate. Given the
nature of the illegal wars being waged, it all
boils down to state-sponsored terrorism in the
end.