PBD Podcast - Blackwater founder Erik Prince | PBD Podcast | Ep. 372
Episode Date: February 29, 2024Patrick Bet-David sits down one-on-one with Blackwater founder Erik Prince. Erik Dean Prince is an American businessman, former U.S. Navy SEAL officer, and the founder of the private military company... Blackwater. He served as Blackwater's CEO until 2009 and as its chairman until its sale to a group of investors in 2010. Prince heads the private equity firm Frontier Resource Group and was chairman of the Hong Kong-listed Frontier Services Group until 2021. TIMESTAMPS 3:47 - Erik's background and his family's business success. 11:19 - Erik discusses why he founded Blackwater. 16:27 - Erik explains who Blackwater's first client was. 27:02 - How the United Nation's hypocrisy led to Blackwater's founding. 29:57 - How the bombing of the U.S.S. Cole led to Blackwater's landing a $7 million a year military contract. 34:27 - The difference between a country's nationals fighting for their countries vs hiring a Private Military Company. 41:26 - Was Blackwater better at training soldiers than the U.S. government? 54:27 - Is there an oath soldiers took to train with Blackwater. 55:16 - Erik discusses the CIA's role in the Ukraine vs Russia war. 1:05:18 - Erik explains why he left defense contracting. 1:14:32 - Was Blackwater hired to train soldiers for The Wagner Group? 1:22:52 - Erik claims a Chinese Cyber Attack was behind the AT&T outage. 1:34:31 - Did "Leave the World Behind" predict a future cyber attack on the U.S. electric grid? 1:41:07 - Erik discusses which social and political issues Americans are united on. 1:48:52 - Erik explains who was behind the Cinema Rex fire that started the Iranian revolution. MINNECT: Connect one-on-one with the right expert to get the answers you need with Minnect: https://bit.ly/3MC9IXE Connect with Patrick on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3OoiGIC Connect with Tom on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3UgJjmR Connect with Vincent on Minnect: https://bit.ly/47TFCXq Connect with Adam on Minnect: https://bit.ly/42mnnc4 CHOOSE YOUR ENEMIES WISELY: Purchase PBD's Book "Choose Your Enemies Wisely": https://bit.ly/41bTtGD BET-DAVID CONSULTING: Get best-in-class business advice with Bet-David Consulting: https://bit.ly/40oUafz' VT.COM: Visit VT.com for the latest news and insights from the world of politics, business and entertainment: https://bit.ly/472R3Mz VALUETAINMENT UNIVERSITY: Visit Valuetainment University for the best courses online for entrepreneurs: https://bit.ly/47gKVA0 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! YOUR NEXT 5 MOVES: Want to be clear on your next 5 business moves? https://bit.ly/3Qzrj3m ABOUT US: Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
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I've heard the name before.
Some love him.
Some respect him.
Some hate him.
Some say he's misunderstood, but
regardless of what you say, he served in the military as a Navy SEAL. When he got out,
he started a company called Blackwater December 26, 1996. In 2010, he ended up selling the
company. During that time, he was awarded $2 billion of government security contract,
of which $1.6 billion of it were unclassified,
federal contracts from 01 to 09,
the CIA awarded them up to $600 million
in classified contracts to Blackwater and its affiliates.
Aside from that, during their course of 40,000 Blackwater
personal security missions, I've heard you say 100,000,
but here I'm reading 40,000,
only 200 involved guards firing their weapons stating no one under
Our care was ever killed or injured. We kept them safe all the while we had 30 of our men killed
I think the number ended up being 41 if I'm not mistaken this number may be a little bit out of date
And then aside from that he is also from a very special family the prince family
Father, uh, I believe edgar prince had two kids one is eric prince the one we're going to talk Edgar, Prince, had two kids, one is Eric Prince,
the one we're gonna talk to, he had more than two kids.
Four kids.
He had four kids, okay, father had four kids,
two out of the four, one is you, super successful,
you've done well for yourself,
and you're somewhat involved in politics.
I was the unexpected blessing.
You were the unexpected, okay, you're the fourth one.
I have three much older sisters.
Okay, got it.
Is Betsy the oldest, or is Betsy older?
Betsy's the oldest, she's 12 years older.
My next sister is 10 and the next one is nine years old.
It is four, so four kids.
But the oldest and the youngest took it to holder
from level, Betsy DeVos, who is,
I believe, married to Dick DeVos.
I know the father, Rich DeVos, he founded Amway,
very, very successful family.
Loved and admired by anybody you ask
that's been close to him, has nothing but good things
to say about him.
My kids go to school that he funded a baseball field
that we have.
She's successful, you're successful.
She becomes US Secretary of Education.
I don't know what your father did,
aside from that he got 12 kids.
When somebody has 12 kids, you have kids
only if you believe the future looks bright. I wanna only if you believe the future looks bright.
I want to know if you think the future looks bright.
And I got a bunch of weird questions for you.
I want to ask, you know, I asked a couple of friends,
hey, I'm talking to Eric, you know, what can he say about him?
Is he the American Progosian Wagner group?
Apparently you did some business with him.
Or maybe he hired you guys.
We'll talk about that, whatever the story is behind it.
That's, yeah. That's a hard no. Okay, great. I mean, we'll talk about that, whatever the story's behind it. That's, yeah, that's a hard no.
Okay, great.
I mean, we can talk about it,
but I did not do anything with that.
You can call, any of these things that I bring up,
you can call all of them out,
then we'll have a good time with it.
PMC, some say you founded PMC,
even though it's been done before,
not in the US, it's been done or passed before.
Again, you'll give your answer to it.
We'll talk Hamas, we'll talk Israel,
we'll talk the difference between,
whether we should trust a private military contractor
or the national one, there's a lot to be talked about.
Again, you've lived a very interesting life,
but it's great to have you on the podcast.
Thanks for having me.
So what was it that caused you to say,
I'm gonna start Blackwater?
How did that happen?
to say, I'm going to start Blackwater. How did that happen?
I, well, back to the family policy.
My dad was a very successful, self-made guy,
built a business which made first die cast machines,
big machine that squeezes a mold and makes
the transmission casing of your car, the engine block,
and now they're even die casting entire Tesla chassis.
And then he made automotive parts in the early 70s
and the business really grew, was privately owned.
But family policy was you don't come
and work in the family business,
you have to go do your own thing first.
You can later, but not at the beginning.
You have to go do something completely on your own,
not associated with the family. Did he have a time limit like at what age you
can come back? Was that clear or was it kind of blurry? Kind of blurry. I don't
think he really bargained that I was gonna go join the SEAL teams but my plan
was to go 10 to 12 years in the SEAL teams which is a good time to be a SEAL
officer much beyond that you kind of get stuck at a desk. But he died of a heart attack in 95.
And I kind of threw the family into a bit of a lurch
because there wasn't a clear successor
to take over the business.
And so my mom made the right decision
and she sold the whole thing.
And I got out to help that out.
And at about the same time,
right after the birth of our second child,
my wife was diagnosed with cancer at 29.
And so I got out of the Navy and started Blackwater
really as a way to stay connected to the SEAL teams.
Got it.
And by the way, for folks that are listening,
your dad didn't just build a small business.
It's a good-sized business.
I think you sold it for like $1.35 billion,
or some number like that I read.
Is that correct?
Yeah, it was a 5,000 employee.
It was almost a billion in sales, very efficient,
very effective at what they did.
Now, what would your other two sisters do,
the two middle ones?
What business did they go into?
My middle sister has a, her family
has a significant ice cream business. Would I know about it? Hudsonville ice
cream. I make a whole bunch of private label brands for a lot of stuff that
you'd see in the grocery store shelves. And my youngest sister, they have a bunch
of car dealerships and injection molding, and she
is an ordained minister.
So how is that possible for everybody to be successful?
What did mom and dad teach?
Were there certain set of clear values and principles we expected you to do this and
then you do this and then you do that?
I guess they kind of imbued that Dutch Protestant work ethic from a very early age and
Hard work and excellence was expected
But was there with like you know when I talk to my kids, you know
I've had interviewed Kennedy and I've interviewed president Bush and I'll say and I say Kennedy
I mean RF Kennedy Robert Kennedy. I'm too young to have a great guy very nice guy
And I would ask I say so tell me what are the traditions within the family? Like, what do you do? What did your father or grandfather
expect from you? What was dinner like? What did you guys talk about? You know, we
always talk about politics. We would always debate. It was always told, go make
your money, take care of your wife, take care of your kids, take care of your
family, and then give back to public service in your own way. Politics, church,
nonprofit, whatever maybe. Was there any set of principles they passed down to you guys or was it kind of general? There's got to be some traditions. There's
no way you guys became this and by accident. We certainly went to a K through 12 Christian
school was run by the church where we're members and we traveled a lot. My dad was invited by the Soviets in the early 70s
to come there, because they wanted to buy his machines.
And so he went off to Moscow, didn't like it at all,
didn't like the surveillance state and the whole thing.
And so they made, you know, by the late 70s,
the business was starting to do okay.
Because before that it was really struggling.
My dad almost died, he had a heart attack at 42 years old
in 1973 and that really gave him perspective.
But we started to travel and he actually shipped
a Chevy Van to Europe and we did a six-week
road trip
Across Eastern Europe as well. Czechoslovakia, East Germany, all the rest. I spent my
my seventh birthday in
1976 in Berlin and I will never forget that. It was a great
I think formative moment seeing the guns the dogs dogs, the tank traps, the minefields, Akhtungminen signs, all facing in keeping people prisoner
in East Germany.
So even for a 70 year old, you can figure out maybe the socialist workers paradise is not
such a paradise.
Is he telling you this while you're going through it and son, look, this is why.
Oh, yeah, no, that's I'm teaching.
I'm seeing that. But is he teaching? Sure. Okay yeah I remember
drawing I remember rolling into Prague then Prague the capital of Czechoslovakia and the only
bright color in the whole capital was red commie stars in the buildings because the buildings
were disgusting. Wow. Dark gray from all the coal smoke. My first girlfriend at the refugee camp was Czechoslovakia, Katarina Staf.
Her older brother was my best friend, Jan Staf.
He died very early.
Good friend of mine.
Okay, so you're traveling, are you traveling
because your dad is at all connected to the government
or no, he's making money and?
Zero, no, no.
Nothing to do with travel.
That travel was purely educational to my sisters and my.
And was he ever, but he never, he was never an agent.
He was never linked to the government.
He never worked with them, nothing at all.
Nothing.
That never touched the family at all.
Did he have any interest in politics?
Did he talk politics with you guys?
Not really until 1980.
Because I remember him saying that in the late 70s,
he was paying an effective income tax rate
of like 90%.
So this is the wonderful Jimmy Carter era.
Yeah.
Right.
Yep.
And I'd watch the news with him when we talk about it, and I remember kind of my first,
the farthest back moment I remember is Nixon resigning because it was kind of a traumatic
moment for the country. And I remember seeing the helicopters
fly off the rooftop of Saigon in 75.
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So I paid attention to those things.
Tally-get it, yeah, it's interesting.
My family, mother side, communists,
that side, imperialists, so they had two divorces
within 20 years, two each other.
Married divorce, married divorce, done.
They cannot be in the same room together.
If they are, I have to call private security.
That's a fundamental difference in
a big way. By the way, to me, I think political difference is more negatively impacting the
marriage than religious difference. You can be a Christian and a Catholic or a Christian or an Atheist,
but you both believe in the same political ideas. That's more likely to work out than
a Christian and a Christian, but one is a commie, one is a imperialist, less likely for likely to work out than a you know Christian and a Christian, but one is a commie one is a
Imperialist less likely for it to work out. Yeah, I don't know. I don't know how I don't recommend it by the way
If you were I don't know how a communist could be a Christian as well
Well, you know, it is what it is. They did escape Russia go to Iran eventually and they found each other anyways, okay
So I was curious family what happened with
Raising four successful kids while he's building a business
that eventually ends up selling for $1.35 billion?
Let's go to Blackwater.
So you read all over the place,
the whole concept of private military contractors,
you hear different names being thrown out
by a bunch of different people, right?
And you're the founder of it in America
and you've told the story of really back in the days,
this is nothing new, we've always had this before. When you get out, why do you choose to go become a private military
contractor?
The SEAL teams had used private facilities since the 70s. A shooting instructor that
was a really good competitive shooter would build a small facility almost like a dojo and teams would go there.
But no one had done it on an industrial scale. And the tempo that SEAL teams would train at
and to for a deployment like the, I remember the year before I deployed, I was gone 11 of 12 months
before even deploying for another six months. Are you married at the time or no? Yeah.
Before even deploying for another six months. Are you married at the time or no? Yeah, okay. Yeah, so that's hard and
so building a Significant training facility where the teams could do a lot of that stuff
Local and still get home in time for dinner was important to me
And I wanted to stay connected because I got out of the Navy way earlier than I wanted to
And I was in the unusual. I mean, I'll think a lot of guys had the idea, I'm not original
on it, I was in the unusual position that I could fund it because funding a private
training facility in the 1990s when a major base or range facility was being closed under
BRAC like once a week, that was very counterintuitive. It was unfinancable.
And every smart financial advisor said, that's a dumb idea.
It'll never work.
So started small.
Well, had to buy a lot of land.
But I said, that's the 6,000 acres you bought.
Bought 3,100 acres to start.
And it was cut over forestry land.
I knew nothing about business, nothing about government contracting, nothing about
land development, but just kind of figured it out and you go back to the team that you
know and trust. I hired Ken Vieira, who was my training officer at SEAL Team 8. Al Clark
was our first firearms instructor and I hired Jim Dehart who was the guy that managed actually managed the facility of SEAL Team 6 and built it out.
So, you know, there's our just very talented hard driving guys that figured it out.
Now, if I would have worked with you and if I was at any of the units you were at, would
I have known that you're eventually going to start something?
Would I say this guy's probably going to start something. What I say, this guy's probably gonna start something.
Nah, not necessarily.
I kept my father's success very hidden.
So the kids, did the crew know
that you were from a wealthy family?
No, I kept it really quiet the whole time,
except after my father died,
and then that was in March of 95 like three weeks later
I had to be out in Fallon, Nevada at the Naval Strike Warfare Center because we were doing
combat search and rescue training and strike training and
We got done on a Friday and the Navy aircraft wasn't coming to move us all back until the following Tuesday
Mm-hmm, and I asked my boss. They said listen
I got all kinds of family issues, because my dad just died three weeks
earlier. Do you mind if I split? And I'll see you guys back at the team on Tuesday.
He goes, go. And my mom sent the plane.
And a couple of the guys from my platoon drove me to the airport outside the base
with a truck. And I said, said guys I got my bags to stay
here like no that's okay mr. P got a private jig on a no I and um well you're
like mom what are you doing mom why are you doing this no no it was the only way
I was gonna get back because it was out in the middle of nowhere but so that
that between those two guys have spilled the beans but they asked me of course
like wait a minute.
So you could like retire right now?
I was like well, I guess I could,
but who would want to do that?
So anyway, that was the only time
that the secret cracked.
Very interesting that you're from a very well off family.
You have money, you've traveled the world,
you've seen a lot of different things.
You probably stayed at the best hotels, you probably traveled private like you're talking
about, you guys probably own jets, you lived in beautiful homes, beautiful vacation homes,
and you chose to go into military to make your life tougher and harder. Why would anybody in
the right mind do that? Or was it the fact that they just raised you so well that it wasn't
too much money? No, I look, I always had a desire to go in the
military. I was a military history geek. Because remember, my family went to Normandy in 1980.
And I was I was the tour guide at 11. So I mean, Pegasus Ridge, and this is sword gold,
Juno Yuto Omaha. And movie did a movie inspire you to typically it's linked to a movie. Was
it a movie or a t-shirt?
The only movie about Normandy that was out then was The Longest Day, which was made in the 60s.
I probably did see that at that point, but no, I'd read.
I just read a lot of that kind of stuff.
So now you're buying the land, 3,100 acres.
You bring your three peers to come start with you.
You have the advantage that you have money,
which means you can get started with money.
And now people are kind of realizing
your family's got money.
Okay, maybe we're gonna do something with this guy.
You start, 31, hey, or 3,100 acres.
You got your stuff going.
Who's your first customer
and how do you find your first customer?
At that point, it was a West Coast SEAL team actually that
sent their guys all the way across because they didn't have any access to
good areas then and that's how we started. Our first big regular customer
was actually the Canadian Special Forces. The Canadian equivalent of Delta Force
would come and do their selection January, February, March because it was just
too damn cold to be training in Toronto. Got it. And how
did they find you? Because it's not like you're doing internet, you're running
funnels, you're doing ads, you're running it on a paper. The soft units would talk.
The soft units would talk even to people in Canada? Sure. Yeah. Tell me more.
Unpack that for me. Just like that because the US elite units would train
with Canadians, would train with the Brits, would train with the other European counterparts.
And what are they saying?
Are they saying, are you guys here about what he's doing?
Are you guys here about what Eric started?
Is that kind of what the conversation is like?
And what is he doing?
He's doing such and such.
Let me give him a call.
Yep.
And then so if you've never done this before.
Look, so why we built Blackwater the way it was is because training on government
bases was exceedingly bureaucratic. You'd go to try to check out and use a range and some sergeant wouldn't
be around and they wouldn't give you the range brief and your ammo wouldn't show up on time.
And for a SEAL team that's doing 11 out of 12 months where you're on the road and you
have all this stuff you have to train for, all these hoops you have to jump through,
then having to go through the nonsense of getting jerked around on an army base, it just didn't work. So we gave people a
country club-like experience. If you book a tee time, I'm not a golfer, but if you book a tee
time, you expect to be ready at 8 a.m. You expect the greens are going to be raked, and it's all
going to be in order. And that's what we did. Radio, brief, ammo, go. Lunch at 12 and it was a customer service organization
and that's how we ran it.
And at the same time,
till Black Order's getting started,
I moved back to Michigan
because the original business my dad started,
the die cast machine business,
because we'd sold the mother ship,
but the die cast machine business was had because we sold the mothership, but the die-cast machine business
had been kind of bumping along since started.
It was not really making money or losing money.
And I wanted, I didn't have an MBA,
but I really wanted to turn around my dad's business
and make something run well.
And I remember my dad described the president there
as the smartest engineer he ever knew. And great guy, smart guy would not change anything because we're trying to kind of do
a lean transformation kind of based on the Toyota production system to engineer out
costs and buy things smarter.
So I had at 27, I had to fire them. And that was quite an experience and kind of restaffed
the whole place with people that were much more focused
on Six Sigma and lean manufacturing, et cetera.
And that really taught me about linear flow.
If you think about old school factories
versus how a Toyota system,
a Toyota production system runs.
And that really, I mean, even the Japanese, about old school factories versus how a Toyota system, a Toyota production system runs.
And that really, I mean, even the Japanese,
when they came to compete in America in the 80s,
it really, it forced American manufacturing to wake up
and cut the waste.
Exactly.
And so seeing that and doing that to a machine tool business,
which was a 30 year old business,
and very based on very old school practices, I start to a machine tool business, which was a 30 year old business and very
based on very old school practices. I start to think that, okay, we built a training facility,
but what does the military do? It recruits, it vets, vet meaning vetting, recruits, vets, equips,
trains, deploys, and supports people to do a difficult job in a difficult place. And so really,
as Blackwater built out,
and there was actually a kind of a aspirational picture
made at the day we opened of what we wanted to look like
in 10 years.
And that's what it was.
It was became a machine, which did that.
And so later when 9-11 happened,
and we got pulled into the security business,
doing overseas deployments of people for the USG,
that put us in good shape.
And that allowed us to be the low cost competitor,
because we could process and recruit and do all that stuff
with and for the guys before they went,
much more effectively than our competitors.
So you start off with training, all one.
So that's December 26th, 1996.
We open in 1997.
So that means you don't get the real big contracts till 0102.
Correct.
The first years were very lean.
What's your revenue first year?
What kind of numbers you guys?
400,000.
OK, got it.
Second year was 800.
Then a million two, then a million six. Still haven't blown up000. Okay. Got it second year was 800 then a million two
Then a million six Still haven't blown up yet. Nope. Then it went to 12
God, that's it. That's all got it 12 35. Yep. 160 400
550 and up
Did you guys ever hit a bill and we were Oh, we were about 850. 850?
850 we topped out at.
And this is seven?
Would it be 07 or 08?
Ah, about 08.
08, okay.
So legitimate business, you're going 400, 800, 1.2, 1.6, 16 million, right?
Or 12 to 6, 12 million, 35 million.
So if you're 400 first year revenue, you brought the three guys, the average salary
for Navy SEAL today at the median is I think 97. The top 1% TALIFI, I'm not mistaken is 135,
138 today. Yeah, look, the first year or two, I still had to, I had to help with payroll.
Got it. Sure. But then, but then again, you just find people
that will find a way to win.
And we had very destructive customers,
meaning they shot a lot of stuff.
Right.
And they ended up destroying all the target systems
we bought on the outside.
And so Jim Dehart, the guy that came over from Dev Boop,
designed fantastic steel targets that everybody loved.
And so the customers started buying them and and oddly enough
the FBI
ordered in
The 11th hour of the last day of the fiscal year
Ordered $400,000 with the target target systems from us. That was the that was 400,000 of that million two
Third on the last day, you know literally like at 1155 p.m. On September 30 the last day of the fiscal year a fax machine
Starts putting out. Oh god. Yeah, 30% of our I know that's great
Of course, I know what that feels like the irony. It was the FBI. So our target systems
stat, you know
Are probably at 10 or 12 field field offices around the country now
You're I'm assuming you're losing money first year second your third year because you're not we're breaking where we broke even at
About a million two. Okay, so you're paying these guys
You're not making you're not taking any money off the table because you don't have any money to take off the table
negative so when did you know and by the way if I'm working if I got two options, okay?
I'm in the Navy seal. I'm making the 97 idea,
let's say I'm making six figures, right?
What advantage do I have?
And by the way, that has to do with time and service rank,
all this, I'm just,
well, come on, man, you're 27 years ago.
It wasn't $97,000 of payroll back then.
60,000 you want to say?
Yeah, 60.
Okay, let's say 60,000.
So 60 and the best guys are making 80. Is that fair?
We put 60 to 80. Okay, something so what what why would I work for you instead of staying in the military?
I'm assuming as a private contractor you probably have way more to offer than the military does that because they
They like the chance to do it right. What does that mean?
because in a non bureaucratic
non-sonsense way. I remember being a homo
mechanic and we would order parts and I would look at the number and I say yeah this part is $800.
I'm like what is why is this $800 and you go look it up you talk to Mercedes or who you know yeah
it's a $70 part. Yep. We're spending $800 on yes we are. What are you talking about? It's kind
of what happens here. So is that kind of what you were talking about where money was being wasted?
Yes. Like our first State Department job, which didn't come until probably 03 or 04, we
we'd been training high-end special operations units. We knew what we're doing. We knew our costs.
Yep. The first price we've submitted to State, they said we can't accept this. They said, why? It's so low, it's not deemed credible. That's the idea.
I understand. Have you been to drive tanks, the facility in San Antonio? Drive tanks?
Well, no, I used to have tanks on my farm. Have you heard of drive tanks? No. Okay, so
this place is called drive tanks. One day, crazy story, I'll tell you. I had kids, I
had two British armored personnel carriers but I'm gonna take
some people go for hay rides we had tank rides but you see you look American
you are American I'm from Iran so one day I take my kids these guys from drive
tanks reach out they say Pat we love the content we want you to come out and
bring your kids we're gonna have a lot of good time we're gonna drive over cars
with tanks we're gonna blow things up you're gonna do 50 Cal you're gonna say
I'm like,
let's go, we get a big sprinter,
we get the guys, we go.
I take both of my boys at the time.
This is five years ago.
So my oldest would be seven, youngest would be five.
We go there, there's Navy SEALs, there's Delta,
there's Special Forces, fifth group, everybody,
they're there.
And you're making bombs, you're driving on tanks,
you're doing all this stuff.
It was an incredible experience. If a person's never gone to drive tanks, you gotta go to, you're driving on tanks, you're doing all this stuff. It was an incredible experience.
If a person's never gone to drive tanks,
you gotta go to, it's a great experience.
My kids come back.
That next week, my son goes to school,
the younger one, five-year-old.
Teacher says, how was your weekend?
She says, it was great.
So what did you do Dylan?
My daddy and I made bombs and we blew buildings up.
I get a call from school.
The teacher says, you're son can't say stuff like this
because I'm from Iran so they're freaking out.
I said, well, what do my son say?
He said, well, your son said you and him made bombs
and you guys blew up buildings.
I said, my son's not lying to you.
Well, sir, what do you mean you guys made bombs?
I said, ma'am, we went to this place
in a military facility.
These are trainers, drive tanks.
Here's the video. Oh my God, he scared the kids off. I said, this is an innocent kid. These are trainers, drive tanks. Here's the video.
Oh my God, he scared the kids off.
I said, this is an innocent kid.
He's just giving you experience.
Anyways, we had a great time with it.
I asked you this because was this kind of like a hobby
or was it a business?
Did you see it being a billion dollar business?
Was it kind of like, let's see what it's gonna turn into.
Was it a clear vision?
You saying, I think we can turn this
into a billion dollar empire.
I, another formative moment was seeing the incompetence and corruption of the UN in Bosnia,
right?
The Yugoslav Civil War and, you know, UN let forces letting people just get slaughtered
at Sebranica.
So yeah, I had, and even seeing the nonsense what happened in Rwanda, UN run their mouth and the Houtis kill,
sorry, no, the Tutsis and the Houtis.
Yeah, the Houtis kill a million Tutsis
with basically farm tools in four months in Rwanda.
Come on.
So I definitely saw a need for private peacekeeping as a way to
displace the UN, which was in my mind, and proven corrupt, immoral, useless, beyond useless, they're
maligned. In your mind, are you sequencing the process of how this is going to work? Yeah, we're
going to start off as a training facility. We're going to get the word out that we're going to get
the right training again. And then all of a sudden, we're gonna be a contractor
and we're gonna do it better than the military's doing it.
Did you kind of foresee that happening?
Yes, and seeing what executive outcomes did,
which is a South African PMC that was formed
in the early 90s, the great work they did
in ending the war in Angola and literally saving Sierra Leone
from an almost an ISIS-like force called the Revolutionary United Front.
They cleaned it up in 120 days and then were forced to leave by idiots at the State Department
only to have the country retaken again by the same bad guys.
I knew there was a place to do peacekeeping and stability
operations infinitely better than what the status quo was.
And in doing so, saving millions of people
from unnecessary suffering.
When you're talking to the first three guys you hired,
are you selling them that vision?
No.
OK, so they don't know.
They're a simple one and a come over to you as the fact that.
Five and 10 meter target was,
we're gonna run a fantastic training facility
and you get to innovate tactics, techniques and procedures.
And we wanted to be a place where,
because at that point, the SEAL teams,
the JSOC units were not doing a whole lot
of close quarter battle and door kicking
and that's actually the people to really learn from then was LA SWAT. They taught the best hostage rescue.
The SWAT. Yeah, so we brought Ken Thatcher, senior guy from LA SWAT out to teach courses
at Blackwater and so we wanted to make Blackwater the repository, the crossroads of tactical
the crossroads of tactical expertise. Got it. Okay. So 400, 800, 1.2 million, 1.6 million, 12 million, 35 million. When did you get the contract where you said, guys, this thing's about
to change? What I know you said 911, but one was when they actually made it. It was actually after
the USS Cole was blown up in October of 2000, right? Navy ship blown up by a suicide
boat killed 17 sailors. They were holding unloaded weapons that they hardly ever fired
before. Because the Navy viewed firearms training as too dangerous. So they're shooting laser
simulators. So the Navy came to us having because we are training lots of soft units
and they said, could you train sailors to protect their ship, retake their ship,
all the elements of small arms, which the Navy had basically
abrogated knowledge and responsibility of. So this is still training though, right? You're still not deploying. No, correct.
Okay, so what that was that that was a seven that was a seven million dollar a year contract. I got you know,
that's that's real for us. Now it's official.
Now you're sitting there saying, guy, something happened.
But it's still training, right?
Yep.
At this point, how many former military vets, seals,
I'm talking high level soldiers do you have?
When you got the $7 million contract, how many do you have?
For that kind of training volume,
it's probably 30 instructors.
30 instructors. OK instructors, okay.
Because we had to stand up facilities in Jacksonville and Groton, Connecticut and San Diego and Bremerton, Washington.
Okay, so now that's happening. You got the $7 million.
What's the next call to say, hey, we actually need a private military contract to send soldiers out? When was that?
After 9-11, a high- level job for the CIA in Afghanistan.
How big was that?
That was 18 guys.
18 guys, got it.
18 guys, because the military didn't want to do it
with less than 250.
The military didn't want to do it with less than 250.
They asked the military to do that.
And they wanted 250 people. They said we will not do it with less than 250 people. You were able to do that. And they wanted 250 people.
They said we will not do it with less than 250 people.
You were able to do it with 18 people.
Yep.
Okay.
So when that call comes in.
And then the next one after that was a very remote, very important base that enabled a
lot of GWAT activity.
And there was 166 soldiers there
and we replaced it with 25 of our guys.
166 with 25.
In that case, they had 28 soldiers in Infantry Patoon
and 138 people supporting the 28.
And we could send 25 guys, five of which were dual-hatted,
to keep the power of the water, the sanitation,
the comms and the food running.
It's a different model. I can send 30, 40, and 50 year olds that have a lot of experience
and can fix a generator, run a radio, and fix a desal pump
versus the military sends lots of 18 and 20 year olds that can do barely one thing. So at this point, what percentage of your business is intelligence? What
percentage is muscle? What percentage is protection? The cost of overseas, of
deploying guys to weird places, that cost gets high fast. So that starts to skew the revenue, but as we're growing, it was still probably
40%, 50% training, 50% security. And then we bought an aviation business in 2003, presidential
airways, a niche little business. It was some former TF-160 guys, Richard Pair, Tim Childry.
And they had the licenses in one leased aircraft.
And we bought that.
And six years later, we had 73 aircraft
that we owned and operated everything from a 767
to a Supertocano light attack aircraft that
was fitted out with a FLIR, a G-Box, a cell phone intercept
system,
geolocation, link 16 so we could talk to all the fast movers
and it could drop laser-guided bombs.
It was magnificent.
And we actually put that on contract to JSOC
as a way for them to do very cost-effective,
close air support, cheaply.
And boy, the big Air Force, big Navy smashed that
because anything that threatened the primacy
of the trillion dollar F-35, they wanted nothing to do with.
Now, the difference between PMC and working
for national military, army, Air Force, Marines, Navy,
whatever it may be, where is my pride to work for you versus the pride
to stay, keep serving the traditional Marines, Army,
Navy, Air Force, whatever may be?
When the debate was happening over the,
whether the US would go to an all volunteer force,
it was in Congress in the early 70s. And Westmoreland, who whether the US would go to an all volunteer force. It was in Congress in the early
70s and Westmoreland who is the idiot general that really screwed up in Vietnam, who then they
made the chief of staff of the armed forces, screw up. Under who? Under Johnson and then.
Makes sense. And then Nixon. Yeah. He said, I do not want to lead an army of mercenaries.
That's what Wes Moreland,
career army officer called an all volunteer force
because the men and women were finally gonna get paid
a fair wage.
And Milton Friedman was debating him in Congress
and he said, I will serve then,
then I am served by a mercenary butcher,
accountant and barber. Because if you're not getting paid a wage
that you're due, a fair wage,
then you're not a free man, you're a slave.
So look, the big military can complain about,
well, obviously they were about fair pay,
but a contractor is, in our case,
was an American veteran that already served their country
once, volunteered to, and now they're just volunteering
to go back again and do it for pay.
Of course, they're not doing it for free.
And this idea that our contractors were paid vastly more
is also really inaccurate because our guys were only paid
for every day they were in the hot zone.
Much like, just like a roughneck gets paid to go to a rig they get paid a lot the day they come
ashore their pay goes to zero so our guys were paid to be in the hot zone to do the dangerous thing
and as soon as they left they went to zero I saw somewhere $600 a day from them is taken that's a
number I saw on the hot some times more sometimes right okay but again the military is tax-free in a combat zone all you got
all kinds of other housing allowances and all their stuff which is non-cash
compensation but they don't really see and feel but in our case it was simple
cash in a barrel head so when you if I'm working for black water I'm a
contractor there you pay me $600 and $600 is not five days a week.
It's seven days a week.
So I'm making 42.
And it could be 18 hours a day or it could be 22 hours a day.
Right?
I mean, it depends.
If the op tempos go, you turn two.
But your day is $600.
Two hours or 24 hours at $600?
Yes, but you're still in a war zone
and you're still at risk of being shot.
Sure.
We had some of our guys were wounded while asleep in their beds at night.
We have an extremely inspiring story.
There's a West Point grad Army officer, Army Ranger named Derek Wright and he was about
2006 asleep in his pod next to the embassy.
And a 107 rocket launched by Iranian surrogates
came through, blew up in his pod.
And the guys found him at the pool of brain fluid
laying on the floor.
And they stabilized him, kept him alive,
but they figured he was brain dead.
They flew him to Landstuhl, Germany, where the military hospital was.
And I remember meeting his parents and his wife, because they came through our office
because we had to quick get them a passport, basically to go say goodbye, to unplug their
loved one.
So I remember sitting there praying with them and crying with him, and off they go.
And so they got there like five days after the incident
and Cindy walks in and there's been no brain activity
and she takes her husband's hand and she said,
babe, I'm here.
And he squeezes her hand.
And it started a long road back
and she made videos and she documented it beautifully
I tear up every time because he learned to walk again and then he learned to run and
literally that rocket took the back third of his head off and
One of his eyes doesn't work well, but God bless him. He is as resilient as you could imagine
He's alive and he is a tour guide in the state capital of Texas. Get out of here. Get out of here. What a story. Wow. Wow. So yes, people can pay up,
people can, you know, throw stones at contractors getting paid. That was a guy that served his
country as a ranger and he goes back serving again and he's, you know, takes one to the head while
he's in bed. Yeah, to me, I don't have a problem with the contractors getting paid.
I'm trying to make it as efficient as possible to see what do we get better usage of our
money with, paying it to our soldiers that are putting their lives on the line or overpaying
for a product by a thousand percent they can get somebody else to negotiate so they can
save some money for the company.
Look, we have an antitrust problem all across America.
We've way over-consolidated every industry.
You used to have a hundred major defense contractors, really at five now.
That's right.
And they really behave like a cartel.
And they pay almost a brigade's worth of lobbyists, a couple thousand that infect Washington DC, contractor gets charges way too much for product
who then pays lobbyists to pay politicians
to affect more restrictions on competitors
and really more nonsense.
And so it's a very unhealthy cycle.
The next president must break up the cartel that is defense contractors, IT, big tech,
insurance, banking.
There's a really powerful book I read actually referred to by my daughter.
It's great when your kids start referring your stuff and educating you.
It's called The Myth of Capitalism.
I highly encourage your audience to read it.
And it's by Jake Tepper. And it basically makes the case that the problem in America
with income inequality. Jonathan Tepper. This is not new. This came, this is a six years
old. Yeah, I read this book. And it just, we have way over consolidated everything.
And man, we saw that loud and clear
in the defense base as well.
Yeah, there's five of them now, right?
General, we've gone through the process.
Boeing, Lockheed, Northrop, Raytheon, General Dynamics.
Yeah, and they're almost one company.
When you're a five, you're not really five companies.
You really want a company.
They jointly bet on stuff and it's
co-operative at Moons. Right, you take this one, I'll take this one, you take
that one, it's cool, I'll take the next one and they're all bully in the same
buyer. It's a cartel. Right. Makes sense. Now let me ask you this. For somebody that's
looking on private versus public, right, if I'm choosing to give you the money, do
I want somebody like you to become as powerful as
possible where all of a sudden you're saying you have 73 aircraft, 767, you have all these
guys, was there ever a moment where you're sitting there saying to yourself, I can do
this better than you guys, follow everything through me? Did you ever go through that yourself?
No, I mean, in some areas we were definitely
better because we could operate with such a smaller footprint. Where were you not better
than the U.S. government? Look, we never attempted to, endeavor to do big line formations, divisions,
brigades of tanks and it was not our thing at all. But I would argue that for insurgencies for
For those problems we had a much better model and we could do it better than the US than the US military
What I wanted what I really pushed for in
2017 was to get Trump to change tactics in Afghanistan to prevent the debacle that happened
Trump to change tactics in Afghanistan to prevent the debacle that happened. Uh-huh.
Um, Bannon, Steve Bannon, friend of mine, um, said, we're going to debate Afghan policy
right in our bed.
So I did.
I wrote it to the Wall Street Journal, submitted for an audience of one.
Trump read it while they were sitting at the Oval Office desk, circled it.
He called in the National Security Advisor who had just asked to send
70,000 more troops to Afghanistan
Trump said I don't like your your plan do this one
HR McMaster
Sure, he's a nice guy, but he was a three-star armor officer who wanted to be a four-star
And he wasn't gonna do anything contrary to the Pentagon what I advocated was basically a version of what the Special Operations Community
had done effectively, which is to train Afghan forces in a way that was cost effective and you
actually live with, train with, and fight with. Put that mentor model with them so that you have,
well, it's the same thing the East India Company did for 250 years, building local forces.
company did for 250 years, building local forces. About 5% were expats, the rest of them were locals.
But by having the continuity with professionals that provide
leadership, intelligence, communications, medical,
logistics, expertise attached to them,
it's like giving a big brother training wheel support
to those units.
And there was like 90 some battalions that we're going to attach to.
So it would have been about 3600 and then there was about 90 aircraft we would have
bought, brought, we already had a lot there, or just taken over the Afghan aircraft, but
fly them effectively.
The US makes the mistake that they built the Afghan army
in the mirror image of the US military,
heavily dependent on contractor support,
heavily dependent on high-end laser-guided bombs
and all the other stuff,
really forgetting how the Afghans wage war
and doing the basics of logistics.
So we're gonna support the Afghan troops effectively.
People love veterans, people love to say, people love veterans,
but they hate contractors, but really in this case, it was the same thing. Just a soft guy going
back to serve again with reliable air power that would show up. And then you take away the real
source of corruption the Afghan forces was the fuel, the payroll, the munitions, food.
was the fuel, the payroll, the munitions, food. And you basically take some, put an accounting firm
in charge of that, take that away from the Afghans.
And we could have done, we could have saved about 95%
of what the US was spending.
I mean, meaning our program costs less than 5%.
And there was a big policy meeting at Camp David,
the summer of 2017, I was supposed to go
as a backseat to the agency,
and I was blocked by Mattis and...
By Mattis?
Yeah, Mattis was a five star,
basically it was a five star general as the sect dev,
as conventional as it is long.
And the sad thing is, for all that money
and all those flags, nobody
has been held account for wasting blood and treasure in Afghanistan. And it's disgusting.
Those guys, those guys, those guys all have board seats. They all have their full pensions
and they lost. They lost us. They lost the taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars.
And we just pissed away a lot of great Americans
in an effort that was unnecessarily wasteful.
Eric, how much of your $2 billion contract you got
was for Afghanistan?
Probably a third.
A third of it was for Afghanistan.
You guys was $600 plus dollars of it? Okay?
So so let me ask this, you know for me
In the last whatever the biggest parts of those would have been building the Afghan border police
Building the Afghan narcotics and addiction unit
We did a lot of aviation support flying supplies to
All the remote bases of the US guys.
And then some of it was for diplomatic security.
Do you think, you know, the last few years, lowest trust the US population has in the
politicians as well as mainstream media.
They just don't trust them, right?
Why would they?
You can't blame them.
Then you got CIA, FBI, lowest it's ever been in a long time.
Do you think we need those organizations
and if you had it your way if you had the influence would you have the military
be set up the way it is right now would you have 50 PMC's competing against
each other to provide the best service for the for the US government? I think
one of the best roles that a PMC could do here here's the thing. We have a post office, that's a federal government activity.
Sure.
You have FedEx.
You can drop off a FedEx package.
In some cases, you can pick up at a post office.
But the difference is FedEx operates
as a private sector benchmark.
Because Fred Smith wrote the paper proposing FedEx,
I think it was at Harvard
They said that's a terrible idea in the game of C. Yeah, well hold my beer. He does it
Yep, and and now FedEx serves as a benchmark and it's definitely made the post office wake up and be more efficient
Maybe not perfect yet, but it's definitely better than it was and that's the best rule that the private sector can be is to provide competitive
pricing that it was. And that's the best rule that the private sector can be is to provide competitive pricing reality checks on what some of these things should be.
You didn't answer the question. So do you think I'm asking?
No, should it all be PMCs? No, absolutely not. But there's a lot of functions that the government
does that can be bid out and let the government bid to do that or let the private sector. I remember
to be bid out and let the government bid to do that or let the private sector. I remember in like 2005, the Bush administration was, they were talking about hiring 2,000 or 5,000
more Border Patrol agents. And we got called to testify as to how much it would cost to
train those. And CBP, Customs and Border Police were saying it was going to be like a hundred and
eighty thousand dollars to train each Border Patrol agent and we got called we looked
at the curriculum to say well we can do that for about 40 and so we were not very popular
with CBP because we could and no shit we knew our costs we could do it for a quarter of what they were
who
Who should the American people trust more to do the work?
better
PMC's or the US government like if I'm again because the the government has lost a lot of credibility last few years right
Who should they trust more you guys?
First of all first of all we as country, we should just spend less. Our
government will suck less if it's smaller. We spend too much in social programs.
We spend way too much in military spending. We don't have the money. I mean, we're 34 trillion
in debt. We have grave danger of our currency collapsing. Putting
the military, putting all the agencies
on a severe diet is a very healthy thing
because it will force people to start to think
outside the box and say, this is the mission,
I still gotta get done.
I don't have this billion dollar fire hose
to throw money at problems.
Anytime a business goes into crisis, right, when it goes into a bankruptcy and you have a bankruptcy trustee and they come in and they force people
to realign their thinking, that's it oftentimes is very healthy for a business. We need to
do that to all aspects of our government. So I'm not trying to avoid your question, but competitive
reality check benchmarking is absolutely necessary to really make our
military spend less. I mean remember, in defense spending we spend more than the
next 17 countries combined. That's insane. That's grotesque and we're not that good
at it. I mean now you have the Houthis, which are basically behaving like long range pirates,
armed by the Iranians,
have closed the Babel Mendab, the waterway,
and is really choking off Egypt.
Egypt is in danger, grave danger.
40% of their GDP depends on Suez Canal traffic,
which is now dropped by 90%.
Last week, the Egyptian currency devalued over 25%.
Insane.
So you have 110 million people, a very poor population, prone towards Muslim Brotherhood
Iqwan attitudes.
The only reason the Iqwan is not in power there is because CC took over.
You talk about danger, all the equipment
of the Egyptian army in the hands
of a Muslim Brotherhood leader, that's a big problem.
Yes, again, I'm asking this question
maybe for my own self-interest
and I think there's other people like me
that are interested, meaning.
There's a group of people that will sit there and say,
well, they're all doing it for money.
The NBA plays the game for money.
People make movies to make money.
If you can do it with your passion
and you make the money even better.
Capitalists builds a business and does it better.
If you're not getting paid a wage,
you're not a free man, you're a slave.
That's right.
And so that goes back to the message you said earlier.
And people join the military and you have to pay them well to do so
We're not we're not even given a raise. I mean right according to what
What we're blowing blowing a lot of money that we should just be paying guys directly on on lots of nonsense
That's mobile again. Well, what could it actually work if the US government just like you're talking about the five
Contractors we have that were buying stuff through Boeing, you know, General Dynamics, all these guys, would
it work if we had 50 PMCs that the government hired to work through?
Would that could that work?
Think of it this way, in the continuum of statecraft, you have diplomacy on one end.
So you have embassies and international conferences.
Right.
And on the other end, you have a military that is big and conventional
aircraft carriers and tank divisions and nuclear weapons
You really don't want to leave that you don't want to have to deploy that ever because it's very expensive. They should be there
fearsome
with maximum deterrence like a big
Snapping dog Waiting to be let off leech, but the middle is the intelligence world with maximum deterrence, like a big snapping dog
waiting to be let off-leash,
but the middle is the intelligence world.
And that's where we've fallen down
because the agency, the CIA,
is not doing anywhere near the covert actions
using the authorities that it was designed to do
to solve some of these problems internationally.
And now, and even more so, you have the Pentagon
trying to wade into all these little small conflicts,
and they basically crowd out the private sector
from helping and correcting these situations.
You know, like Guyana?
Guyana isn't-
Venezuela, the oil.
Correct.
So Venezuela wants to take 70% of Guyana's land, the Essequibo area.
And that is a perfect example of Guyana needing a PMC.
They need surveillance, they need some specialty manpower to train and advise them.
They need some lift aircraft, they need some maritime interdiction capability, all of which a PMC can do. But the Pentagon goes waiting in there
backed by the big five to say, ah, we're here to sell some helicopters and we're going to
sell an aircraft. And it's all nonsense. And Guyana is going to get rolled. And I predict
they'll get, they will get pressurized hard here by April or
May.
Okay, so let's-
So now you have another country that's going to get damaged due to a lack of American credibility
and success.
I don't disagree.
So if an expat goes to a PMC, you know when you join the Army, you join the Navy, hey,
I solemnly swear and you're kind of giving your oath that you know you're gonna, is there an oath when they join a PMC or no, it's just a job? So meaning
well why would I when guys went to work for Blackwater? Yeah. They swore the same oath that
they did when they joined the military. Why does it matter if I'm doing it for a private contractor
though? Because we serve, because we're Americans working for America Did you guys ever take contracts for a company countries that are not in America?
Sometimes training contracts sure training contract. Yeah, but nothing more than that. It was all training. Okay training
So so you know when you're when you're watching what's going on today? Okay?
You watch Ukraine you watch. Let's specifically stick to Ukraine for now
and then we'll get into some of the other ones.
You watch Ukraine and
Hey, we're gonna do border, you know
Bill, $118 billion. You guys are saying no to the border bill two weeks later. No, it's a $95 billion bill
$60 billion is going to Ukraine, right? Yeah, and where that money is gonna end up
You have no idea where that money is gonna end up, right? And Kamala here is going to say, we're going
to keep spending money until that, that, that. How similar is Ukraine to what we did with
Afghanistan and what's different about it?
Ukraine is a, we need to bring that war to a close because all Ukraine is doing now
is destroying itself demographically.
They are chewing up the next generation of manpower
that they can't really replace right now.
They don't have enough manpower.
The western defense base is
pathetic
and you're not going to out-conventional war the Russian bear.
And I would say a ugly piece is better than a
Whatever their idea of an idea war is well, what is an ugly piece though meaning freeze the lines straighten the lines
except
Let them have Crimea. Let them keep Crimea Dnesk lahansk whatever
They need to, it is not
certainly the tax, it's not the American taxpayers obligation to spend another $100
billion in Ukraine when there has been significant corruption and really nothing to show for
it.
But why do so many people support it, Eric? I mean, you're saying that, so somebody may
say, it's easy for you to say,
so should we just let a dictator do its part
and kill all these innocent people that he's killing?
Are you saying we leave it alone
and we allow Putin to get what he wants?
I mean, half the country voted for that, right?
There, you know, the disgusting thing
is all these people that say,
ah, support Ukraine, spin a globe in front of them.
99% of them couldn't even find Ukraine on the map.
So don't tell me what their opinion is.
Their opinion doesn't really matter because they're idiots.
You think they're idiots.
And I think I think a shocking amount of the people
that have these strong social media opinions on
Ukraine have no freaking idea where Ukraine is or what the realities are
and so I think social media is a is not a great influence on our body politic or
on our society at all. I don't know if I disagree with you but the question is
somebody is converting these people that you claim idiots, right?
So the question that becomes I read this quote by this lady who said it the other day
1% of the population controls the world. It's a smaller percentage, but you get the idea
4% of population are their puppets
90% percent of the population are zombies
5% are trying to wake up the zombies, the 1% make sure that
the 4% stops the 5% from waking up to 90%.
I don't know if you cut that whole thing that we're going through.
I think Sal was trying to do the math.
So there's a lot of math going on here.
For a guy that made a lot of money, I'm sure you're following through on the math here.
But the point is this, forget the 90% of zombies, okay?
The 1% that are advocating to the 5% of the 4%
of their, not the profits, but disciples,
and they're going and selling everybody.
These guys could be in mainstream media.
These guys could be in business.
These guys could be in Hollywood.
Why are those guys, the people that are smart
people, they're not dummies. Why do they think this is a good idea to keep giving Ukraine
money? Is there an incentive behind closed doors to them that we don't know about? Is
that the only thing that drives them? Or do some of these guys actually think we're doing
the right thing?
I think people are highly susceptible to propaganda. Highly susceptible to propaganda.
Yeah, look, the Russians were wrong to invade Ukraine.
Absolutely.
But I don't know that the West could have also handled
the whole situation much differently
because there is all kinds of assurances made
that NATO would not extend eastward after 1992. And from a Russian perspective, now
they lost 22 million people in World War II defeating the Nazis. And so for them looking
out and seeing more unfriendly countries on their border than any time since what May of 1940
That's a that's a problem. That's a red line for them. And they kept saying stop stop stop this idea of making a
Ukraine a NATO member bad idea. It should it shouldn't have been on the table beforehand and
You know, I even offered I offered the administration before the invasion, because I noticed that
there was the Russians are even canceling orders, defense orders at the end of 2020
before the, no, at the end of 2021. And I wrote a paper and I sent it up through a friend in JSOC without my name on
it so they can't use the IHEDARC prints card. And it basically laid out that at that point
there was some almost 500 aircraft set to be retired from the US inventory. So literally
scheduled to be flown from an active squadron to the desert Davis-Monten Air Force Base,
the Boneyard, and parked for eternity, written off to zero value to the taxpayers. I said,
make that a Lend-Lease package. Almost like when Roosevelt gave 50 destroyers and some
aircraft and a bunch of guns to the Brits in like 1940, Len Lise. And I said, make it
a combination of Len Lise and the flying Tigers, a good use of a private contracted capability
because Ukraine needed air power. They need a lot more air power. So I said, perfect. There is 50 some f-16s 55 f-15s and another 40
810s perfect
Fly those to Ukraine Biden can make an announcement
Ukraine is not going to be a NATO a member of NATO
But they're gonna have an Air Force and here it is and I could have put contracted pilots in those aircraft
And you know what if you lose 20 or 30 percent of the aircraft
that's okay that's what ejection seats are for that would have been a significant deterrent
force the whole program would have cost like 400 million bucks which was when you're talking
about no okay no that we looked at we looked at buying motors Itch, which is a company that makes
turbo engines, and some idiot made wild allegations about that.
That was three years ago.
That was a simple plan to buy a turbomaker.
But no, went all the way up to Sullivan and the National Security Council,
and of course they never acted on it.
But again, because you have people in those jobs without experience that have never deployed
aircraft themselves.
They've never done that, so they get told by some Air Force officer, well, that's impossible,
they could never staff those aircraft.
In that sense, there are hundreds of former military aircraft flown by contractors today
in America, and they're
flown as opposition squadrons training against the U.S. Air Force and U.S. Navy for their
readiness. So it was a very applicable model and it could have, I believe 150 ex-U.S. military
combat aircraft showing up in Ukraine. That's a significant deterrent and I bet you it would
have stopped the war before it even started.
So why'd you stop doing this? Why'd you stop? Why don't you still do the business? I mean,
you sound like you're-
Because the left and the idiots in Washington so hate any ideas that are innovative or different
that interrupt the money train, the very corrupt money train from the Uniparty, Lindsey Graham, just as bad as any Democrat
on spending more money to defense contractors and washing it through.
And what do we have to show for it?
What great military successes do we have for the last 25 years?
Remember after 9-11, what did the Pentagon want to do?
So Bush goes to meet with his National Security Cabinet five days after 9-11.
While the Pentagon is still smoldering,
the most expensive military in the world at that point with like a $700 billion budget,
they wanted to do bombs, missiles,
and a Ranger raid in October of 2001, and they wanted to wait until the following April and do a mechanized
invasion via Pakistan. That's the best the Pentagon came with. It was the CIA, go for
black, and counterterrorism center, and they said, money, authorities, three weeks, the
flies will be walking on the eyeballs of enemies. That was innovative.
They had done asymmetric unconventional warfare and with less than a hundred special operators
and case officers backed by air power, smashed the Taliban.
They were truly on the run.
That model worked for six months until the big conventional Pentagon showed up and then
they screwed it up for the next 19 and a half years.
And basically replicated the same Soviet battle plan.
If you read a book called the bear that bear the bear went over the mountain.
That's what the Soviets did.
In fact, our base locations were the same places.
The Soviets were followed the same plan.
So you telling that story?
What's your point of telling that story?
Are you telling it to say how bad it is right now?
If that's what you're doing, why did you get out of the business if you think you're fully qualified
to be able to expose that and make it better?
Why did you get out of the business?
Because the black water was so attacked and the regulatory state was thrown at us.
I paid about two and a half million dollars a month in legal fees
for two years.
60 million.
Yeah.
I paid the highest per capita fine in State Department history from Hillary Clinton for
no actual damage to national security.
So they've, of all the stuff that was thrown at us because black order was bad after Nisir
Square and the left really came for us. We fought off all the audits, Defense
Crown Track Management Agency and all we came through that all clean but the one
place we could not fight we couldn't litigate was on export licenses because
if we if we litigated they would stop all export licenses and it would stop the
business because you have to be able to export
Body armor or a helmet or a gun to do a security or training job
And so they stuck us with the highest per capita fine and even in their study They acknowledged that there was no actual export of no damage to national security. So what they ended up finding us for?
was exporting
helmets Body armor plates etc. So if we were working for
the State Department, diplomatic security, another part of the State Department does
the licensing called defense trade controls, and they're kind of moving at their own pace.
And so we have a license into them to export stuff for our guys, which the diplomatic security
service is demanding. I need 50 guys in this town in Iraq,
next week, go, go, go.
My license is in, it hasn't come back,
I'm not gonna send these guys naked.
Yeah, we sent the body armor, we sent the helmets,
and they fined us like $500,000 per helmet.
That kind of nonsense, and it was just politics.
So I started the business as a way to stay connected
to the community I loved and to serve my country
and to just get repeatedly kicked in the head.
Yeah, I'm about done with that.
How many people, like, how many PMCs do we have right now
the size of Blackwater peak
when you guys were doing 850 a year in America?
There's really not any integrated ones left.
And they've all, like Blackwater now is owned by BlackRock,
or no, by Apollo, another freaking New York hedge fund.
And it's run like a typical Beltway bureaucratic firm.
But you're getting out, you're contributing to that, no?
If you get out and, because think about it,
okay, how many people like you are there, and I know what you're thinking. You're like, do you know you get out and because think about it, okay If you how many people like you are there and I know what you're thinking you're like
Do you know how hard this was do you understand how tough this job is I get that I
Honestly, no it fair. It's a fair criticism
Because if I look back I
was
2007 I was 36 years old, 37 years old.
I did not have an older me as a mentor.
Nobody that I knew in Washington or anywhere had gone through the regulatory proctology
that we had, the bureaucratic assault, the media assault.
I mean, at that point, I was doing, we were doing very legitimate
co-ordaction programs from the agency that I was even involved in personally on top of
all the training and security aviation and stuff.
And so we kind of built and prepared to help our country deal with threats abroad, not
planning for the bureaucratic and media and political assault that we came under back
in Washington. But if I could send a, if I could send myself a note back to a, when
I started the business, I would have just said, don't work for the State Department.
They're not worth it. For all the great work we did. I don't care what happens to them.
Not worth my people. Find somebody else.
That's, that's the one thing, what else?
But even having gone through all the shit, the gauntlet,
even if I had to pare it back down to a 30 or 50 man
business down from a thousand man or 3,000 men,
I would have, hindsight, I probably would have done it.
Because it was it it was
Such an extraordinary team. They were the best that team that management team
Punched so far above its weight. It would run circles around the fortune 500 How many of them are still there with none? Okay, so your kids you have 12 kids, right?
So so we have a double Brady bunch family. I had seven she had five so seven is still a lot
He used it. Oh, yeah, so you got a good side got four
I'm like you know, I'm a small timer compared to you having seven and twelve kids. Okay, so seven twelve kids
Do you do you think the future looks bright for those guys if somebody doesn't choose to?
Expose what these guys are doing on the military side because the fewer guys like you out there you create fewer competition if you do the bullies are
just gonna go more and you know they're gonna they're gonna be able to take
advantage the system more and have more and more control and my my concern is
the following so you ran a PMC okay successful one 850 a year you know what
the next PMC is gonna look like?
Probably robots, AI, God knows what the next level
of PMC is gonna look like.
We've seen it, I mean it's not like
it's not a believable thing, right?
You see in the military what Guy creates,
he's got all these.
There's an interesting window to what that looks like.
That's what I'm saying, I think it is a little window.
There's a book called The Profession,
written by Steven Pressfield and
That's the guy that wrote gates of fire about thermopylae also wrote
The Lionsgate, which is a very interesting book on the 67 war
But he wrote the profession which is written in like 2030
set in 2030 and
At that point the Iranians invade Saudi Arabia, they take the oil fields in the US
because of basically Middle East fatigue doesn't send any troops and so what do they do? The Saudis
end up hiring the successor company to Blackwater who cleans up and does it and it's a very interesting
perspective how that force is organized and a lot more mobile, fast, and drones.
And I would say the real lesson out of the Ukraine conflict now is that small
FBV drones or small quadcopters that can drop munitions, even in a high
electronic warfare environment, is exceedingly potent and a true asymmetric capability that the
US military is, I mean, the Russians are paying attention.
They are building and learning.
I was just at the Saudi defense show a couple weeks ago, and there's all kinds of Saudi
firms marketing their loitering munitions and with videos of them smashing Western tanks, Paladin how it's hers and an M triple seven, you know guns
on you know
Without without damn it without without stopping. So it's
the US military needs to pay attention to those things because the the change of
Equipment and tactics and warfare is very real
Who's the modern day Eric Princes?
They're Eric Princes right now trying
to do what you did or no.
Are they any formidable ones that are ambitious,
driven, crazy enough to do it?
I'm not saying I wouldn't build a PMC again.
Okay, good.
All right, maybe we're bringing them
out of retirement today.
An announcement's been made.
Okay, so let me continue my questions.
This is good.
I'm enjoying where we're going with this.
I mean, look, what I really tried
to get the Trump administration to accept,
and even the Biden administration,
was a rationalization, a stay-behind plan for Afghanistan
to keep the lights on, to keep the Afghan government in power,
put the Taliban on their knees, and make them take a deal.
Yeah, that would have been a full-spectrum PMC
But instead I would not I would mean the analogy what and and now billions of dollars right every year in whatever aid
I would not do a PMC to just play defense and be a bodyguard for the State Department. No, I would do
Do it if you you could actually do offensive combat units that could go and do small scale counterinsurgency
kind of stuff.
The Russians contacted me in 2011.
I went to Moscow November.
They said please come and build a black water here.
Here's the land, all the rest.
I actually went shooting with their Alpha group. This this was before they went into Ukraine, even in 14.
So there was a preset and peace, love, and happiness
with the Russians.
Obviously I said, no, I can't do that.
But it was interesting.
They fully embraced what the private sector can do.
And...
Are they doing it?
The Russians have never really integrated
air land battle and maneuver and
The integrating fusing that surveillance
I would argue. I think I could have built a better PMC than Progosin did but
Wagner group. Yeah Because that was a very very conventional force. Did you guys ever do anything? Did you ever meet him or no? Never did never had a communication?
Nothing zero point zero zero zero zero zero got it because somewhere talks about black water offered service to
Yeah, that's a a
That's a newspaper if you can call it that funded by an Iranian communist
From the today part you got to give him credit. It's actually pretty good spin if it's a fuck those guys
Who is this company by the way? Do you know it's a it's a ball this up? I'm actually curious
It's it's funded by Pierre Omadar. Okay whose parents were Iranian communists
Which they stayed in Iran?
Yeah, that's from the Mossad air camp Al Jazeera wrote it or who wrote it? Intercept. Intercept wrote it. Okay. So you're there, you're in Russia. They're
wanting you to create a PMC there. This is a year after you, so 2011. So this is a
year after you sold. So 13 years ago, you're 41, I want to say, 40 years old.
Okay, so you still, you know, you have a lot of the stuff is fresh in your mind.
If you really wanted to do it, you could do it.
Did you ever meet Putin on your trip there?
Or you never met him?
Okay.
So let's stay on this point here with the PMCs,
but also a little bit with Russia.
So the house and Republicans push back on this border deal
that was disguised as a border deal for $118 billion,
but only $20 billion was going to the border,
$60 billion was going to Ukraine.
Two weeks later, they just come out
and they call it the $95 billion bill.
And all those numbers you're throwing around,
it's disgusting, they say,
oh, we're gonna spend $20 billion on the border?
It's all nonsense, it's all a game, and that's the problem.
We can say the Republicans are in charge of Congress,
then if they really are, starve the beast,
beat the litimide, cut everything down to size.
We cannot afford all the nonsense
that we're spending money on.
And the best thing America could do as a society,
as a government, as a people,
is put the whole thing on a very severe diet. I think a lot of people look at what Millie in Argentina has done
in like two months in office. That's right. It's the equivalent of him cutting a
four or five hundred billion dollars out of American budget. That's what he's done
in Argentina. That's right. God bless that man. Yeah, you saw the meeting with him.
Any man? I don't know if you saw that one. Oh yeah, I was there. Yeah. Look, anybody that
campaigns with a chainsaw, I could identify with. Yeah. So, so let me stay on this one
eighteen. Then I go to 95, 60 going to Ukraine, 60 billion going to Ukraine. They say no. But
hear me out. Let me get my question. They say no. After they say no, the media blames
the Republicans. All of a sudden, Navalny dies. Okay. Whether it's a blood cloth, you know,
a Ukrainian spice as it was blood cloth,
but everybody else says no, Russian spice killed him.
Whatever the story is, many people believe
that Putin may have taken out as opponent.
That's what a lot of people are saying.
And if that's the case, then the following week,
US puts 500 sanctions on Russia,
500 sanctions on Russia, 500 sanctions on Russia,
three out of four banks in China,
largest four, the largest banks in China,
three out of four, all say moving forward,
we're not doing business with China.
These are all bigger than JPMorgan Chase in China.
So.
Bigger with China or bigger with the,
or doing business with the US.
They will not do business with Russia.
They will not do business with Russia.
So I can give you the bank's names, Rob.
If you want to pull up the bank's names, I believe you. I'm not questioning that.
One of the industrial and commercial bank of China, the China Construction Bank of China.
ICBC.
The only one that didn't do it, that still allows, is the agricultural bank of China, all bigger than JPMorgan Chase.
How much of this do you think is...
You worked with the CIA before, you know how those guys
work, you know, if they want to overthrow a government, a country, a president, a leader
that they don't like, they can do it in many different ways.
Do you think there's anything going on here?
I don't think, I think you think a little too highly of that organization anymore.
I think too highly of that organization anymore. I think too highly of that organization.
I think you're over projecting what their capability is,
or what their willingness is.
Let's change the capability.
How about motive?
Is their motive still high if they
want to get rid of somebody?
Do they still have high motive when they don't like somebody
and say, let's target this guy, let's get rid of him?
Is the motive still high?
I don't know.
I come back to the, you've heard of Havana syndrome?
No.
Pull up Havana syndrome. It started in Havana. There was US diplomats working out of the
embassy that suddenly got hit with effectively a microwave weapon.
The sound, yes.
Yeah, a microwave weapon and it's giving them serious TBI and screwing up their vision and
hearing and then it was in Columbia and Vienna and Delhi and even in Washington D.C. and
these are real problems definitely caused by it's not made up in people's minds.
And for the agency to say, well, it's all in your head, that's a problem. That's an organization I have a problem with.
If you're asking your people to go do difficult,
dangerous things, right?
Because if you're sending a case officer out,
they're literally committing an operational act,
a crime that can get them killed in a country
to convince someone to betray their country
or their friends
and operational act and active intelligence.
And yet they're not even acknowledging these attacks
on their own people, I have a problem with that.
So do you think Navalny was killed by Putin?
Do you think Putin is a bad guy?
Do you think some of this stuff that's happened
is simultaneously right after them saying no to the 95 billion, do you think games are being played or no, it's just whatever we
see is exactly what it is?
No, of course there's games being played.
And look, Putin has a, opponents of Putin have a way of falling out of windows a lot.
So yeah, obviously there's a lot of directed hits
all through there for anybody that's appointing him.
There's some kind of a parliamentary election in March.
So, Navalny having a fatal accident or whatever he had,
doesn't surprise me, sadly.
Doesn't surprise you.
No.
From being on the inside, not on the inside,
maybe seal, I know you're not gonna say on the inside,
but were there things, Eric, were there things you knew
that, you know, because you're getting certain contracts,
you're communicating with certain people,
were there things you knew that the media would report on and you're like no way
that's what's happening. I'm part of that and I know that's not what's going on
right now. Were there things like that? That happens all the time on a almost
daily basis. How big of a scale was it? Or were just like small things, that they're
bullshitting, it's not a big deal but they're bullshitting on this, that's not a big deal but they're lying on this were just like small things. Ah, they're bullshitting. It's not a big deal, but they're bullshitting on this.
Ah, that's not a big deal.
But they're lying on this.
Or some of the things were so big,
we were like, this is ridiculous how they're selling
on American, they're buying it.
Some of, look, some of the nonsense
that you see in the media is driven by
the competition of the internet.
And so they are all in the race to be the first out
with a story, which is not so well- so well checked and they try to make it sensational to make it
click-worthy effectively click bait and so yeah truth has definitely been the
victim of some really sloppy journalism and then you add to that nation-state
sponsored propaganda whether it's from the Russian side or the Ukrainian side or the Chinese or
Cutter or from different interest organizations the United States
There's there's a lot of propaganda in the world and so I I guess I try to cut through that
I travel a lot and I meet with a lot of people that are first-hand
Participants and a lot of those things that are happening. I can at least ask them what they saw happen.
Got it, got it.
And I give you maybe a different kind of a,
yeah, because I wonder some of the stuff we're seeing right now
just feels like it's coming straight out of a movie.
Like it almost doesn't even make sense
when you see some of these things.
Like even a maybe a recent event that just happened,
AT&T a couple of days ago.
I don't know if it happened to your-
Yeah, I think that was a Chinese cyber attack.
You think so?
Yeah.
Why do you say that?
I would predict that was a warning,
a trial run before they go do more aggressive things
on Taiwan in April or May.
So is that a way of saying?
I would expect provocation by the Maritime Militia
or some of the islands,
so there's Taiwan Island, Formosa,
and there's smaller ones like Qimoy and Matsu,
which are right up against the Chinese,
actually the Chinese mainland.
I can see some incidents there where they seize those
or stage an incident or an accident,
and they end up putting
hundreds of Chinese maritime militia, which are just PLA troops called maritime militia,
and they'll see what the West does. Is Biden going to roll an aircraft carrier if that happens?
And so they will test and see if there's consequences. Test and see if there's consequences.
They now do hundreds of Chinese Air Force aircraft
that overfly Taiwanese airspace all the time without consequence. They shoot missiles over
Taiwan or Japanese territory even without consequence. If you allow them, China is an ancient society and they will slummy slice.
They will keep pushing, right?
You know, you can cut it really thin and they might take three little slices, but they've
moved.
They've moved the ball in their direction where they want to be.
And Trump was the first president that came along that said, hey, they're like a neighbor that moves the yard fence into your yard six inches a year.
And Trump was the first one that said, hey, get the hell back on your side of the line.
I can tell you, I spent enough time in China during the Trump administration. They were spooked
by him. They were, they were the trade policies and the controls on certain technologies not going to China really spooked them.
What's your level of speculation on this being China?
If you were to say over and under, I'd say 70% is China, 50% is China.
What would you say on the AT&T incident?
70%.
Okay.
So let's just say that 70% China.
Are they doing it and telling US that we did it? Like are they doing? Okay.
So they're doing it and they're saying break contact on Taiwan and or more to follow.
Got it to say we are capable of doing way more than this if you screw with this. Okay.
So let me ask let me go a little bit deeper with this because we have lots of asymmetric capability
inside the United States already. What does it look like? Give us a picture of how ugly this could be, what would China's capable look? Look, China
from a CI, counterintelligence perspective, they've had the Confucius
Institutes at American universities for decades, which are Chinese
government-funded interest and communication centers on campuses.
They have the Thousand Talents program program where they would task smart Chinese to go...
Thousand Talent program. Thousand Talent program where they would task smart Chinese to go study
in a specific university to gather intel on a specific thing. So they're tasked to go burrow in,
learn, do, follow, take that tech back to China. They have the United Front Works Department
all through the United States.
So you have a lot of Chinese diaspora that are here
that the Ministry of State Security still has their hooks in.
And because there's family members back in China
that they can hold in danger to make that person in America do what they want
if the if the FBI was serious about CI the
The Communist Party members have to check in and go for training at least every six months
so
there's a
It's called the general. a, it's called the general,
I think it's called the general management department.
It's like the HR department of the Chinese Communist Party
and they oversee the training you have to do every year.
It's almost like reserve duty where they have to come in
and get their party indoctrination.
If they were smart, surveil every consulate,
every known Chinese facility and see who's
going in and out of there, those are the CCP members that are here in the United States
working, living, studying, and some of them even working for the US government.
So yeah, they have a massive installed base of influence and covert action already, and
that's mostly on the collection side.
And because of the massive illegal flow of migration,
there's a lot of Chinese males, military-age males,
they're not all Chinese soldiers,
they're not all Chinese spies.
There's a lot of men,
there's like 40 million males of marriage age in China
with no prospects of marrying a female
because of sex selection abortion. when they had one child policy
the parents would abort a female baby and
Have a male so they have so these these dudes are in China with a economy not doing great with no prospects of a female
They say hell I'm I'm going to America now if only 2% of those millions are bad
I'm going to America. Now, if only 2% of those millions are bad, still really bad.
So again, that is a serious CI problem
that needs to be mopped up.
On the cyber side, AT&T, phone goes out, right?
So can they?
Knocked out 911 service.
That's right.
So can they, what does their cyber attack capabilities
look like?
Like if you were to paint a picture, what could it look like? Quite significant. And if they have, if there's
Huawei switches and any of that Chinese telecom infrastructure in the United
States, which is what Trump was right to ban and to push other allies to ban.
When the daughter was trying to come in from Canada and she was doing business
with Iran and Huawei no longer could do business here. I remember that. Yep. Um, but before that, there was a lot of Huawei switches installed.
And so who knows what, uh, what back doors that, uh, you know,
Huawei was started by a X PLA Colonel, uh, from the intelligence business.
So yeah, there's no, no, no shocker there.
So, but, but, but paint paint a picture meaning, for example,
do they have the capability of the week of the election
to have 300,000 phones, you know, in make life challenging
in certain zip codes, certain areas that maybe are going
to be politically voting on one side or the other
to keep the
left or Biden in, are they capable of being able to do something like that?
They understand asymmetric warfare very, very well.
So yeah, think of the permutations of nonsense that they can pull.
They'll probably do it.
Okay.
So let's just say they do do it.
What they are doing now is sponsoring the fentanyl epidemic.
China.
Absolutely, unequivocally fact.
The precursor drugs produced actually around Wuhan,
oddly enough, the same place that COVID leaked from.
And the stuff is shipped to Venezuela,
Venezuela to Mexico, formulated into fentanyl.
And I mean, think about it, all these fentanyl deaths,
like 109,000 Americans killed by fentanyl,
and it's a normal drug dealer,
doesn't wanna make a drug that kills its customers.
Dead customers don't pay, they don't buy, right?
That is absolutely pushed to a fatal level
as a true disruptive destruction to American society.
And they and they need to feel consequences for that.
The son of YouTube's former CEO Susan just died from fentanyl.
YouTube's CEO, former she resigned a couple of weeks, a couple of years ago.
Her son just passed away, tragic death from fentanyl. Yes, so I'm all right about it
Okay, but I'm trying to go a little bit. Did you watch the movie leave America alone or leave America behind?
The movie with Barack Obama that he was the have you seen that movie or no? No, no, I haven't seen that
Why are you smiling? I
Wouldn't say bro. I'm the world behind I wouldn't I
smiling. I wouldn't say Barack Obama. Leave the world behind. I wouldn't, Barack Obama would not be on my top 10 filmmaker list. Well if there's anything that I would want you to watch as this one, not because it's a great
movie. When you watch it, you'll see, well I'm surprised you haven't seen it by the way. It is a very weird movie.
Very. There's a scene in this movie where a massive ship, okay, is coming towards, we can't play this obviously
for obvious reasons, but a massive ship is coming towards the beach and the daughter,
this baby is sitting there saying that ship's getting closer and closer and closer and closer
until eventually it just comes through.
Planes start crashing, Teslas are all driving into each other.
I mean, it's a pretty epic movie if you've not seen this.
And he is the executive producer with Julia Roberts
and a couple other people.
Then a movie is being launched right after that
called Civil War.
We were talking earlier off-camera.
And my question is the following.
If let's just say election day,
I think it's November 5th, it's a Tuesday.
If on that day, there is some gamification going on
where certain people don't have access to voting
and others do, and the election goes in a certain way,
how ugly do you think it
would be in America gamification yes what do you mean game of fine meaning they
can game of fine manipulate look a lot of countries have moved back to paper
ballots and vote on that day let's do that simple you know we're gonna do that
no chance of hacking we should you think we're gonna do that. I think state by state
We should
Not sure that there should is a different. There's a lot of you know things we should be doing but as a country
You know
Again if in any possible way there's manipulation gone and there is
There's manipulation gone and there is phones off,
phones not working, certain things not happening. You know, places you go into want to vote,
maybe it's not working.
There's challenges with technology,
with software in that area that is causing you
to wait in line for eight hours
and families are sitting there saying,
dude, I can't wait for eight hours.
My kids are waiting out the house.
I gotta put them down.
If there's that level of frustration
where a mom or dad is gonna say,
I just can't wait anymore, I gotta go home. And that affects the election and there's that level of frustration where a mom or dad is gonna say I just can't wait anymore
I gotta go home and that affects the election and there's proof of that how ugly could he get in the states and if no
If no clear candidate wins 270 electoral votes
the founding fathers are so G are so brilliant they thought of
They thought of everything so it goes to the House of Representatives and the house decides
It happened before Brilliant. They thought of, they thought of everything. So it goes to the house of representatives and the house decides.
It happened before.
It was John Quincy Adams versus Andrew Jackson.
Nobody won the Electoral College clearly. They went to the house.
John Quincy Adams won and then Andrew Jackson came back four years later and crushed him.
So you're not worried about it.
You're not worried about 2024.
There's a lot of people that are.
Of course I'm worried about it.
There's a process and let's follow the Constitution.
I mean, of course, I mean, people want to follow the Constitution.
You say it in a way where you're assuming everybody will.
Do you think the concept of civil war is capable of happening in the States anytime soon or not on America?
Not the way the founders created it?
I've read a lot of American civil war history and the feel and the vibe in the country and, yeah, some of that feels like it would today. But here's the thing,
a civil war would not necessarily be, it's really going to be rural versus urban. That's
the difference. It's not a regional, it's not a north versus south. It's rural versus urban is where this divide is Which is a very different different equation. Tell me more
Trump won in like in 2016 Trump won
Like 3,100 counties Hillary Clinton won like 80
Yet the ones that she did win are big urban metro top 20 metropolitan cities
yes so if that becomes a civil war becomes a very unpopular place to be
not because those are those places don't don't have enough food don't have
enough water that becomes very very bad for for them. Are you a preparer?
Not really.
No?
No.
Live a simple life.
You're not, you know, concerned about what could happen.
Yeah.
I have a few guns.
I have a few guns.
I have a few friends.
Just a few, is that what it is?
There's a couple.
You got like a, you know. And a great alumni association.
A alumni association.
Who out of all our enemies do you fear the most?
Like if you were to say our most formidable enemies,
who would you say are the enemies that you fear the most?
Look, the sad thing is, if the left had not done
the lie of the Trump-Russia collusion
bullshit, which is proven to be bullshit after $50 million of investigation, if they'd not
done that, Trump could have made a deal with Putin on Ukraine and it would have pulled
with Russia on Ukraine, et cetera, pulled Russia in from the cold and pulled them out of the orbit of China.
The US policy for 100 years, and even before we really got involved in Europe,
the goal was to keep German industry away from Russian resources.
But now we've pushed Russian resources into the hands of Chinese industry and really
Russia is in a subjugated role.
So I think the the medium and long-term security interests of the United States is to
bury the hatchet with the Russians and pull them away from an
Orbit of China because culturally we have a lot
more in common with Russia than we do with China or Japan or Korea or India, fact.
So our major threat, the major threat to liberty in America is still the Chinese Communist Party.
When you read the statements that she makes to the Standing Committee, there's a great
article written in Foreign Affairs by Matt Pottinger, and he actually takes chunks of
she's statements that don't normally get translated into English.
And he says, prepare for great conflict, and it is basically the job, the mission of this
Chinese Communist Party to remake the world in the image of this Chinese Communist Party to remake the world in the image of the
Chinese Communist Party and to overthrow the Westphalian Order. Now, you've never heard of the
Westphalian Order. I know you have, but it's basically the role of the modern nation state and
our role as citizens within that, and they want to remake it into the role of just like China. Hell no to that.
And I think the next administration, and China has a, for like the last 19 centuries,
it's been one of the biggest economies, if not the biggest in the world, but they have a habit of
coming together under a strong dictator and then a century later, fragmenting apart.
I think it's better for China to be a bit more diffuse and less controlled by Beijing
and that is in all of our interests.
Even especially the neighbors of China would especially agree with that because they don't
want to be seenified. And by the way, their economy not as good as people think they're getting hammered right now
You know, it's correct. Look when they look what they did to Jack Ma
right Jack Ma is like a combination of Jeff Bezos and
Steve Jobs like literally an amazing tech innovator and
Just so Jack Ma started Alibaba, which is 10 times the volume that Amazon does.
And all this, he made some comments critical of the government in the central bank and the CCP.
And instantly he's disappeared from view, like literally one of the wealthiest guys in China.
He disappears. And some months later, he's found lecturing to an elementary school and that in the media announced that he'd embraced supervision
whoa
Okay, so that that's the message they've done to their tech sector. I can tell you that the Chinese money is
fleeing
China as much as humanly possible. They're going to Europe. They're going to Dubai
Anywhere they can. There's
a huge Chinese population in Australia that's gotten out there because they want to live
free and not be under the boot of the CCP.
Where's Jack Monowadis?
He is in China under supervision about three, four years ago. no, not even, three years ago,
he made a trip to Spain to basically clear out bank accounts,
to sign them over, and he was surrounded
by 12 Ministry of State security agents,
while his family is held hostage back in China.
So they hold him by the balls.
This all happened after a speech he gave.
I don't know if you saw speech he gave him a little bit
Critical it wasn't like overly critical. Yeah, that was it. He wasn't throwing down. No, he wasn't throwing down
Like this is it you can't talk like this
You can't talk where are we united at in America like if you were to say the left right center everybody what what topics are we united on that you see
or everybody, what topics are we united on that you see? Is there anything we're united on?
A country is a country when its people have some commonly held beliefs.
And if we can't even agree on what is male and female anymore, we have a problem, right?
The Democrats' last candidate for the Supreme Court could not identify, could not define, supposedly some Harvard trained lawyer, couldn't define what a woman is.
So that's a problem.
The first, the last Civil War kicked off over states rights.
It was over trade and it was over, and people went to war over that.
Maybe it's worth going to war
over defining what a gender is,
because I certainly know what a gender is,
and there's some things I'll fight for.
Yeah, that's the part, right?
When you got kids, and your kids get into it
you bring a man like a grandkids now. Well, yeah, congratulations. I'm far away from having
grandkids. My oldest is 12. I swear. If I become a grandfather soon, I'll be very upset
at him. But I'm impressed slightly but more upset. But so I got kids and you know when
these guys get into it and they fight and as a father you first let them do their thing
And there's levels of fights right level one level two level three they got right six seven
Maybe eight nine you kind of get involved look at we got to talk guys and you start off by saying hey
What do you guys you know a green? This is your brother. You'll love him. You know, this is your this and you kind of go through it
So so let's just say we're trying to figure out a way to put the people from the left and
the right and the center in the same room.
Okay.
And you're the mediator.
They've hired you, Eric.
That's your new job.
Okay.
To mediate these guys.
Easy job, not a tough one.
Hell has frozen over.
It's frozen over.
And you show up, right, and you're trying to bring them together.
What do you ask them?
Like, what do you say?
They say, hey guys, can we all agree
that America is the greatest country in the world?
No, it's not.
Do you know what we've done?
Okay, let me try a different way.
Do you guys love your family?
I love my family, but I know he doesn't love his family.
How do you start to get these guys to start out of common?
I think the amplification of social media of idiots is,
look, I think most,
I think you're gonna see an awakening
of what were traditional Democrats
that feel abandoned by that party
and even black and Hispanic votes
that are, you know, most black and Hispanic voters know what a male and a female is
they know
Muslims as well by the way you can put Muslims in that. Absolutely. They definitely know it exactly. Yeah
and you
You focus on basic economic
Opportunity again a candidate that runs on
De-cartelizing
industry wins.
What did the US Army do?
The mission of the US Army after World War II in Germany.
Denazification, demilitarization, and decartelization.
The difference, again, I'm drawing in that book
from Tepper, seeing what John D. Rockefeller did,
controlling most of the hydrocarbon industry
in all of America.
And then when the Sherman anti-trust laws come along
and they break up standard oil
and it becomes all kinds of oil companies.
And John Rockefeller made more money doing that because he had a bunch of businesses.
But the Germans saw that and they did that to their industry.
And so it made it very easy in the 20s as they became bigger and bigger cartels after
World War II.
Very easy for the Nazi party to control German industry, much easier
to control 30 companies than 30,000 entrepreneur led companies.
We need America, we need hundreds of thousands of entrepreneur led businesses with a very
sharp elbow competition instead of the Fortune 500.
Here's the thing, even in the last like 20 years, there is half the
amount of public listed companies than there used to be. Why? Over
consolidation. And how is that allowed to happen? Because it's like a $220,
for every dollar you spend in lobbying, they get $220 return.
It's like a 22,000% return, which is why we have too many damn lobbyists in Washington,
D.C. and the five counties surrounding Washington, D.C. are the wealthiest per capita in the
country.
All of that is not a sign of a healthy society.
So fix that.
Yeah.
Teddy Roosevelt, total badass, got shot while he was campaigning, finished his speech, then
he went and got fixed. He led a very, very rough but effective antitrust effort. We need
that in America. A rising tide really does lift all boats and making it possible,
whether you are super poor or your middle class or whatever, easier to start a, to start
a business, to get access to capital, all the rest.
And that's even the same argument on governance. One of my favorite authors is Fernando De Soto.
And he wrote Invisible Capital and the Other Path.
And he was a Peruvian economist.
Sorry, he was a Peruvian, managed a big construction firm
in Switzerland, made all kinds of money, went back to Peru,
and said, why is Peru so rough?
Why is Switzerland so nice?
And he built a consulting firm around installing
the basic building blocks of capitalism,
like title for your land, a bank account, a business license,
a commercial remediation, a way to commercially adjudicate
disputes, all the things we take for granted, right?
If you want to form a business in America,
you can call 10 states
and get it done for 200 bucks in half an hour.
You can get a bank account.
You can get, that stuff exists.
But the more regulation, you know, this runaway regulatory state that now puts up like an
average of 78,000 pages of rules which has the force
of law which has never been voted on. When the regulatory state's allowed to do that,
we truly have a constitutional crisis because we're supposed to have three branches of government,
executive legislative judiciary, but we have a fourth permanent state bureaucracy that
is not elected, not accountable, yet can write rules with a force of law that must change
I just ordered a book
Mystery of capital yeah, that's what you were talking about
So you know back in the 80s Peru had a terrible problem with the shining path the Cendero luminosa
Which was a Marxist Maoist?
Insurgency and when they enacted De Soto's reforms, land for the people that they owned, it was over.
Because the farmer said, the Camposino said, this is my land, pal.
Get out.
That's right.
No more commies.
So a couple more topics here before we wrap up.
How much did you study?
How much do you know about what happened with Iran?
Do you know a lot about Iranian history or no? Okay, so what really happened with, you know,
how the Hezbollah, Sahih Khomeini, how these guys came in with the Shah,
you know, the revolution that took place with the Shah, how much do you know what happened there?
I know that I think it was Mossadek.
Mossadek was before the Shah.
Yes, but he was going to nationalize BP, their oil fields, and so there was somewhat of a
sponsored coup which ousted him, put the Shah in place. The the Kamini definitely got help from the Soviets
To stir up and to oust right because they hated that there was an American friend on their on the border of the Soviet Union and
I think the US largely let the Shah hanging
And didn't give him the help
Again, the CIA in the 70s was a very troubled, weakened,
hamstrung organization between the church committee and Stansfield Turner just kind of
threw out all the all the sharks and they were left with minnows. And what a what a strategic
error to let it go. Destroyed an entire region. Now, a question for you.
Let's just say hypothetically. And you know what, someone just told me that the Shaw
converted to Christianity before he died. Did he really? I've heard that story.
Yeah, this is his last book he wrote before he died, Answer to History.
I just had a son on a couple months ago. We did a 3R podcast. Raisin Pallavi? Yeah, we had him on it.
Very, very, longest podcast he's done. We did a three-hour podcast. Raisa Pallavi? Yeah, we had him on a very, very longest podcast.
He's done, we had one of the best conversations.
Everybody around the world was talking about it
in their Iranian community.
But I got a question with this one.
Say somebody was to call you, okay?
And they said, hey, Eric, we would like to hire you
as a consultant and we would like some ideas.
If we wanted to bring democracy back to Iran
and whether it's a revolution or change the regime.
How would you go about doing it, Eric?
Of course I've thought about that.
Do you think I'm gonna talk about it on camera?
Give me three things.
I mean, you know, it's just, first of all,
we have a small podcast.
Probably 17 people will watch this.
And the 17 people that watch it,
they're all gonna be Iranian, just so you know that.
But if, I know you can't, do you and your mind know?
Like, do you, you're-
I know exactly what I do.
You know exactly what you would do.
Absolutely.
Who else knows?
Ah, some of my friends.
Okay, good.
So what I'm saying is- So if I get clipped, the mission will Okay, good. So what I'm saying is in...
So if I get clipped, the mission will continue.
That's not what I'm saying.
What I'm asking is like...
No, look, think about it this way.
Reagan took office in 1981.
And he sat in the Oval Office because we'd had a policy of containment for 35 years.
And he said, enough.
We're gonna fuck the commies.
We're gonna go at them economically politically culturally socially in all ways
We push back. I remember that speech fuck the commies. It was a no I go what you're saying
I'm with you know, but I look behind closed watch my podcast
Yeah off leash with Eric Prince and you can see Jack Wheeler put the link below by the way so the audience can find it
Jack Wheeler was the guy that went abroad and brought back all the ideas which became
the Reagan doctrine from all the places to push back on the Soviets.
And I mean, he's the closest thing to a real life Indiana Jones.
Anyway, I digress.
What they did, what the US working in concert with the Catholic Church and MI6 in Poland
provided communications equipment to
the shipyard workers, the right, the solidarity movement, students, farmers, the church,
all sorts of communications, and that, you know, the means to communicate is essential.
There's a fantastic book called the Dictator's Handbook.
Great book. You've read it. Fun, Fana, it's small. It's a fantastic book called the Dictator's Handbook. Great book. You've read it. It's small. It's a phenomenal book.
Yeah, but it's a college study and how Dictators can empower.
So identify who that selector it is. Who keeps the Supreme
Leader in power? Okay. Obviously
the sad thing is, I think the
Arab Spring started in Iran in 2009 with the green movement,
you know, lots of people in the streets, and the regime was so threatened that they had
to call in Lebanese Hezbollah to crack heads because they didn't trust the Iranian internal
capability anymore.
And crickets, nothing from the Obama administration.
Not, we support Iranian freedom, we support your, nothing.
Not, obviously no direct help or kinetic help, but not even the equivalent of a tweet or
a statement.
And then you have the women life freedom protest, where women are protesting protesting they want to show their hair or wear a skirt
or drink a beer or listen to rock and roll or drive or whatever be normal and
be free and you'd think the women's rights groups from around the world would
be supporting them but it's again crickets from them crickets from the left, empowering those movements with
communications tools with we can make you can make the regime
very, very vulnerable. Now, there's a lot of stuff before that
that I'll tell you about after we're off camera. But yeah,
yeah, it's it's I was talking to Pierce two weeks ago, and he asked me the question
I said, you know Iran what you're here's Pierce Morgan, and I oh, yeah
What he what Iran fears is not what you fear
Iran fears the youth they fear women
They fear
Students they fear sanctions they fear economy being bad. Those are some of the things that they fear. The question is, to go about doing that with Iran,
you also need the right administration
that's willing to go all the way through for that to happen.
And that's a lot of work.
And you do that, why would Russia or China,
whatever your plan is?
Let's just say your plan is a strong plan effective one. Why would Russia or China allow you to win?
Well the Iranian people all ultimately get a say there's what 85 million people
Yeah, I mean look the
Iran even has a demographic problem themselves the women have voted and close their wombs. I mean, they went from like five kids per woman
to like point eight. Right. They have a severe contraction issue. Right. China has it because
of force. They have the reverted pyramid, whatever they call it, inverted people where. Yeah, and the costs, where it's very, very expensive
for them to try to start a family
and job insecurity and all the rest.
I'm curious to know what your plan is.
I'm very interested to see what your plan is.
And you and I will talk off camera.
Next question, McAfee, John McAfee.
I don't know if you remember him.
McAfee, anti-virus guy, right?
So I sat down with him six years ago at his place, five years ago at his place.
Very interesting guy, eccentric.
The entire interview, he had a gun on him.
He was smoking cigarettes and he was having whiskey or something.
While his guys in the back are holding M16, some guy knocks on the door.
They run to the door with guns. The guy's freaking out.
I'm just trying to drop off something.
He said, he looks at me with my phone. He says,
why do you have a regular phone? I would never have a regular phone. So what do you mean? So I
would never have a regular phone. You know what kind of phone I got? Do you know who's
spying on your phone? I said, John, do you really believe about everybody? He said,
you have too much trust. Okay. Now for you, you also, you know, talk about a certain phone.
Yeah. Right. Tell us a little bit more about that phone. You also talk about a certain phone, right?
Tell us a little bit more about that phone.
Well, this is an unplugged phone.
And this resulted from the nonsense
after the 2020 elections.
Big Tech was canceling certain apps
and shutting off certain voices.
And I said to some of my much smarter friends,
I said, we need our own phone that they cannot cancel, they cannot control.
And so this is an unplugged phone, which as a result, it's our hardware.
So it's unplugged on there.
High-end camera.
Same one that's on the iPhone 15.
But the difference is this is our operating system with our own store VPN antivirus messenger.
But the difference is we don't have an advertising ID.
Your phone is like a 25 digit, basically like a mark of the beast, which follows you everywhere.
And it's they know where you go, what you buy, how you, where you go, who you call what
you buy and what you browse.
And they the handset, right, Apple, Google, take that data, export it to the tune of about
$180 a year, and the apps that are on your phone also work with that ad ID to export,
to the point of even turning on the microphone, turning on the camera, turning on GPS.
I've had so many people I've talked to, they said, yeah, I was talking to my wife in our bedroom about the need for a mattress,
and the next day we're getting advertising for mattresses.
So imagine that phone listening in their bedroom.
So this phone prevents that because it doesn't have an operating system.
We block that, and it's actually the first one With an actual firewall on it that you can hard off
The Wi-Fi the camera the microphone who's a service through
T-Mobile AT&T Verizon and we prefer Patriot mobile got it
So so it's really the internet
It's really on the it allows you to be in the world, but not of the world and not be collected and tracked got it
Very and it's called what unplugged unplugged unplugged on plug on plug.com. There you go. Yeah, we're looking at we delivered
Yeah, we delivered 500 of them in November and I got 10,000 coming delivering soon
So did you guys just started this?
Well, geez we went from zero to a fully functioning phone
with our own operating system in three years.
That is so cool.
Just, that's great.
If you've ever heard of Pegasus?
Yes.
The guy that developed Pegasus is our CTO.
Got it.
Okay, so he's a good CTO.
But he developed it as a way to do remote phone service.
And then he built a very secure phone used by governments
and then he built a phone that controls most of the world's pacemakers.
Now who's behind this phone by the way? Investor-wise?
Me.
Just you.
Well no, me and some others.
And just a few others. Okay, you haven't done around, you haven't brought people in yet or anything?
Ah, no, there's, I think we have ten.
Okay, got it. Very interesting concept.
But we are, it is intentionally not a Silicon Valley backed company. It will not be a public company ever and it is there to be an independent phone platform
It's not even an American company
Where's the base out of cypress cypress? Okay, cool
That's a very interesting project last but not least before we wrap up. I I saw an article. I wonder if this is true or not
Did you guys train Project Veritas' spies
on how to go and get intel from some of the people out there?
Is that a somewhat of a true story?
I didn't train anybody,
but they did use our ranch at some point.
They did.
Yeah.
It's open area and they had, you know,
they used a barn in a classroom.
What a interesting model. Did you see him the other day dressed like a gay man going out there talking to and actually pulled it off? You got to give this guy credit on one. Obviously,
he's no longer a project very tough. That's called OMG, you know, what's but yeah, I know there's no
question about it. There's no question about it.
Eric, your book.
Oh, can you tell us a little bit about the book?
I brought this for you.
Oh, okay, fantastic.
This is the Civilian Warriors.
It's the book I wrote about starting and running
and getting crushed in black water,
but it's a bit cathartic and it sets the record straight.
Well, is the next one gonna be I'm back?
Is that like the next one?
I'm back in the PMC side, okay.
I'm gonna come back.
It's gonna be interesting to see what you do with it.
You know, I-
Look, there's a lot of instability in the world
and there's a lot of people suffering unnecessarily
and it pains me that the US can't ever seem to finish.
pains me that the US can't ever seem to finish.
And the private sector has the model about to do that. Cheaply, practically, ethically, and safely for the people,
and not safely for the jihadis that deserve to die.
You know, my interest is, here's one of my interests,
this purely competition.
That's my interest.
Because if we have more. Yeah, if we have more
PMCs if we in a in a perfect world for me at least as a
Civilian if we had 20 30 40 PMCs
I feel safer and the reason why I feel safer is because the way AI is advancing
I will feel very uncomfortable if it's a monopoly controlled by a
government who can impose certain regulations against PMCs or if it's done
by a guy who is a multi-billionaire and not just a billionaire guy that's worth
half a billion dollars or trillion dollars who has his own PMC because
remember a lot of people think PMCs are like such a you know my god PMC Ross Perot
I think send the I don't know how many people get his 130 employees from EDS when they were working for the show in the
70s ex-villain 79 right and he brought him back in December
Yeah, and he left a few guys to finish the project and after Khomeini that he brought him back
So Ross Perot did that. I mean, there's a lot of people that have done this to protect their guys nature hates a vacuum
Yeah, private military contractors are it's kind of the world's second oldest profession
As long as people have been picking up sticks and throwing them at each other yeah
PMC's were the the engineers that built the Trebuchets or the this
super accurate bowman if you're using a longbow or
the this super accurate bowman if you're using a longbow or today it's it's the guys that are can fix the aircraft or provide a very high-end intelligence
capabilities. I'd like to see more of them that's that's where I'm at I'd like
to see more of them so the government has to compete and get tighter better
cheaper. And I can tell you unequivocally that big Washington and big government wants to crush it all they want to they want a big monopoly and
our big monopoly military is not very effective at finishing and that's the
problem and by the way don't get me wrong I don't I don't trust if there's
only one PMC I don't know only one PMC a hundred of them I want as many PMCs and
let the best one survive and then if we have 20 30 of them
I think we're in a very good place the gazelle wakes up in the morning knowing that he has to outrun the lion to her be
Eating the lion wakes up in the morning knows that he has to outrun the gazelle or he'll starve
That's right. So whether you're the lion or gazelle when you wake up in the morning, let's find out
You better be running. Let's let's find out Eric. Appreciate you for coming out. Cheers. This was great
Really enjoyed it been looking forward to this for a while. Take
care everybody. Bye bye, bye bye.