Master of War: Blackwater USA's Erik Prince and the Business of War [NOOK Book]

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Overview

The name Blackwater, the world's largest private military contractor, became infamous early in the Iraq War, when four of its men were seized by a mob in Fallujah, murdered, and hung from a bridge for the world to see. Since then, Blackwater has expanded dramatically; its men have been involved in major scandals, including a shooting spree in Iraq that has now caused the Iraqi government to blacklist the company. As Suzanne Simons reveals in this first-ever inside look, based on extraordinary access to Blackwater founder Erik Prince, and dozens of his key employees, Blackwater is just the tip of Erik Prince's empire. He publicly reassures everyone that Blackwater only works for the U.S., ...

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Overview

The name Blackwater, the world's largest private military contractor, became infamous early in the Iraq War, when four of its men were seized by a mob in Fallujah, murdered, and hung from a bridge for the world to see. Since then, Blackwater has expanded dramatically; its men have been involved in major scandals, including a shooting spree in Iraq that has now caused the Iraqi government to blacklist the company. As Suzanne Simons reveals in this first-ever inside look, based on extraordinary access to Blackwater founder Erik Prince, and dozens of his key employees, Blackwater is just the tip of Erik Prince's empire. He publicly reassures everyone that Blackwater only works for the U.S., and would never become a mercenary organization for other governments, yet he has another entire company dedicated to doing just that, hiring foreign nationals, working for well over a dozen different governments, and overlapping in crucial ways with Blackwater. In addition, he has a private spying company, run by former top CIA men, employing extraordinarily sensitive methods and technical sophistication, for rent by any interested party, from companies to governments. Finally, he is amassing an air fleet that is large enough to serve as a miniature air force, not just by purchasing planes and helicopters, but also by building his own unmanned drones. In short, the full story of Erik Prince and his now-crumbling empire is a story of one of the modern world's most influential military figures, and it has never been told. Prince is a man who shuns publicity except when absolutely necessary, to tamp down a scandal; even when he has wanted to tell his story, he has been shut down by his clients in Washington who won't stand for it. Instead, he has given Suzanne Simons hours of interviews; access to his staff; invitations to join him on trips to Afghanistan; and more. He is a fascinating figure, part deeply conservative, evangelical patriot; part rebellious, go-it-alone kingpin. He is worth hundreds of millions of dollars, and his companies are worth billions. His empire dwarfs all of its competitors, to such a degree that even if the military wanted to wash its hands of him, they wouldn't be able to replace him.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

CNN executive producer Simons balances private and public accounts of Erik Prince, founder and owner of the country's most notorious private military contractor. In this often glowing, mildly critical portrait, Prince is depicted as a fierce individualist, visionary entrepreneur and patriot, an upstanding guy's guy, albeit born into enormous privilege, right-wing values and Beltway ties. A determined overachiever, Prince trained as a navy SEAL until his father's death led him to an enterprising idea to provide the training facilities SEALs needed. Certain contradictions ensue: Prince is known to be deeply religious, so his affair while his first wife is dying of cancer surprised many friends. Likewise, Prince's free market faith denigrates government involvement in business, but his Blackwater project only survived by means of hefty government contracts. Simons's premise-that all questions arising from Blackwater's relevance go back to "one man"-justifies emphasis on the personal, but the book is most instructive when straying to include Dick Cheney's impact on Pentagon outsourcing or General Sanchez's frustration over boundary confusion in Iraq between U.S. soldiers and the State Department's veritable "private army." (July)Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

The Barnes & Noble Review
Erik Prince didn't have to go into the military at all, but he's ended up as the leader of America's shadow army, Xe (formerly known as Blackwater). CNN executive producer Suzanne Simons' detailed new book, Master of War, chronicles the story of the 40-year-old Navy SEAL who left the military after his entrepreneurial father (who made the family a boatload by inventing automobile sun visors that light up) died and his wife was diagnosed with cancer. Prince took his inheritance and started Blackwater in 1997 to simply provide training sites for law enforcement and the U.S. military. Instead, he's frighteningly changed the nature of war. Simons traces the company's dramatic growth and changing mission, as well as the rise of the billion-dollar military-contracting business that Blackwater has come to represent. The government can now outsource many of its nastier military assignments to a once virtually unchecked band of well-armed former cops and soldiers from across the globe. Prince, who recently stepped down as CEO of the company, ran Blackwater with the same industrious zeal his father embodied: ?The lion wakes up in the morning, he knows he has to outrun the gazelle, or he's gonna starve,? Prince says in the book. ?The gazelle wakes up and knows he has to outrun the lion, or he's gonna be eaten.... Whether you're the lion or the gazelle, when you wake up, you'd better be running.? All that running and explosive growth can get you in some trouble, though. In the past few years, Blackwater has brought the U.S. some controversial black eyes in Afghanistan and Iraq and has become a symbol of the gunslinging, tough-talking Bush administration. While the world is changing, the outsourced military isn't going away anytime soon. Simons' book offers a tremendously important look into the hidden corners of that world. --Mark J. Miller

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780061887000
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Publication date: 6/23/2009
  • Sold by: HARPERCOLLINS
  • Format: eBook
  • Pages: 304
  • Sales rank: 137,538
  • File size: 1 MB
  • Items ship to U.S, APO/FPO and U.S. Protectorate addresses.

Table of Contents

Prologue 1

1 The Prince 7

2 Hell and High Water 27

3 The Blackwater Project 45

4 How to Rent a War 65

5 The Bridge in Iraq 83

6 Private Air, Private Eye 111

7 Under the Gun 141

8 September 16, 2007 175

9 The Secretary and the Prince 195

10 Mission in Afghanistan 215

11 The Blackwater Behemoth 233

12 The Cost of Business 249

Acknowledgments 279

Index 281

Customer Reviews
Average Rating 4
( 10 )

Rating Distribution

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  • Anonymous

    Posted August 13, 2009

    Balanced, Fair

    Simons has written an excellent book about Blackwater and Erik Prince. Anyone who has an opinion of Blackwater should read Master of War. This is not an expose but a balanced reading of the frustrations of political intrigue and games. A fascinating portrait of a fascinating company and its founder.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted August 14, 2009

    The author clearly had a different agenda

    Suzanne Simons has managed to take an incredibly interesting topic, and write a very boring book. She clearly used the book simply as a vehicle to criticize the fact that we ever went to war in Iraq. (She does work for CNN, so it would be pointless to act surprised). More than 50% of the book is filled with side stories intended to either poorly pull at your heartstrings or anger the reader about incidents during the war that did not even involve Erik Prince or Blackwater. The writing is choppy and and there is no finesse or style to the story telling. Chances are high that a better book will be written at a later time, and by another author.

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  • Posted July 8, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    Great book and well written

    Suzanne Simons gives an objective account of a controversial policy of hiring outside of the military for protection. A true page turner and you'll want to read more about many topics that are discussed within the book. Excellent job!

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    Posted August 6, 2009

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