Blackwater Prince offering charter seats from Kabul for $6,500 each

Given that someone somewhere had to authorize both the landing and the takeoff of this charter flight we are left with the feeling that we were not supposed to hear about this.

25 August 2021 | MYCHAEL SCHNELL | The Hill

Erik Prince, the founder and former CEO of the security contractor previously known as Blackwater, is reportedly offering to fly people out of Kabul for $6,500 each as the evacuation effort in Afghanistan ramps up ahead of President Biden’s Tuesday deadline.

The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday that Prince has said for $6,500 each people can be safely transported into the Hamid Karzai International Airport and onto a chartered flight, with an extra fee for those who want to be brought to the airport but are trapped in their homes.

Prince’s offer comes as U.S. citizens and Afghan allies are scrambling to leave the country amid the deteriorating security situation as the Taliban tighten their grip on the country. The Journal reports that NATO and U.S. teams are being dispatched to Taliban-controlled parts of Kabul to escort their people to the airport.

The U.S. evacuated roughly 19,000 from Afghanistan between early Tuesday and early Wednesday, according to a White House official, bringing the total number of individuals pulled from the region to approximately 82,300.

Those efforts, however, have been stymied by the Taliban, who have begun to dig in against the removal of Afghans.

Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid on Tuesday warned Afghan citizens against leaving the country, saying during a press conference, “The Afghans leaving, we are not going to allow that, and we are not even happy about it.”

The Taliban have set up checkpoints on paths leading to the airport in Kabul, where people have reported being beaten, whipped and intimidated.

Prince, a former Navy SEAL and a top ally to former President TrumpDonald TrumpSupreme Court rebuffs Biden over Trump-era ‘Remain in Mexico’ policy Judge declares mistrial in Michael Avenatti embezzlement case Herschel Walker files paperwork to run for Senate in Georgia MORE, gained widespread attention in 2007 when contractors from Blackwater killed 17 civilians in Iraq.

He has also faced accusations of breaking arms embargoes on Somalia and Libya and has denied allegations of setting up a backchannel communications line with the Russian government.

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