Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Trump ally allegedly violated arms embargo

UN experts say Erik Prince, UAE firms sold weapons

- By Edith M. Lederer

American security contractor Erik Prince, a close ally of former U.S. President Donald Trump, violated the U.N. arms embargo against Libya along with three United Arab Emirates-based companies and their top managers during an operation to help a rebel military commander take the capital Tripoli, U.N. experts said.

In a key section of a report to the U.N. Security Council obtained Saturday by The Associated Press, the panel of experts outlined “a well-funded private military company operation” called “Project Opus” designed to provide military equipment to eastern-based commander Khalifa Hifter.

“The Project Opus plan also included a component to kidnap or terminate individual­s regarded as high value targets in Libya,” the experts said.

The plan was first reported by The New York Times and The Washington Post.

Oil-rich Libya was plunged into chaos after a 2011 Nato-backed uprising toppled longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi and split the country between a U.n.-supported government in Tripoli and rival authoritie­s based in the country’s east, each side backed by an array of local militias as well as regional and foreign powers.

In April 2019, Hifter and his forces, backed by

Egypt and the United

Arab Emirates, launched an offensive to try and capture Tripoli. His campaign collapsed after Turkey stepped up its military support of the U.n.-supported government with hundreds of troops and thousands of Syrian mercenarie­s. An October cease-fire agreement has led to an agreement on a transition­al government and elections scheduled for Dec. 24.

The panel of experts report said it identified “Project Opus” in June 2019.

It was designed to have private military companies provide Hifter’s forces with “armed assault rotary wing aviation, intelligen­ce surveillan­ce and reconnaiss­ance (ISR) aircraft, maritime interdicti­on, cyber, UAV, and intelligen­ce fusion and targeting capabiliti­es,” the experts said,

Prince became involved when Jordanian authoritie­s became aware of elements of the plan “and suspended the auction” of surplus military helicopter­s to Hifter on June 18, 2019, according to the experts.

“This required the Project Opus team to initiate a contingenc­y plan to rapidly identify and procure new aircraft,” the panel said.

“These included three medium utility helicopter­s from a South African company and three light utility helicopter­s from a United Arab Emirates company,” the experts said. “Also purchased within a tight time frame were an Antonov AN-26B from a Bermudian company, a LASA T-bird light attack aircraft from a Bulgarian company, and a Pilatus PC-6 ISR aircraft from an Austrian company.”

The panel said the Antonov, LASA light attack aircraft and Pilatus “were deployed before any payment and the normal due diligence took place, thus demonstrat­ing that a fourth individual, Erik Dean Prince (USA), who controlled the companies owning the aircraft, assisted in procuremen­t for the operation.”

“No one else was in a position to arrange the sale of these aircraft within such a short time frame,” the experts said.

The panel said further investigat­ions “identified that Erik Prince made a proposal for the operation to Khalifa Hifter in Cairo, Egypt on, or about, April 14, 2019.”

The panel said it therefore “finds that Erik Prince” violated the 2011 Security Council resolution imposing an arms embargo against Libya “in that, at the very least, he … assisted in the evasion of, the provisions of the arms embargo in Libya.”

Prince, founder of the controvers­ial security firm Blackwater, soared to notoriety after Blackwater employees in 2007 shot and killed 17 Iraqi civilians in central Baghdad during the Iraq war. After the scandal, the company’s name was changed and Prince sold his shares to a private equity fund. He reportedly now heads a private equity fund focused on investment­s in frontier emerging markets.

Prince was accused of acting as a back channel on behalf of Trump. His sister, Betsy Devos, was the secretary of education in the Trump administra­tion.

The panel of experts said “three United Arab Emirates based companies were primarily used for the planning, management and finance of the operation” under Project Opus.

It identified them as Lancaster 6 DMCC, L-6 FZE, and Opus Capital Asset Limited FZE.

The companies were “controlled and managed” by Christiaan Paul Durrant of Australia and Amanda Kate Perry of the United Kingdom, with the ground team leader being Stephen John Lodge of South Africa.

The panel said “all three companies and individual­s were found … to have violated” the 2011 council resolution “in that they had each violated, or assisted in the evasion of, the provisions of the arms embargo in Libya.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States