Blackwater Worldwide renamed Xe as company tries to salvage its tarnished brand
US Security Firm Mired in Iraq Controversy Changes Its Name
Blackwater Worldwide is abandoning its tarnished brand name as it tries to 
shake a reputation battered by oft-criticised work in Iraq, renaming its family 
of two dozen businesses under the name Xe. The parent company’s new name is 
pronounced like the letter z.


Blackwater Worldwide’s headquarters is seen in Moyock, N.C., in this July 21, 
2008 file photo. Blackwater is abandoning its tarnished brand name as it tries 
to shake a reputation battered by oft-criticized work in Iraq, renaming its 
family of two dozen businesses under the name Xe. (AP Photo/Gerry 
Broome)Blackwater Lodge & Training Centre - the subsidiary that conducts much 
of the company’s overseas operations and domestic training - has been renamed 
US Training Centre Inc., the company said today.

The decision comes as part of an ongoing rebranding effort that grew more 
urgent following a September 2007 shooting in Iraq that left at least a dozen 
civilians dead. Blackwater president Gary Jackson said in a memo to employees 
the new name reflects the change in company focus away from the business of 
providing private security.

“The volume of changes over the past half-year have taken the company to an 
exciting place and we are now ready for two of the final, and most obvious 
changes,” Jackson said in the note.

In his memo, Jackson indicated the company was not interested in actively 
pursuing new private security contracts. Jackson and other Blackwater 
executives said last year the company was shifting its focus away from such 
work to focus on training and providing logistics.

“This company will continue to provide personnel protective services for 
high-threat environments when needed by the US government, but its primary 
mission will be operating our training facilities around the world, including 
the flagship campus in North Carolina,” Jackson said.

The company has operated under the Blackwater name since 1997, when chief 
executive Erik Prince and some of his former Navy Seal colleagues launched it 
in north-eastern North Carolina, naming their new endeavour for the area swamp 
streams that run black with murky water. But the name change underscores how 
badly the Moyock-based company’s brand was damaged by its work in Iraq.

In 2004, four of its contractors were killed in an insurgent ambush in 
Fallujuah, with their bodies burned, mutilated and strung from a bridge. The 
incident triggered a US siege of the restive city.

The September 2007 shooting in Baghdad’s Nisoor Square added to the damage. The 
incident infuriated politicians both in Baghdad in Washington, triggering 
congressional hearings and increasing calls that the company be banned from 
operating in Iraq.

Last month, Iraqi leaders said they would not renew Blackwater’s license to 
operate there, citing the lingering outrage over the shooting in Nisoor Square, 
and the US state department said later it will not renew Blackwater’s contract 
to protect diplomats when it expires in May.

Blackwater spokeswoman Anne Tyrrell said the company made the name change 
largely because of changes in its focus, but acknowledged the need for the 
company to shake its past in Iraq.

“It’s not a direct result of a loss of contract, but certainly that is an 
aspect of our work that we feel we were defined by,” Tyrrell said.

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