What Taylor Should Expect from the Bush Administration
By Alhaji G.V. Kromah
The Perspective
Jan 19, 2001
The dictatorial regime of Charles Taylor in Liberia may have
been nightmarishly watching the US Presidential election twisting
with a potential Al Gore victory. Earlier this year, the Clinton-Gore
Administration banned Taylor government officials from entering
the United States, finally deciding to apply more stick than carrot
in dealing with the Liberian dictator. Taylor's public relations
phalanx built in Washington with millions of dollars to woo American
decision-makers inevitably collapsed under the weight of his own
mounting notoriety. It would be illusion if the Monrovia establishment
takes solace that Gore did not emerge, and George W. Bush may
not prioritize Africa.
The Liberian pariah must be sorely mindful of a powerful Republican
Senator who rigorously believes, "There can be no peace
in Sierra Leone until the strongman of neighboring Liberia, Charles
Taylor, is brought to heel." In an article carried in
the May 9 edition of the Washington Post last year, New Hampshire
Senator Judd Gregg said, "as long as Taylor rules Liberia,
Sierra Leone's anguish will continue." As the Chief Deputy
Whip in the Senate Republican Leadership, the 53 year old Lawyer
wields considerable influence in identifying senate agenda. He
is particularly close to the powerful Republican Senate leader
Trent Lott, who was instrumental in Gregg's becoming a Republican
whip.
While Incoming Secretary of State Colin Powell and National Security
Advisor-designate Condoleezza Rice are cautioning against exhaustive
US activity around the globe, the two African Americans will certainly
not ignore the critical reality of West Africa. Powell has already
sounded out warning that the United States under the Bush administration
will "stand strong" against "those nations who
are poorly led, led by failed leaders pursing failed policies
that will give them failed results." Making the comment in
accepting his nomination as Secretary of State on December 16,
Powell insisted he would serve the "the cause of peace and
freedom around the world." Charles Taylor can escape the
wrath of a Bush Administration only if he performs a miracle -
reverse his game of destabilization in the subregion and uphold
human rights in Liberia.
Sierra Leone-Guinea Factor:
The pending American Administration has promised to conduct international
affairs in concert with its European allies, a tradition firmly
upheld and aptly utilized by the older President George Bush in
operations like the Gulf War. And already, Chief US Ally Britain
is vehement in its diplomatic effort to neutralize the destructive
deeds of people like Taylor in Sierra Leone, a former British
colony. London is succeeding in galvanizing support. The Taylor
administration is already suffering from a European Union economic
sanction and travel ban in some instances.
The trend is intensifying. The United Nations has come out recently
with a new report scathingly identifying Taylor as the guru in
charge of the unending diamonds-for-guns relations with notorious
rebel groups like the so-called Revolutionary United Front (RUF)
in Sierra Leone. A committee of UN experts revealed a wider scope
of operation Taylor has launched, naively believing he is acting
incognito. According to the report, Liberian registered aircraft
are dutifully channeling guns from Europe to destinations in West
Africa. The committee is therefore recommending a sanction regime
that includes an international travel ban profoundly commensurate
with the pariah status of Taylor. The world body is also insisting
that Liberian logs and other exports that have kept Taylor lucrative
be prohibited on the world market. Taylor has nervously greeted
the announcement by herding picketers in the streets and having
them deliver a statement of support to him, quite in cadence with
decadent Liberian political tradition.
With the RUF rebels in charge of the mineral largesse and virtually
getting weapons of their taste, the implications for widespread
catastrophe in the subregion are too explosive to be ignored by
any leadership in Washington. The international community is faced
with Taylor-RUF arrangements, which, among other things, allow
the rebel group to freely operate in major Liberian border towns
such as Foya. The RUF effectively controls the northwestern Liberian
border and the strategic southwestern frontier of Guinea, which
is then at the mercy of effortless insurgency from its two neighbors.
In border attacks into Guinea in the past eight weeks, the invaders
have caused the death of hundreds of civilians.
Since 1997, when Taylor came to power, the RUF has picked up vigor
and remains benignant in realizing Taylor's grandiose hope of
installing satellite regimes in Sierra Leone and Guinea. Accordingly,
Liberia has been an active plotting venue and Sierra Leone the
command post for Guineans determined to get rid of the administration
of President Lansana Conte. Former Guinean army major, Gbargo
Zoumannigui has been the key figure in the anti-Conte operation.
He was the leader of the l996 abortive coup which took nearly
24 hours to quell only through a miraculous act of negotiation
between the rank and file of the army and Conte himself. Zoumannigui
fled to neighboring Mali, and then later to Burkina Faso and Libya.
The latter countries provided training and support for Taylor
and RUF leader Foday Sankoh. When Taylor became President, it
was no surprise that Monrovia would be a crucial center for the
Guinean project.
By July l998, a recruiting exercise in the Liberian capital had
begun to tap former fighters from all of the erstwhile Liberian
factions. Some officers of the defunct United Liberation Movement
of Liberia for Democracy (ULIMO) were also contacted and had to
flee Liberia because of their refusal to cooperate. The officers
revealed to me that the plan was to use the RUF to launch the
operation from Sierra Leone. The combined rebel operation was
to be primarily staged from Koindu, the Sierra Leone town strategically
located near where the three countries share borders. The recruitment
went on full scale in Monrovia with a two-tier plan Taylor envisaged
in his bid to become sole power broker in the subregion.
Under the first objective, it was decided that the Guinean dissidents
and Taylor's men along with other fighters would join the RUF
to overrun the Sierra Leone government in Freetown. With the country
in the hands of the RUF and Taylor, Guinea would then be an easy
prey as the second part of the plan. This anticipation eventually
led to the RUF attack on Freetown in December, l998. More than
6000 civilians were reportedly killed. The Nigerian armed forces,
which were in charge of the West African peacekeeping force protecting
the Sierra Leone government, lost more than 700 men before the
rebels were repelled from Freetown. The defeat of the RUF initially
suffocated the Guinean portion of the Monrovia plan.
There was another critical obstacle that kept the Monrovia plan
in check. Disaffected fighters of the dissolved Liberian warring
factions, including Taylor's NPFL, organized and began battling
Liberian government forces. The fighting occurred in Lofa, Liberia's
largest county spread along the Sierra Leone and Guinean borders.
For some time, that operation blocked the gunrunning between Monrovia
and the RUF in Koindu and Buedu in Sierra Leone. Taylor also had
to rely on the RUF entirely to resist the Lofa attack. His commanders
in Voinjama, the Lofa capital, were part of the group and therefore
put up no resistance when the hour came. Taylor suspected this
in advance and called on the RUF to take over the task of subduing
the Liberian attackers or risk losing their support from Monrovia.
The RUF evidently believed it had no alternative but to engage
in one of their fiercest combats since the establishment of the
group in l991. It was a battle for survival and the idea of overthrowing
the Guinean government as agreed in Monrovia was necessarily shelved.
At the peak of the RUF December attack on Freetown, a special
meeting of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)
was convened to consider further actions against the rebel group
and its supporters. At the gathering in the Ivorian capital of
Abidjan, delegates from Nigeria and the observer from the United
States openly accused Charles Taylor of providing support for
the RUF. In London, officials were equally vociferous. Officers
of the Nigerian led West African Peace Force in Sierra Leone had
long been publicly decrying Taylor for his involvement.
The desperate Liberian culprit sent his late Vice President Enoch
Dogolea to lobby for support in Accra, Ghana. The diminutive vice
president was stunned when in minutes of meeting with the visibly
angry and towering President Jerry Rawlings, he was told that
Liberia's support for the rebels was a stab in the back of West
African nations. Rawlings went further. Not mentioning Burkina
Faso and Libya by name, he said the RUF was receiving help from
two other African countries, one in the west and the other in
the north. Eyewitnesses say Rawlings was so angry he almost motioned
his visitor out. In further protest, he told the shivering Liberian
visitor to inform Taylor that the Ghanaian government expected
that all Liberian refugees would be immediately evacuated. Of
course, the expulsion never occurred.
The American rebuke of Taylor in Abidjan was the first publicly
delivered by the United States. Ambassador Howard Jeter bluntly
declared in Abidjan that the US had evidence of Taylor's involvement.
Taylor took the matter personally and began an evidently unsuccessful
smearing campaign against the seasoned and knowledgeable diplomat.
First as President Clinton's Special Envoy for the Liberian peace
process in l997, Jeter played a crucially supporting role in the
concluding of the various peace agreements. A former ambassador
to Botswana with stints in other parts of southern and East Africa,
Jeter was again quietly instrumental in consummating the Lome
Peace agreement between the RUF and the Sierra Leone Government.
When Taylor naively launched his smearing campaign against Jeter,
he should have known that Washington had reached a zero-tolerance
level. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Vicky Huddleston was
in Monrovia three months earlier to let Taylor know that the United
States was concerned about his possible support for the RUF, even
though she said there was no conclusive evidence at that stage.
Ambassador Huddleston, who is now head of the US Interest Section
(embassy) in Havana, Cuba, said she was unimpressed with the rule
of law under Taylor. A month after the Abidjan fireworks, the
US State Department itself was putting out hard evidence on the
matter and equally instructed its embassy in Monrovia to go public
with warnings against Taylor.
As per his character, however, Taylor ultimately chose to single
out Jeter, making it appear it was a personal matter between him
and the ambassador. Taylor woefully suggested that Rev. Jesse
Jackson, a non-employee of the State department, should substitute
Jeter, whom he described as a "burnt out" diplomat.
Taylor clearly observed that not only did his moves against Jeter
proved futile, but also the US was indeed prepared to deal with
him over the RUF affair. Thomas Pickering, Undersecretary of State
for Political Affairs, traveled to Monrovia in July last year
to verbally deliver the ultimatum that Taylor immediately stops
his backing of the RUF or face sanctions. Pickering told Taylor
his refusal to withdraw support from the RUF would not only damage
relations with Washington but also the rest of the international
system. He said Taylor was both "patron and benefactor"
in the gunrunning and diamond smuggling from Sierra Leone. The
Undersecretary told Taylor he had personally reviewed evidence
and intelligence showing the Liberian dictator was providing arms
and other support to the RUF. Taylor argued bitterly and did not
pay heed to the warning. And indeed, the international sanctions
began with the travel ban by the United States and Britain, and
the withholding of funds from the EEC.
The United States, which has no colonial history with Sierra Leone,
ironically took interest in the crisis much earlier than Britain.
It's open secret that the then US Ambassador John Hirsch, more
than anyone in the international configuration, was the driving
force behind the l996 elections, which brought President Tejan
Kabbah to power. Once at the VIP lounge of Lungi International
Airport in Freetown, I extended my thirty-minute waiting to a
full two-hour stay listening to Hirsch passionately trying to
convince me it was necessary to have elections at that time, even
though certain parts of the country were still under RUF control.
Hirsch succeeded in selling the idea to Washington, which, to
the slight embarrassment of Britain, seemed to have assumed a
democratically patronizing role for the former British colony.
London eventually redeemed itself through the remarkable performance
of its soldiers in defending Freetown against rebel attacks in
l999 and in the rescuing of more than 200 UN peacekeeping troops
abducted by the RUF. The British brought in special forces and
anchored a war freighter nearby to protect the government in Freetown.
Military trainers are currently in the Sierra Leone capital to
help build a new national army. In fact, the British peace lobby
through strong anti-RUF and Taylor measures were so intensive
that the Clinton-Gore Administration appeared to have lagged behind
in its declared commitment to the Sierra Leone peace process.
Thanks to the travel ban on Taylor, his associates and government
officials, Washington is once again seen robustly dedicated to
dealing with the Sierra Leone problem.
Human Rights Debacle:
Gunrunning and blood diamond dealing to destabilize his neighborhood
is only a part of Taylor's problem in West Africa, with the United
States, Britain and the rest of the international community. Taylor's
domestic record in the short three years he has been President
of Liberia abundantly qualifies him for punishment under Colin
Powell's announcement that the Bush Administration will appropriately
deal with "failed leaders pursing failed policies that will
give them failed results."
As early as two months after Taylor assumed the Presidency in
August 1997, opposition figures literally began falling victims.
The most notorious case was the butchering of former Deputy House
Speaker Samuel Dokie along with his wife, sister and security
guard. Anxious to dissociate themselves in anticipation of public
backlash, officials of Taylor's Justice Ministry nervously announced
that the Dokie's were last seen in the custody of agents of the
President's Special Security Service. A mock trial was held and
expectedly exonerated all of the suspects.
In a review of the first year of the Taylor administration, the
Pan African News Agency reported in a July 30, l998 dispatch that,
"insecurity and human rights abuses continue to haunt Liberia
a year after Taylor became President with promises of delivering
stability. " It reported that the atmosphere of paranoia
has not escaped the presidency. Within weeks of his inauguration,
Taylor announced that he would not abide by the ECOWAS peace arrangement
of restructuring the military and security forces with the involvement
of ECOMOG, the peacekeeping force. He saturated various government
security institutions with former fighters of his NPFL militia.
Judges and lawyers in Liberia describe the judicial branch of
the government as an instrument of the Executive Mansion due to
the gross interference of the President and his security personnel
in judicial matters. At a national reconciliation conference held
by the Taylor government in July 1998, Counselor Varney Sherman,
a prominent Liberian lawyer, simply described the Judiciary as
"rotten." A local newspaper reported that Circuit Court
Judge William Metzger disclosed that government security officers
pulled a court official out of his vehicle and publicly flogged
him. In another court incident, Star Radio in Monrovia reported
that an attempt to enforce a debt court judgment against a local
bank failed because Security officers from the Executive Mansion
blocked the process. The case involved a debt of $600,000. In
its 1999 Human rights report, the US State Department said the
"judicial system, hampered by political influence; economic
pressure, inefficiency, corruption, and a lack of resources, was
unable to ensure citizens' rights to due process and a fair trial."
In other incidents of human right violation, Liberian newspapers
reported that Taylor's Special Security Service snatched a rights
advocate group leader, Madame Nowai Flomo from her Monrovia home
without any explanation. She is presumed dead. The Catholic Justice
and Peace Commission and other human rights organizations are
harassed and threatened when they protest against human rights
violations. The JPC executive director Kofi Woods was at one point
listed for elimination by the State Security. The leakage of the
plan received mass public protest, which helped save the human
rights activist. In summarizing some of the events under Taylor,
the US State Department report indicated that, "The government's
human rights record remained poor, and the security forces committed
many extra-judicial killings." The report said the Taylor
government security forces "violated citizen's privacy rights,
conducted warrantless searches, harassment, illegal surveillance,
and looted homes."
On a regular basis, the government security forces have physically
assaulted journalists, leading to their hospitalization. Journalists
Phillip Wisseh, Hassan Bility and Andrew Redd were arrested by
government security operatives at various times and manhandled.
Redd had to flee for his life, and is now in the United States.
The Statement Department report confirmed that the government
"restricted freedom of the press and assaulted, threatened,
and intimidated journalists into self-censorship." The situation
has since not improved.
The Liberian people's problems under Taylor are further exacerbated
by their dismal living conditions. Prices of imported and local
goods continue to rise and the government is constantly in at
least four months behind in paying the meager salaries due its
employees. Electricity and pipe-born water and other basic public
services seem to be a decade away, and Liberia's largest hospital,
the JF Kennedy center closed down last month. The dilapidated
road network and public buildings from the war remain the same
or have further deteriorated. Taylor and a few local and foreign
partners run the economy through petroleum, logging, and mineral
and imported rice trade arrangements.
The international community, including Americans and their institutions
continue to bear witness to the sustained and gruesome violation
of human rights now set in motion in Liberia. About two years
ago, a consortium of rights non-governmental organizations called
on the United Nations to investigate what they called "Threat
to Peace" in Liberia. The group, which included the United
States Committee for Refugees, TransAfrica, and the International
Rescue Committee, said in their October 21, l998 submission that,
"Reports of looting and disregard for civil liberties by
government security forces have undermined the confidence of Liberians
and others in the government's commitment to reconciliation and
the rule of law." The consortium worried that "many
have questions about the legitimacy of the treason charges the
Liberian government lodged against opposition members." Today
several hundred thousand Liberians are living as refugees in the
subregion, Europe and the United States for fear of death, harassment,
or sheer impossibility to survive economically.
A US-based African group, the Universal Human Rights Center in
Boston, said in a press release that "it was in the vital
interest of the (Liberian) government, not only to ensure that
life and property of citizens and foreigners are protected but
it is also important that citizens and foreigners feel secure..."
The Boston group protest was launched just five months after Taylor
assumed the Presidency.
Recently an American institution, which was stubbornly optimistic
about growth of democracy under Taylor, finally packed up and
left Liberia. Former US President Jimmy Carter and his Atlanta-based
Center were prepared to help build institutions of democratic
governance in post war Liberia. This evidently turned out to be
wishful. When the group withdrew a few weeks ago, it did so embarrassingly.
The Carter Center had fastidiously endeavored to illustrate it
was possible to succeed with its objective even under a character
such as Charles Taylor. The former President had played a controversial
role in the preceding Liberian war when he was perceived to be
supportive of Taylor the rebel leader. He since then labored to
demonstrate his neutrality and was in Monrovia to observe the
1997 elections and individually meet with leading presidential
candidates.
When I met the statesman at his headquarters in Atlanta two years
ago, I was particularly touched by his resolve to pursue his humanitarian
goals in Liberia. I however concluded that President Jimmy Carter
was unrealistically optimistic and excited about building democratic
institutions in post-war Liberia under Taylor. Knowing the kind
of leadership we were dealing with, I thought it was only fair
to admonish the former President against building monumental hopes.
Carter's initial target was to strengthen the Human Rights Commission
set up by Taylor. He told me he wanted to help the commission
function as part of his desire to see the rule of law, genuine
reconciliation and honest national reconstruction take place in
the embattled West African nation. The commission is today totally
limp if not extinct. Its chairman, Judge Hall Badio, fruitlessly
complained about the lack of funds and other necessities. It was
sad that three years of struggle in Liberia only siphoned vitality
out of the Carter initiative.
The Carter experience only further solidifies the growing alienation
of the Taylor government in American circles. Public figures like
Jesse Jackson and Congressman Donald Payne, who were once criticized
by Taylor adversaries for backing the Monrovia regime, are now
distancing themselves. Even paid professional Washington lobbyists
like the former Assistant Secretary of State, Herman Cohen, have
refused to renew their retention contract with Taylor. The resignation
of Rachel Gbenyon-Diggs as Taylor's ambassador in Washington in
1999 exposed the fatigue in trying to patch up a pariah image.
It is this Liberian backdrop that particularly spells doom for
Taylor in the corridors of Congress, and inevitably soon the Bush
presidency.
Vital Interest:
Liberia has long been written off as subject of US vital interest.
But the West African subregional political and economic web that
crucially links the United States makes actions coming out of
Liberia difficult to ignore. American men and money are providing
specialized military training for Nigerian, Ghanaian and other
West African soldiers to take peacekeeping positions in Sierra
Leone. The move is helping to nurture US influence in a region
assumed to be under the cloak of British and French colonial culture.
Top Bush officials like Dick Cheney and Colin Powell with intense
defense experience will certainly want to pursue the strategy.
Nigeria, the most powerful in West Africa and the most populous
on the continent, is at the center of the US operation for critical
economic reasons as well. Oil is the West African nation's mainstay,
accounting for about 90% of export earnings. Crude oil reserves
are estimated by various sources to average about 22 billion barrels.
A member of OPEC with an average annual production of nearly 700
million barrels, Nigeria continues to value its partnership with
American and other western companies. The low-sulfur Nigerian
oil is luring to the West, where efforts abound to curtail air
and environmental pollution.
Last month, Chevron oil of the United States won a major Nigerian
bid to prospect oil in newly identified areas. Along with Shell,
Chevron will work in the most coveted deep-sea allocation. ExxonMobil
and the Italian Agip company won smaller prospecting bids.
It is not clear whether Bush National Security Advisor Condoleezza
Rice will resign her membership on the Chevron board of directors,
but the long-term commitment of the company in Nigeria and other
parts of West Africa is vital to the United States. The company
has also entered a contract to spearhead the multimillion-dollar
West African Gas Pipeline Project. Upon completion, the 620-mile
offshore pipeline is expected to have the capacity of shipping
180 million cubic feet of gas per day. The Nigerian gas will be
servicing power plants and other facilities in Togo, Benin and
Ghana.
The combined oil exploration and gas projects portend significant
benefits for the United States, where the simmering global energy
threat nearly created a crisis last year. The Clinton Administration
had to deflate the political time bomb by authorizing the release
of emergency national petroleum reserves. With energy bound to
preoccupy the new comers to Washington, whatever affects an important
source like Nigeria will have repercussions on the already slowing
US economy. After all, Former President George Bush did not mince
words in pointing out petrol economics as one of the main reasons
for the United States' involvement in the Gulf War.
Besides Advisor Rice, Vice President-elect Dick Cheney is himself
familiar with the security and economic implications of the critical
commodity. As Defense Secretary during the war and later as CEO
of the Halliburton Energy Service Company up to his selection
as a Bush running mate, he is in the position to recognize the
connection between America's vital interest in Nigerian oil and
the threat posed by the spreading anarchy engulfing the West African
sub-region. Cheney is familiar with the economic and political
intricacies of his former company's host locations in Nigeria,
Ivory Coast, Cameroon and other African countries.
It is not fantasy to foresee where trouble hatched in Liberia
could literally engulf the subregion and undermine all of these
petroleum and gas interests, so vital to the struggling economies
of the area as well as the energy needs of the United States and
Europe. The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)
practically led by Nigeria, is saddled with security problems
mostly manufactured in Liberia. Nigeria got bigger in stature
when it led the efforts to end the seven-year Liberian war. It
certainly is doing everything to maintain regional leadership
and respect. And the Nigerians are fully aware that only a responsible
and effective role in West African conflicts, in addition to proper
management of their own governance system, can guarantee their
regional leadership. Liberia as a source of West Africa's most
explosive problem, therefore remains at the top of the Nigerian
agenda. As for now, the fundamental approach, as far as Nigeria
is concerned, is to fulfill a sense of moral duty in pursuing
the peaceful survival of Sierra Leone, a fellow African and Commonwealth
country. Britain shares that obligation, and the United States
is certainly not impotent in the matter.
With blood diamond and gunrunning taking international proportions
under Taylor's sponsorship, pervasive abuse of human rights and
decadent economic conditions in Liberia, the Bush team has opportunity
to manifest compassionate conservatism towards innocent victims
on both sides of the Atlantic. It is comforting to recall that
the Republican leadership in the Senate believes the best relief
is to engender a dictator-free Liberia. Charles Taylor should
expect no less from a Bush Administration.
Editor's Note: Alhaji G. V. Kromah is a former leader of the ULIMO-K, one of the warring factions that fought during the Liberian seven years civil war. He served as a member of the transitional collective presidency of Liberia from 1995-97.