This is
part five of the Appendix to Damien Lewis book “Operation Certain Death”
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After
the successful rescue of the Royal Irish hostages in September 2000, the
British military intervention continued in Sierra Leone. Soon after, the Royal
Irish contingent at Benguema was replaced by some three hundred further British
troops who took over their activities. By the end of 2000m some three thousand
SLA troops would have completed the IMATT training course. In fact, IMATT was
mandated for a three-year contract to sort out the situation in Sierra Leone,
with a budget in excess of some £30 million.
The British military continued to operate in Sierra Leone, doing by default
what the UN had proven itself incapable of – enabling the SLA to operate
effectively against the rebels and bring about an end to the country’s
internecine civil war.
IMATT was and remains a British-led
initiative, which is not under the UN. It uses only experienced military
personnel: in addition to the Royal Irish Regiment, the Royal Gurkha Rifles,
the Royal Anglian Regiment and several other units have served under IMATT in
Sierra Leone. There are also smaller allied contingents, including several
Canadian and American troops. In 2000, the Canadians deployed military
personnel under Operation Sculpture, and they worked alongside the British
forces training the SLA. Between August 1999 and March 2000, IMATT cost the
British taxpayer some £7.4 million – and that was prior to the massive military
interventions of Operation Palliser and Operation Barras. The price tag for the
British military intervention in Sierra Leone is not inconsiderable.
At the start of 2001 – several months after
Operations Palliser and Barras – three scenarios were facing IMATT. Under the
first, ‘golden scenario’, the rebel forces would disband in the face of British
forces and a newly revamped SLA. In the second, ‘silver scenario’, the
13,000-strong peacekeeping forces of UNAMSIL would move into the rebel areas,
and oversee a nationwide rebel disarmament program.
Colonel Mike Dent, IMATT’s CO, was pretty
clear about the British forces’ mandate against the rebels. “We need to
orchestrate success and ensure that when we attack, we can take our objective
completely. This is to build up confidence within the Sierra Leonean ranks, to
test what our training teams have taught them, and to send a message to the RUF
and quite possibly other forces in … Liberia as well.”
The issues facing Sierra Leone cut across
many traditional British political enmities. Though IMATT was a Labor
government initiative, it enjoyed a large groundswell of Conservative support –
despite concerns about ‘mission creep’. In a House of Commons debate on Sierra
Leone on 25 May – just as Operation Palliser was really getting to grips with
the RUF in Sierra Leone – Crispin Blunt MP, a Tory, spoke approvingly of the
British military actions.
‘The RUF is a bunch of terrorist gangsters, which supports
itself in power through the supply of money that it gets from Sierra Leone’s
diamond mines and its relationship with Liberia, where the diamonds are
marketed. The key military objective must be to destroy the RUF by taking
control of ground that is vital to them – that is the diamond-producing areas.
I believe that is achievable, given that the RUF has no cultural basis of
support and no tribal loyalty. The operation should be properly followed up by
retraining the Sierra Leone Army, training the police force and the civil
service and putting in place civil institutions.’
For
his unstinting support over the last four years in Sierra Leone, Tony Blair
received the personal thanks of President Kabbah. In an open letter Kabbah
expressed profound thanks for ‘the principled and ethical position’ that
Britain has taken on the conflict in his country. Blair himself certainly sees
Sierra Leone as a success story, one demonstrating the efficacy of his policies
on international intervention in troubled nations: ‘When people say that they
run an ethical foreign policy, I say Sierra Leone was an example of that.’
One
of the greatest difficulties now facing the country is the numbers of those who
in one way or another have been involved in the fighting – either as rebels,
militia, Kamajor or SLA. There are an estimated 50,000 such combatants, and
only eight-thousand-odd of those could be integrated back into the
IMATT-trained RSLAF. The rest – some, 40,000 – were destined for the
UN-operated Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration program, which aims
to provide some training and civilian jobs for the new non-combatants.
The
enemies of IMATT went far beyond the borders of Sierra Leone. Consider the
wider scenario. It was one in which Liberia’s Charles Taylor helped the RUF by
taking their conflict diamonds, selling them internationally, and providing
weapons in return. That was the way by which the RUF converted diamonds into
money and arms. By extension, any enemy of IMATT’s was also a friend of
Liberia’s. And as the RUF was initially trained and backed by Libya, there were
even wider international implications. Add into that the recent diamond deals
that the RUF have done with al-Qaeda operatives (conflict diamonds being an
untraceable and unfreezable form of almost ready cash), then IMATT was in
effect taking on the minions of Osama bin Laden and his world-terror network as
well. All the more reason, therefore, for the British government’s serious
commitment to getting the job done in Sierra Leone.
In
May 2000, President Taylor attacked the role British forces were playing in
Sierra Leone. ‘The British government has been among the collaborating
governments which has posed a direct threat to the security of Liberia by
rearming a non-restructured Sierra Leone Army, and the Kamajors… which include
special forces of Liberian dissidents in Sierra Leone.’ Turning up the heat on
its war with Britain and the US, Liberia accused the two nations of supporting
Liberian rebels and backing a plot to assassinate Charles Taylor himself. In
interviews with the BBC, Taylor denied charges that he was aiding the RUF, and
went on the counter-attack. ‘Isn’t it easy for the Great United States to
confront this little country with evidence, so that everyone will say, “Yes,
you are wrong”?’ Taylor went on to claim that the US had sent American
assassins into the country to kill him, posing as missionaries and diplomats.
The US was supposedly paying $2 million for the killing of Charles Taylor.
In
the spring of 2003, David Crane, the Chief Prosecutor of the UN Special Court
in Sierra Leone, revealed growing evidence of an al-Qaeda link to the civil
wars in both Sierra Leone and Liberia. President Taylor was allegedly harboring
al-Qaeda operatives. ‘We know that they are moving about. We know that they are
trading in diamonds, laundering money and being protected by Charles Taylor,’
David Crane told the Reuters news agency. It was high time to examine the
region’s terrorist links, Crane said, before the world community would come to
rue the day that it had ignored the area for so long. ‘Charles Taylor is
harboring terrorists from the Middle East, including al-Qaeda and Hezbollah,
and has been doing so for years. Taylor is a player in the world of terror and
what he does affects the lives of those living in the United States and Europe.’
Interestingly, the US is the worlds single biggest market for diamonds,
accounting for some 50 per cent of the global trade.
http://www.globalpolicy.org/wtc/terrorism/2003/0209blood.htm
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