Two very significant and interconnected events happened last week in Liberia
– President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was inaugurated for a second term with a
subdued opposition attending the ceremonies, and former Liberian President
Charles Taylor was implicated in a Boston Globe article
for serving as a CIA informant beginning in the early 1980s and spanning many
decades.
Taylor, Taylor, How Did Your Garden Grow?
Taylor, who currently languishes in a jail cell in The Hague after undergoing
trial for 11 counts of crimes against humanity in the Sierra Leonean civil war,
has ironically never faced trial for the atrocities that he orchestrated,
oversaw, and implemented in Liberia. The bombshell news that he was indeed a CIA
informant in the early years of his rise to notoriety calls into question
America’s complicity in Taylor’s destruction of Liberia.
America’s facilitation of Taylor’s escape from a maximum security prison in
Boston in 1985 – while he was facing extradition to Liberia for allegedly
stealing US$1 million from the General Services Agency, which he headed during
President Samuel Kanyon Doe’s regime – was always rumoured but never
corroborated.
I remember covering the first day of Taylor’s trial in The Hague for
Pambazuka News, and interviewing Stephen Rapp, the then chief prosecutor, about
whether or not his investigations into Taylor’s exploits in Libya and Sierra
Leone ever unearthed the real causes of his ‘escape’ from the maximum security
prison in Massachusetts. Rapp was tight-lipped, yet appeared confounded by this
mystery as well. When Taylor eventually confessed during the Hague trial that he
strolled out of prison after a guard conveniently opened his cell one night, we
all knew that something was awry: “I am calling it my release because I didn’t
break out,’’ Taylor testified. “I did not pay any money. I did not know the guys
who picked me up. I was not hiding [afterwards].’’
The Taylor-CIA connection has re-inscribed for Liberians an age-old dilemma,
what to do with our so-called historical relationship with the US, which has
been fraught with betrayal after betrayal. Liberians who have been commenting on
various notice boards are justifiably angry, upset and disappointed, but not
surprised. This is the validation we have been wanting for years, and it comes
on the heels of the inauguration for a second term of our head of state, who was
ironically pictured dedicating the new US Embassy in Liberia this week, with a
smiling US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in the foreground.
Some Liberians, under anonymity, are arguing that US authorities who courted
Taylor for intelligence be brought to justice for crimes against humanity in the
Liberian civil war, that the International Criminal Court – now headed by a
female Gambian national – should exhibit blind justice, that instead of hauling
African and non-Western leaders to the international body for prosecution, they
too should face the full weight of the law. I tend to agree with these
arguments, however radical and farfetched they may seem.
Inquiring Liberian Minds Deserve to Know
The Globe article recounts that the CIA has said releasing further
information could be a national security threat. A threat to whom, might I ask?
Liberians deserve to know the nature, duration, scale, and scope of the
CIA-Taylor relationship, it is a part of our national history, and must be
recounted in the history books for our children, and our children’s children to
remember that a relationship with the US must be monitored at all times.
Liberians are not gullible, nor are we unsophisticated in realising that one
plus one equals two. We have always known that the dubiousness surrounding
Taylor’s escape from the Massachusetts maximum-security prison was the beginning
of the end for us. And if the implications of the Globe article are true, then
the CIA could provide more answers.
It is no wonder that the US did not intervene in the Liberian civil war,
though Liberians begged and pleaded for its “father/mother” to stop us from
killing each other. One US diplomat at the time even said that “Liberia is of no
strategic interest to the United States.” It begs the question, if Liberia was
of “no strategic interest” during the war, when we were killing ourselves and
each other in the name of liberation, what is Liberia’s strategic interest to
the US now, when American NGOs and development workers abound, and the Peace
Corps has reinserted itself?
This should send a strong signal to Liberians and Liberia once and for all
that America cannot be trusted. From Noriega, to Osama, to Saddam, to Samuel
Doe, authoritarian leaders who end up in the US’s good graces are never there
for long.
Limits of Reciprocity
What Liberians and the Liberian government should be doing is strategising
and devising our own “Liberia Policy for the US” which factors in seriously our
chequered history with unsentimental bias.
We should also rely on a corpus of intellectual and creative work that has
already investigated our ‘limits of reciprocity’ with the US. Liberian filmmaker
Nancee Oku Bright’s film, Liberia: America’s
Stepchild, explores the torturous relationship between Liberia and the
US, with her thesis being that the US sees Liberia as an ‘outside’ child, one
who is illegitimate upon conception and can be used and abused at will without
consequence. And Liberian academic Dr D. Elwood Dunn also interrogates this
relationship in his book, Liberia
and the United States During the Cold War: Limits of Reciprocity,
showing that the Cold War placed Liberia in a very strategic position to exploit
its relationship with the United States, yet with unintended consequences.
In this new political dispensation, it should be clear that Liberia should
hold the US at arm’s length, that hosting AFRICOM or any US satellite post is
out of the question, that we have to use them just as strategically as they have
used us. With the geopolitics of China and other emerging nations, Liberia needs
to develop a “Look South Policy,” not because we have become alienated, as in
the case of Zimbabwe, but because we have made a conscious decision to explore
other options, remembering that the US will act only in its own interest and
leave those caught in the crossfire to fend for themselves.
We deserve to know the details of Taylor’s relationship with the CIA. It is
crucial to our development planning, historical remembrance, healing and
nation-building.
This article was originally published at African
Arguments. 25 January 2012


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