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Authors: Greg Campbell

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But for smugglers and criminals, UN resolutions mean little. Nassour had business to conduct with the RUF. He told the rebels that he had buyers who needed to convert large sums of cash into easily convertible commodities, and diamonds fit the bill perfectly.
It's not known if Nassour told the RUF who the buyers were, but they probably could have guessed. On previous occasions, Nassour
had done business with two Muslim men who referred to him as “Alpha Zulu” whenever they spoke to him on a satellite phone. The two 24-year-old men—Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, from Tanzania, and Fazul Abdullah Mohammed of Kenya—were members of Saudi billionaire Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda terrorist network. According to the FBI, they'd been buying diamonds from the RUF since 1998, the same year U.S. embassies were destroyed by Al Qaeda operatives in Dar-es-Salaam and Nairobi. Ghailani is accused by the FBI of helping buy the truck that destroyed the building in Dar-es-Salaam.
According to the FBI, it seems the first Al Qaeda contact was established between Mosquito and Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah, a top bin Laden aid. The two met through RUF General Bah in September 1998, and Abdullah discussed the possibility of buying RUF diamonds on a regular basis. As recently as January 2000—right under the nose of UNAMSIL—Ghailani and Mohammed had been in Sierra Leone's mother-lode district, Kono, with the RUF, overseeing diamond production on behalf of Al Qaeda.
Whether he mentioned his clients or not at the July meeting in the safehouse in Monrovia, Nassour's request of the RUF stood to benefit everyone involved: He asked the RUF to double their production at the diamond mines in exchange for a higher price for the rough. That way the RUF could pad their profits before having to hand over the diamond districts to the government as outlined in the disarmament agreement, Nassour would make out handsomely, and his clients could easily launder millions of dollars of cash. They could also turn a considerable profit: RUF diamonds usually sold to their first customers for about 10 percent of their uncut worth.
The timing of this agreement was critical. From the RUF's point of view, there was a finite amount of time, measured in months if
not weeks, for the rebels to continue plundering the diamond fields before the government regained their control, with UN oversight. For Nassour's Al Qaeda clients, they had less than two months—until September 11, to be precise—to turn their cash into diamonds, which would then represent one of their few liquid assets.
Shortly after the meeting, news reports noted a frenzied pace of mining in Kono and other RUF-controlled diamond areas. “Sierra Leone's rebels are using the forced labor of children and young men to greatly expand their diamond mining here, despite an agreement as part of a fragile peace process to stop harvesting gems from one of the world's richest diamond fields,” wrote
Washington Post
reporter Douglas Farah from Kono in August. “The rebels of the Revolutionary United Front are digging, in defiance of an accord with the government earlier this month, and the presence nearby of 800 UN peacekeepers. UN officials said their mandate was to enforce a cease-fire signed by the rebels and the government in November (2000) and did not include enforcing the mining ban.”
It's impossible to say how much Al Qaeda money was converted to gems during this last-ditch megabuy, but it's likely that it served its overarching purpose very well.
On September 11, 2001, a group of Al Qaeda terrorists hijacked three commercial airplanes and crashed them into the World Trade Center's Twin Towers in New York and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., in a catastrophic and well-organized attack on the United States. A fourth hijacked airliner presumed to be aimed for the Capitol building or the White House crashed in a forest in Pennsylvania after passengers fought with hijackers for control of the airplane. The Twin Towers collapsed, killing nearly 3,000 people, and 190 were killed at the Pentagon. The plume of smoke from the New York attacks could be seen by satellites in outer
space. Intelligence experts put the blame squarely on Al Qaeda and its leader, Osama bin Laden.
As a first step in its retaliation, the United States launched a diplomatic mission to Europe and the Middle East in an effort to freeze the financial accounts of Osama bin Laden's terror network, tying up over $100 million in assets in the first three weeks. The aim was to cripple the Saudi exile's ability to fund future attacks and resupply its military assets in Afghanistan, Al Qaeda's base of operations.
But if bin Laden's currency-to-diamonds conversion scheme worked—and the indication is that it did, for Al Qaeda operatives seem to have begun three years before the attacks—the network kept up to several million dollars worth of assets in the form of milky white stones, the most compact form of wealth known to man.
“I now believe that to cut off Al Qaeda funds and laundering activities you have to cut off the diamond pipeline,” said a European investigator quoted in the
Washington Post.
“We are talking about millions and maybe tens of millions of dollars in profits and laundering.”
1
 
“WHAT IS ‘HEZBOLLAH?'”
It was an unexpected question for 44-year-old
Washington Post
reporter Doug Farah, especially under the circumstances. Although Sierra Leone was the proud home to thousands of Lebanese diamond merchants and their families—and the country's reputation as a fund-raising source for the infamous Iranian-backed terrorist group was practically common knowledge—the fact that he was being asked about Hezbollah by one of his RUF contacts seemed out of place. And that it was happening in the weeks following the September 11 terror attacks made it all the more intriguing.
He answered the question with one of his own: Why do you want to know?
That simple inquiry would lead, although he couldn't have known it at the time, to his eventual hasty departure from West Africa under threats to his life and those of his family by a powerful network of people. It was the tiny crack in a dam of information that would bring the Sierra Leone diamond story full circle and add a major piece of the puzzle to the world's biggest story that was breaking in places far removed from Sierra Leone: the U.S. war on terrorism that was, at that moment, building like a thunderhead over Afghanistan.
But the tale began undramatically, as many do, with a shrug and a plausible explanation. The RUF fighter told Farah that there was a safehouse in Monrovia used by General Bah that was occupied by Hezbollah members, but he wasn't sure what Hezbollah was. He told Farah that he'd been there and seen movies of men blowing up Israeli tanks and large posters of Osama bin Laden on the walls. The men who occupied the house claimed their membership with the Lebanese terrorist group.
Although he had no idea about the eventual significance of that piece of information at the time, Farah filed it away as a possible lead. A longtime correspondent in some of the world's most dangerous locations, Farah was a veteran reporter of the drug war in Latin America and was no stranger to conflicts that were run purely as economic endeavors. In the weeks and months following the September 11 attacks, he was pursuing the connections between foreign fund-raising in West Africa and its wars.
2
Although he'd been to dangerous places in the past, Farah had never experienced a fighting force as unhinged as the RUF, a telling statement from a man who'd spent fifteen years prior to coming to
Africa covering wars in Central America, drug wars in the Andes, and the American occupation of Haiti.
3
Since March 2000, Farah had been the
Washington Post
's West African bureau chief, based in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, with his wife and infant child. He spent his time traveling throughout West Africa, but focused on Nigeria, the big brother of all West African countries. The continent's most populous country, Nigeria holds the most interest for Americans—one in six Africans is Nigerian—and it's the one that Western nations hope to be a stabilizing force in the war-torn region. Other countries of interest to Farah were those that don't have a map-location in the minds of most American news consumers: Equatorial Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Niger, Chad . . . and Sierra Leone. When Farah took on the job, Sierra Leone was reaching a watershed moment in its history—the breakdown of all authority with the deployment of UNAMSIL and the subsequent capture of over 500 of its soldiers.
Sierra Leone proved to be familiar soil for Farah. He felt he intuitively understood the conflict thanks to his background in Colombia, the big difference being that the end product of one war was illegal and that in the other was one of the world's most prized luxuries, a fact that made the Sierra Leone story all the more lurid. Diamonds and drugs can sometimes have a lot in common in regards to where they're harvested, what they fund, and how they're sold.
But the RUF defied most stereotypes about organized crime rebellions. The RUF's standards of conduct—and those of almost everyone else fighting in Sierra Leone—were nearly nonexistent, controlled mainly by drugs, booze, and savagery, making them wholly unpredictable and terrifying.
“Even the crazed death squad goons in El Salvador and the hit men in Colombia were not that far gone,” he wrote in an e-mail
message to me in late 2001. “And no group I was familiar with ever targeted children like the RUF and others did.”
Farah filed a story about diamond mining in Kono, and how it had inexplicably reached a fever pitch in the summer of 2001 even though the RUF were to have stopped mining under the current peace agreement. One of the key points in his story was the obligatory washing-of-hands statement from UNAMSIL officials: The peacekeeping force was there to enforce the disarmament, not the mining ban. In other words, although it was a violation of the agreement, UNAMSIL was going to do nothing about it.
Farah returned home to Abidjan, where he turned the Hezbollah nugget over in his mind. There are an estimated 120,000 Lebanese living in West Africa, most of them in the import-export business. Although the number of extremist Shiite Muslims who would be inclined to actively fund Hezbollah is thought to be low, it's also thought that more moderate Lebanese contribute to the organization to keep from being shaken down. The fact that Bah may have ties to the group wasn't necessarily surprising. Intelligence agencies have long suspected Bah of coordinating diamond sales with them for as long as twenty years, during a time in which terrorists attacked American interests in Beirut with car bombs, hijacked airplanes, and kidnapped Americans. Bah has spent most of his life as a rebel, first in Senegal, then in Afghanistan, then in Lebanon. He is thought to have personally trained Charles Taylor and Foday Sankoh when they were in Libya in the early 1990s.
4
Farah soon learned that a top Hezbollah member may have visited Abidjan recently. The man was named as one of the FBI's most wanted terrorists, a list that was released in the wake of the September 11 attacks and also published, with photos, in
Newsweek
magazine. Farah took the magazine with him when he again met with his RUF contacts a few weeks later.
The Al Qaeda story may have died there. None of the people he showed the picture to recognized the Hezbollah operative. But one of the RUF men picked up Farah's
Newsweek
and began idly flipping through the pages, looking at the pictures. At one point, Farah said the man gasped in surprise. He knew three of the others wanted by the FBI; two of them, he said, had been in Kono as recently as January 2001, working with a man known to them as Alpha Zulu, the code name of Aziz Nassour. All three of the wanted men were identified in the magazine as Al Qaeda members.
Farah was stunned. He'd gone to Sierra Leone with the hopes of connecting RUF diamond sales and Hezbollah, but it seemed that he had hit the jackpot, so long as the RUF man knew what he was talking about. Several other RUF soldiers came over and also recognized the three Al Qaeda operatives. He asked them to look at the pictures again. They said that they were sure; Bah also knew the wanted men, they said, because Bah had “fought in Afghanistan” and with Hezbollah. The Al Qaeda operatives were sent to Kono by “Alpha Zulu.” He was the main man, they confirmed, and he's the one who rented the Hezbollah house in Monrovia.
The story gelled quickly in Farah's mind, like drops of mercury rolling toward one another to form one big pool. He'd heard the name Aziz Nassour in the past. Not only was the man a diamond merchant with a buying office in Bo, a diamond trading center in Sierra Leone, but he'd also heard rumors that Nassour was involved in running guns to the RUF and was close to both General Bah and Brigadier Sessay, the RUF leader. Farah knew Bah from previous meetings and an earlier
Washington Post
reporter had relied on Bah to make critical field contacts with commanders like General Mosquito. The outline quickly took shape: The RUF had sold diamonds to Al Qaeda through Nassour and his cousin,
Samiah Osailly. September 11 may have been the impetus for the RUF to ramp up their mining efforts in Kono.
That was the theory. To turn the theory into a news story, Farah would have to have a showdown in Freetown.
 
OMRIE GOLLEY' S SMALL SUITE at the Cape Sierra Hotel is guarded by a phalanx of RUF fighters and UN soldiers, most of whom lounge and sleep in the hallway outside his door, shortwave transistors providing a tinny backdrop to their continued presence. The suite is at the end of a series of narrow, unlit corridors, but because it's at the far end of the hotel complex, it also offers a commanding view of the ocean pounding black boulders at the nation's edge. The sound of the surf rolled across the unkempt lawns and into the room, where Farah and Golley sipped almost-cold beers and listened to it fill the long silences.
Omrie Golley is the RUF's civilian agent, spokesperson, and UN liaison as chairman of the RUF Political and Peace Council. He is a round-faced man with thick glasses, and lives in London. He's also one of the group's most level-headed and world-wise, which is why Farah went to him to arrange a meeting with other top RUF leaders about his Al Qaeda story. It wouldn't be wise to confront such unstable personalities with his charges without the presence of someone more sensible and literate like Golley.

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