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West African military force enters Liberia
By Chris Talbot
7 August 2003
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The first detachment of Nigerian troops from the Economic Community
of West African States (ECOWAS) has been airlifted from Sierra
Leone to Monrovia, the capital of Liberia, part of a vanguard
interposition force that is intended to separate Liberian
government forces from the surrounding rebels.
More Nigerian troops will be sent in this week, bringing the
initial force up to 1,500. ECOWAS leaders meeting in Ghana at
the end of last week agreed to a total force of 3,250 soldiers
from Nigeria and other West African countries to be sent in over
the next three weeks. At the insistence of the United States,
Liberian president Charles Taylor is supposed to quit office in
the next few days and leave for exile in Nigeria.
The ECOWAS intervention is effectively being carried out on
behalf of the United States. Although the US now has some 2,300
marines on three ships off the Liberian coast, President George
W. Bush has refused to make any commitment on US troop deployment.
For the last two weeks, the rebel group Liberians United for
Reconciliation and Democracy (LURD), backed by neighboring Guinea,
has stepped up its assault on Monrovia, resulting in hundreds
of civilian deaths and a deepening humanitarian disaster.
Over a million people are trapped in the city with food and
water supplies running out. Footage of the tens of thousands of
displaced people living in makeshift shelters and empty buildings,
constantly fleeing from the gun battles between irregular militias,
is now shown daily on television news.
The other rebel group fighting the Liberian government, the
Movement for Democracy in Liberia (MODEL), supported by the government
faction in the Ivory Coast conflict, has taken over Liberias
second city of Buchanan. Between them, LURD and MODEL now control
most of Liberia outside of Monrovia.
The US-backed intervention in Liberia has had a drawn-out and
indecisive character, partly due to divisions within the Bush
administration and partly due to haggling between the US and the
ECOWAS countries over financing the operation. A US vessel with
marines on board was sent towards Liberia in June but was then
withdrawn. ECOWAS announced it was sending in troops on July 4,
but they then failed to appear.
Bushs five-day visit to Africa at the beginning of July
was expected to coincide with an announcement of a West African
intervention with US backing, but instead Bush merely sent in
a small inspection team. The rebel forces took advantage of the
disarray and broke the temporary cease-fire agreement of June
17, stepping up their assault over the last two weeks.
ECOWAS sent in a 10-man inspection team to Monrovia, supposedly
to further assess the situation. Following Bushs announcement
that US ships were heading for the country, there appeared to
be another cease-fire. West African ministers met with Taylor
to check that he was actually prepared to leave, but this coincided
with a further outbreak of fighting as Taylors forces attempted
to push back the rebels before ECOWAS arrived.
Last week, the US summoned a special closed meeting of the
United Nations Security Council tabling a resolution to authorise
the West African intervention, to be followed by a full UN force
scheduled for October. The US insisted that the resolution contain
a clause exempting contributing states in the Liberian
peacekeeping operation (i.e., US officials and military personnel)
from prosecution for war crimes by the International Criminal
Court. Despite token opposition to this clause from France, Germany
and Mexico, the three countries abstained in the voting, enabling
the resolution to be passed.
Whilst the US is hardly a supporter of UN diplomacy, it appears
that the UN move was required to bring Nigeria and the West African
countries on board. The neo-conservatives of the Bush administration
consider that Liberia, a country with no mineral wealth and little
strategic importance, should be dealt with at a minimum cost to
the US, and would like other western powers to foot the bill through
the UN.
Although Bush has attempted unconvincingly to show some humanitarian
concern for a country that the US has looted and exploited for
over a century, the Pentagon has made clear that it is opposed
to risking troops on top of its commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan.
State Department officials have seen some benefit in sending a
military force to demonstrate that the US is concerned to liberate
people living under a dictator where no oil wealth is involved.
It seems that a compromise has been reached between the different
factions of the administration by sending the present small number
of US troops that will not be used in combat situations.
Nigerian president Obasanjo expressed the resentment of West
African countries at being called on to police Nigeria on behalf
of the US but without any financial backing in a BBC interview
on Thursday, July 31.
In an unusually frank outburst, he attacked the USs offshore
contingent of troops by comparing the situation to a house fire:
Somebody says here I am, I have my water, my fire
engine, now when you put the fire out in your house, I will come
in, I wonder what sort of help that is, with all due respect.
Obasanjo pointed out that ECOWAS peacekeeping operations over
12 years cost over $12 billion and resulted in more than 1,000
Nigeria soldiers killed. The world did not acknowledge that,
not even in terms of giving us debt relief for the contribution
we made. Needless to say, he did not mention that the Western-backed
Nigerian forces became completely discredited as unpaid soldiers
looted the local population and effectively ended up as one more
faction in the Liberian civil war.
All that the US has offered so far is a mere $10 million paid
to a US private company to give logistical support to the ECOWAS
troops. It seems that with the passing of the UN resolution and
UN secretary general Kofi Annan agreeing to provide some funding,
the ECOWAS intervention has gone ahead.
As well as military and financial considerations, the peacekeeping
operation has been further complicated because of the US insistence
that peacekeeping can only proceed if Charles Taylor quits. Taylor
is indicted for war crimes at a US-backed Special Court in Sierra
Leone.
Taylor is undoubtedly a brutal dictator but hardly different
from a whole layer of criminal elements on both the government
and rebel side of the conflict that loot, rape and kill the local
population, as well as recruit children, often supplied with drugs,
to carry out their fighting. Whether Taylor will agree to go into
exile and risk prosecution remains to be seen.
The Liberian catastrophe has resulted in growing demands in
the press for a US-led intervention to rescue the people from
a humanitarian disaster. There are repeated complaints that the
US administration is not taking up its historic responsibility
towards Liberia. The Washington Post complained in a editorial
that Bushs strategy is giving the appearance of responding
to the United Nations desperate pleas for US military assistance
without actually providing any. An article in the British
Guardian the next day moralised that whilst the US has
a relationship to Liberia similar to that of Britain to Sierra
Leone, unlike the UK the US has consistently avoided the
duties implicit in that relationship.
Whilst it is understandable that desperate Liberians have called
on the US for help, a US military intervention, or for that matter
the intervention of US-backed West African forces, will not provide
any basis for security or improvement in the region. Even if carried
out reluctantly, compared to the war on Iraq, and accepting that
Liberia is a much smaller country with few resources, the result
can only be the extension of neo-colonialism.
Despite the boasts of the British government and its Guardian
supporters that Sierra Leone is a success story, a serious examination
of conditions there three years after British troops defeated
the Liberian-backed rebels gives a different picture and indicates
what faces Liberia.
It is true that the continued presence of British troops, backed
by a large UN force, has stopped fighting in Sierra Leone itself.
But conflict was exported, often involving the same rebel outfits
preying on the local population, to the Ivory Coast, Guinea and
Liberia. The French are now suppressing conflict in the Ivory
Coast with a presence of 4,000 troops. A US-backed policing operation
in Liberia would only shift fighting to Guinea or even other countries.
Sierra Leone is now burdened with thousands of refugees that have
fled the fighting in Liberia.
All the social and economic conditions that gave rise to the
decade-long conflict in Sierra Leone are still present. There
has been no revival of the countrys economy, and it remains
at the bottom of the UN list of underdeveloped nations. All that
British officials can recommend is to attract foreign investors
in diamond extraction and the mining of rutile (titanium)as
though a century of looting of the regions resources by
Western multinationals is not the cause of its present plight.
Despite the operations of dozens of non-governmental organisations
(NGOs), there has been minimal aid from the West compared to the
billions of dollars that would be needed to restore even the limited
infrastructure and public services that existed two or three decades
ago.
The United Nations mid-year review of May 2003, whilst
making many references to progress, cannot but reveal
the abysmal situation. There are clearly few reliable statistics,
and the report simply states that unemployment remains very
high, especially among the youth. An appeal by the UN for
the tiny amount of $109 million assistance for 2003 received less
than 50 percent of the total. A staggeringly low figure of only
6.6 percent of the population has access to safe water, and the
report states that 80 percent of shelter needsgiven the
continuing return of refugeesare unmet. Despite the huge
HIV/AIDS crisis facing the African continent, the UN did not receive
enough funds to provide either the diagnostic units or the support
for people dying with AIDS that had been planned.
Above all, it is clear that despite all the talk of promoting
a human rights culture, the country is effectively run by British
officials assisted by the same tiny corrupt elite that were in
power before the civil war began, and that without the continuing
military occupation the country would quickly descend again into
a bloody conflict.
See Also:
Liberian war restarts
[21 July 2003]
Bush administration divided
over intervention in Liberia
[7 July 2003]
Africa and the perspective
of international socialism
[18 February 2002]
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