CHAPTER ONE    CENTCOM    YEMEN, WINTER 2002    With Notes On Colombia    “
Yemen was vast. And it was only one small country. . . . How to manage  such an imperium?”    In November 1934, when the British traveler and Arabist Freya Stark  journeyed to Yemen to explore the broad oasis of the Wadi Hadhramaut, the  most helpful person she encountered was the French aesthete and business  tycoon Antonin Besse, whose Aden-based trading empire stretched from  Abyssinia to East Asia. Besse, dressed in a white dinner jacket with  creased white shorts, served excellent wine at dinner, and was described  as “a Merchant in the style of the Arabian Nights or the Renaissance.”1 In  December 2002, when I went to Yemen, the most helpful person I encountered  was Bob Adolph, a retired lieutenant colonel in the United States Army  Special Forces, who was the United Nations security officer for Yemen.    Adolph, whose military career had taken him all over the world, had the  chest of a bodybuilder and a bluff, bulldog face under wire-rim glasses  and a creased ball cap. I spotted him on the other side of passport  control, waiting in the dusky warehouse under fluorescent lights that  functioned as the Sana‘a airport.    Because of their own al-Qaeda problem, the Yemenis were suspicious of  anyone with a Pakistani visa inside his passport. I was pulled over by a  man smoking a cigarette and wearing a torn sweater and slippers. Adolph,  seeing that I was making no progress, ambled over to him, speaking in bad  but passable Arabic, gritting his teeth each time he made a point. Others  were also haggling with customs and passport officers. It was a typical  third world scene: confusion and a cacophony of negotiation in place of  fixed standards.    After more of Adolph’s pleading, I got back my passport. We headed for the  parking lot. It was 2 a.m. Two beggar boys grabbed my bags and put them in  the Land Cruiser. Adolph slipped them half a dollar in riyals. I was  relaxed. The Arab world, while afflicted by political violence, had little  or no common crime. In this sense, Islam had risen to the challenge of  urbanization and modern life, and was a full-fledged success.    “This is the most democratic state in Arabia. For that reason it’s the  most dangerous and unstable,” Adolph said, explaining that when  Western-style democracy replaced absolute dictatorship in places with high  unemployment rates and weak, corrupt institutions, the result was often   a security vacuum that groups like al-Qaeda could take advantage of.   “I’ve drawn up multiple evacuation plans for the U.N. staff here, updating  calling-tree lists,” he went on. “If the place goes down during the night,  I can have all our people in Asmara the next day in time for brunch at the   InterContinental there. The trick is to keep doing favors for people in  the army, the police, and the tribes, and never call them in, until you  need them to get your people out.”    He veered to avoid another head-on. “Notice the way people drive here,  you’ve got ten-year-olds propped up on phone books driving Granddad around  town. Forget about rules and licenses. Keep all of your cash in different  pockets. Despite all of the guns, ready cash always gives you more power  in Yemen than a gun. Everybody in this country is a businessman, and a  good one.” His tone was commanding, didactic.    It was the last night of Ramadan. Though a few hours before dawn, the  streets were noisy and crowded, and gaily strung with lights. Sana‘a  resembled a fairy-tale vision of Arabia, with basalt and mudbrick  buildings festooned with colored glass fretwork and gypsum friezes. I  recalled my first visit to Yemen in 1986.    Back then, the diplomats and other area specialists had assured me that  with the discovery of oil in significant amounts, the Yemeni government  would soon have the financial wherewithal to extend its power into the  countryside, ending the feudal chaos. The opposite had occurred. To  placate the sheikhs, the government bribed them with the newfound wealth,  so oil revenues strengthened the medieval periphery rather than the  modernizing capital. Kidnappings of foreign tourists erupted in the  mid-1990s, as the sheikhs got greedy and sought to further blackmail the  government. The government also had to compete with wealthy Wahabi  extremists from Saudi Arabia and with al-Qaeda, who sometimes had more  money with which to influence local Yemeni tribal leaders. With al-Qaeda  targeting oil vessels off the Yemeni coast, maritime insurance rates had  gone up, reducing sea traffic and consequently the amount of money from  oil exports, so the regime had less money for bribes. The foreign  community feared that a new wave of kidnappings might lie ahead.    For al-Qaeda, Yemen was a conveniently chaotic, culturally sympathetic  country in the heart of Arabia, so much more desirable than far-afield,  non-Arab Afghanistan. It might just be a matter of chipping away at the  regime.    In downtown Sana‘a, I noticed that people were not wearing the cheap  Westernized polyesters that signify the breakdown of tribal identities  under the pressure cooker of urbanization. They still wore white thobes  with checkered keffiyahs or Kashmiri shawls, with the men sporting  jambiyas (ornamental curved daggers) in the middle of their belts.    “It’s tribal everything,” another U.S. military source would explain to  me. “The ministries are fiefdoms for the various tribes. It’s a world of  stovepipe bureaucracies. All the information flows to the top and none of  it is shared along the way, so that only [President Ali Abdullah] Saleh  knows what is going on. As for the furious demands from the Americans to  fight bin Laden, we Americans are just another crazy tribe that Saleh  holds close to his chest, and balances against the others. Same with  al-Qaeda. Saleh has to appease and do favors for everyone to stay in  power.” Yeah, I thought, whichever dog is closest to biting him, he feeds.    Adolph told me that the Yemeni government controlled only about   50 percent of the country. A high-ranking Western diplomat in Yemen would  hotly dispute that claim, telling me that Saleh controlled “all the main  roads, oil fields, and pipelines,” which, I countered, was less than   50 percent of the country. “Well,” the diplomat huffed, “he controls what  he needs to control.” If that was the case, I thought, then why was there  such a problem with al-Qaeda in Yemen at the time of my visit? The  difference between Adolph and this diplomat was not in their facts, or  even in their perceptions, it would turn out. Rather, like the Marine  lieutenant colonel I had met briefly at Camp Pendleton, Adolph didn’t know  how to be subtle, or how to dissemble. He was brutally, refreshingly  direct. Dealing with him saved time.    Inside the galloping Land Cruiser, Adolph knocked off the most recent  security “incidents” in the country. His apartment building had been the  scene of a gun battle between the son of a highly placed sheikh and  government forces, with four people “KIA” (killed in action). Several more  had been killed during a firefight between the al-Haima and Bani Mattar  tribes outside Sana‘a. Two bombs had exploded near the homes of government  officials in the capital. In nearby Ma’rib there had been an attempt to  assassinate the regional governor, Abdullah Ali al-Nassi, when tribesmen  blocked the road and opened fire on his vehicle. The reasons for all this  violence remained murky. As for al-Jawf and other areas on the Saudi  frontier, there had been so many bombings and gun battles that Adolph  hadn’t bothered to investigate or keep count. All this was a prelude to  the assassination of a leading Yemeni politician and the murder of three  American missionaries.    Adolph, trained as a hostage negotiator by Great Britain’s New Scotland  Yard, told me what to do in case I was kidnapped: “Don’t protest. Be  submissive. Show them pictures of your family to establish a relationship.  After the first few hours, ask to see the sheikh. If they take you to meet  him, it’s all right. It’s an authorized kidnapping, for the sake of  convincing the authorities to give the tribe a new road or water well.  They’ll tell you the negotiations should be completed in a few days;  figure two months. Foreigners have been known to gain weight in the course  of being held hostage in Yemen. Each family in the village will host you  for a while, to divide the cost of your food. But if they don’t take you  to see the sheikh the first day, start to worry. Then it may be an  unauthorized kidnapping, and it’s okay to think of ways to escape.”    He slowed the vehicle as we got closer to his apartment in a wealthy area  of Sana‘a where many expatriates lived. High walls, armed guards, and  concertina wire were everywhere: the paraphernalia of paranoia.        I was headed for Injun Country, Adolph told me. He meant the desert wastes  of northern Yemen abutting the Saudi border, a border that the Yemeni  government was attempting to demarcate, even as local tribesmen were  blowing up the new border markers. The next day I had an appointment with  a sheikh who could provide me with guards and a guide, a sheikh for whom  Adolph had done favors.    Sheikh Abdulkarim bin ali Murshed, forty, looked older than he was:  something not uncommon in a country where extreme poverty and a high  birthrate literally sped up time. Well over half of the people in Yemen   hadn’t been born when I had first visited sixteen years before. From his   father, Sheikh Murshed had inherited control of one hundred thousand  Khawlan tribesmen who lived east of Sana‘a. They were part of the Bakil  tribal confederation, the largest in Yemen. The Bakils were less powerful  than President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s more cohesive Hashid confederation,  which resided along the northern spine of the mountains of the High Yemen.  President Saleh’s political rival, Abdullah al-Ahmer, leader of the  Islamic Islah (Congregation for Reform) party, was a fellow Hashid, of   the al-Ahmer branch. Consequently, the president needed allies from the  Bakils to counter some of his own Hashid tribesmen, and Sheikh Murshed was  both willing and ambitious for power.    With the blessing of both Saleh and some khawajahs (wealthy white  foreigners), including the Americans, Sheikh Murshed had established a  nongovernmental organization (NGO) called Human Solidarity. He had  business cards and a half-empty office where nothing seemed to be going  on. Like the political party system in Yemen, the office was mainly a  Westernized facade, behind which lay a vibrant traditional means of power:  the tribe.    Adolph introduced me to Sheikh Murshed less than twenty-four hours after I  had arrived in Yemen. This was at the start of the three-day Feast of Eid  al-Fitr which concluded Ramadan, a time when such a meeting should have  been impossible to arrange. But Adolph had a holiday gift for the sheikh:  “an American jambiya,” as he put it with a wide, overbearing smile, as he  towered over the sheikh. It was an authentic, foot-long Texas bowie knife  in a handsome red case.    Adolph showed me a stack of such bowie knives inside red cases that he had  bought for $80 apiece. “I should be able to deduct these on my taxes as a  legitimate business expense,” he told me, “but of course I can’t. I’ve  given one to the chief of police, and have another for the president’s  half brother. In male-dominated tribal societies like Yemen, manliness  goes a long way. It’s how you get people to do things for you.” Adolph’s  apartment was filled with knives and swords—from West Africa, the Horn,  and Yemen.    Sheikh Murshed told me that as a friend of Adolph’s, I would be his guest  in the tribal areas. Thus it would cost me nothing for the vehicle, the  bodyguards, and the guides I would be lent for my journey. If I wanted to  show my appreciation, however, through a donation to his NGO, that was up  to me. In other words, the negotiation had begun. The first group of  guards with whom he put me in contact wanted $350 a day. I ended up paying  $100 a day, plus a donation to the sheikh’s NGO.    Soon after our first meeting, the sheikh invited me to chew ghat at his  medieval tower house, perched on a hilltop on the outskirts of Sana‘a. The  sheikh’s mafraj, upper-story room, was filled with about twenty tribesmen  reclining on pillows on the floor. Late-afternoon sunlight fell through  the stucco friezes and colored glass windows. The sheikh sat with his  Makarov pistol, Kalashnikov assault rifle, and notebook, using a spittoon  to rid his mouth of excess ghat leaves and mucus as he listened to  supplications. The ghat was stuffed in plastic supermarket bags beside the  pile of assault rifles on the machine-made carpets. An antique telephone  sat on a chipped wooden stand. It never rang, but the sheikh talked  incessantly on his new cell phone. Mounted on the wall beside faded family  photographs was a television turned to Al-Jazeera, the all-news  Arabic-language station out of Qatar that the Yemenis thought of as  provocatively Westernized, even as Americans saw it as hostile to the West.    Arguments raged into the evening over the best way to improve security and  living conditions in the troubled desert regions of al-Jawf and Ma’rib.  The sheikh listened, not interrupting, but he always had the final word.  He heard numerous supplications, including a request to help a man whose  brother had been arrested for allegedly stealing funds from the central  bank. The idea that a good lawyer and an independent judge would provide  justice was not especially considered; only the sheikh, it seemed, could  guarantee a fair resolution of the matter. “In Yemen, the kabili [tribal]  system is stronger than the government, stronger than Islam even,” one of  the supplicants told me. This was the essence of underdevelopment, a  situation in which the government bureaucracy works on the basis of family  ties and who-you-know, rather than on impersonal laws and principles.    The ghat spurred conversation. If it is chewed properly—the soft stems and  leaves bunched into a rear corner of the mouth, resting on the lower teeth  until a greenish mucus forms—the plant has an exquisitely subtle effect at  once energizing and relaxing, like having five cups of espresso without  feeling overwound. Ghat’s effect was creeping. It incited you   sexually. It was common for men after the afternoon chew to take a siesta  with their wives. A water-intensive crop, ghat was a principal reason for  the desertification of the country. Groundwater supplies in Yemen were  expected to last no more than a generation or two, while Yemen’s popu-  lation growth rate of 2.8 percent was among the highest in the Middle  East.* Ghat, which had no export potential, was increasingly being grown  at the expense of cash crops like coffee, further exposing the local  economy to catastrophe as underground oil reserves diminished.        The next person I saw as soon as I arrived in Yemen, again courtesy of  Adolph, was Brig. Gen. Ali Muhsen Saleh al-Ahmer. Gen. Ali Muhsen, half  brother to President Saleh (they shared the same mother), was said to be  the second most powerful man in Yemen after Saleh himself. Ali Muhsen  controlled an armored division that protected the capital. He had the  reputation of being a buttoned-down, capable organizer, close to the  fundamentalist Islah movement, as well as to gun-running sheikhs and  perhaps to some in al-Qaeda, too. It was Ali Muhsen who helped Saleh get  support from the radical “Afghan-Arabs” (Yemeni veterans of the Afghan war  against the Soviets) when his regime was threatened by civil war in the  mid-1990s. But American pressure following September 11, 2001, had been so  severe that both Ali Muhsen and Saleh felt they had no choice but to  accommodate President George W. Bush. The Americans made a deal with this  former “bad guy”: giving Ali Muhsen’s regiment a chunk of the American  military aid package was the only way that Washington could do business in  Yemen.    Ali Muhsen reminded me of a tribal leader that a young Winston Churchill  describes in his first book, The Story of the Malakand Field Force: “He  was a great man, which on the frontier means that he was a great murderer.  . . . A strong man who has felt the grip” of an imperial power “is the  best tool to work with.”2 It was Ali Muhsen’s ties to the radicals that  gave his half brother, the president, the political protection he needed  to move closer to the Americans—temporarily, that is. And also to distance  himself from the Americans swiftly and credibly if that, too, became  necessary.    Late at night during Eid al-Fitr Ali Muhsen received Adolph and me in his  heavily fortified compound in Sana‘a. The flamboyant jambiya that Ali  Muhsen wore over his tribal dress testified to the value of its lineage;  it had likely been passed down for generations. Syrupy tea, nuts, and  raisins were served. Adolph presented Ali Muhsen with a bowie knife, “a  gift from one soldier to another.” Ali Muhsen smiled as he put his hand  gratefully on Adolph’s. For Adolph in this situation, being a former U.S.  Army officer    *World Bank estimates.    was more important than being a U.N. security officer. But the two  functions were really inseparable. For sensitive security details like  Yemen, where expatriates were truly at risk, it was not unusual for the  U.N. to have Americans, or at least other Anglos, in positions of  authority. While the United States and the United Nations often seemed at  odds on the world stage, on the ground in Yemen the distance between them  seemed less   consequential.    “I’m ready to roast your communications minister alive,” Adolph  complained. “I need to set up a radio call network for my staff in case of  emergency and he won’t see me.” Ali Muhsen suggested he would settle  Adolph’s problem. Adolph didn’t believe him, and went on complaining for a  while. Ali Muhsen appeared to respect him for that.    Adolph introduced me in flattering terms and I made small talk with the  general. To ask a direct question—or to consider this an interview—would  have been an abuse of hospitality. In a place like Yemen the truth emerges  by accident, when talking of other matters. The fact that the general had  received me would serve as the best form of protection were I unlucky  enough to be kidnapped. The excess of nervous-looking armed guards in the  sitting room and nearby courtyard testified both to Ali Muhsen’s real  authority and to the anarchy swirling around it.        Less than seventy-two hours after I had arrived in Yemen, during the most  important holiday of the Muslim year, when government offices were closed,  Adolph, with his passable Arabic, had arranged a trip for me through an  area where westerners had been denied the right to travel, and had gotten  me a brief audience with the country’s most shadowy figure. Adolph  impressed me as neat, orderly, a bit anal-retentive even, as well as  unpretentious.    Robert B. Adolph Jr. was born in 1952 in Chelsea, Massachusetts, one of  nine children in a poor Catholic family. He started working when he was  eleven. He was thrown out of high school five times, finishing 313 in a  class of 330. He joined the U.S. Army after high school and was sent to  Germany, becoming a staff sergeant, and later a member of Army Special  Forces. “In the military, for the first time in my life, people told me  that I wasn’t stupid.” Encouraged, Adolph, by way of a mail-order  correspondence course, got a college degree, something he was still  intensely proud of. Later, he would earn a master’s degree in  international relations from American University in Washington, D.C. His  military education in the course of becoming a Special Forces officer  included Belgian commando school, Russian language school, a combat  swimmer’s course offered by the Danish army, and Ranger and parachute jump  master schools. In Germany he commanded two military intelligence  companies. Serving in Egypt he learned to be wary of most scholarly books  about the Arab world. “The books I read never mentioned that to improve a  society you have to give the money to women, never to men. In the City of  the Dead in Cairo,” he went on, “I adopted a poor family: Dad wanted a TV  set, Mom wanted a sewing machine to start a little business.”    In 1992 he was sent to Cambodia as an American military observer to the  U.N. peacekeeping mission. “It was the first time that I was in a place  with no government. The Khmer Rouge were doing a bargain-basement business  with the Thai army in gems and logging. I learned that if someone puts an  AK-47 in your face, you move back slowly, bend at the waist in a  supplicating manner, with your palms together as though you are about to  pray. They usually put their guns down when you do that. Being in Cambodia  for six months was like being raped. Nothing I had been given to read in  the course of my education prepared me for what I encountered.    “It didn’t make me cynical. It just helped me get things done on the  ground.” He set up an anti-malarial program in northern Cambodia, getting  a French crew to bring in mosquito nets on C-130s (Adolph’s French, I  learned, was like his Arabic) and a Canadian trucking company to  distribute them. “The hardest thing, though, was to convince rural  Cambodians that malaria was from mosquitoes, not from bad spirits.”    Upon retirement from the U.S. Army in 1997, Adolph became an advisor under  contract with the State Department to the Bosnian Ministry of Defense. The  next year he became the chief security officer for the U.N. peacekeeping  mission in Sierra Leone, where he had to evacuate several hundred civilian  staff under threat from the sadists of the Revolutionary United Front  (RUF). “Whether it’s the RUF, al-Qaeda, or Serbian Chetniks, one unifying  factor is that none of these people know how to have a normal relationship  with a woman, and that lies at the root of their cruelty,” he told me,  sucking on beer suds one night in his apartment. “RUF commanders would  force boy soldiers to rape old women in their own village at gunpoint, so  that the boys could never go home again. It is the kind of discipline  unsocialized teenagers understand.”    Sierra Leone had been a frustrating assignment for Adolph. In Special  Forces he had learned that “the mission was everything”; in the U.N. he  had to work in an environment where, as I knew from my own reporting, the  mission was secondary to diplomatic necessity.    For example, Nigerian peacekeepers were not in Sierra Leone to keep the  peace, but in some cases to steal alluvial diamonds. The RUF controlled  the diamond fields. The Nigerians made deals with the RUF. They used their  own peacekeepers as mules to get the diamonds back to Lagos. The Nigerian  government was getting money from the international community for each  peacekeeper it dispatched to Sierra Leone, but the Nigerian soldiers  themselves were not always paid by their own government. Guinean and  Zambian peacekeepers were also not paid, though their governments were  getting money from the U.N. for every soldier dispatched to Sierra Leone.  The result was that they surrendered without a fight to hunter-warrior  guilds dressed in wigs and shower caps.3* If the U.S. was going to  subcontract out its imperial burden to the U.N., the U.N. would have to be  able to fight on the ground as well as it talked before the television  cameras.    Two weeks after he left Sierra Leone, the U.N. sent Adolph to Yemen. Here  the mission was everything, to judge by the blunt way he had spoken to  Gen. Ali Muhsen about the communications minister.        “Family, Village, Tribe, Guns—Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. That’s Yemen,”  began the U.S. Army colonel dispatched to Sana‘a from CENTCOM in Tampa,  Florida. Terrorism is an entrepreneurial activity dominated by   enterprising self-starters. And as the colonel explained to me as we lined  up for food in Adolph’s apartment, “In Yemen you’ve got nearly twenty  million aggressive, commercial-minded, and well-armed people, all  extremely hard-working compared to the Saudis next door. It’s the future.  And it terrifies the hell out of the government in Riyadh.”    The buffet dinner included a dozen men. Aside from me, a U.N. official,  the French defense attaché, and two diplomats from the American Embassy,  the rest were American military officers running one program or another in  Yemen: Yemeni commando training, de-mining, and so on. They were a bunch  of working-class guys. There was much talk about “how dumb” they all were,  especially from the U.S. defense attaché, Army    *For a blow-by-blow account of United Nations military incompetence in  Sierra Leone see Damien Lewis’s Operation Certain Death (London: Century,  2004).    Col. Gralyn Harris, a former wrestler at the University of Connecticut who  happened to speak fluent Arabic. I had also gone there, I told him. I said  that he was the first fellow graduate I had met in more than two decades  as a foreign correspondent. “What shit is that?” he laughed.    The conversation drifted to jobs after retirement from the service that  paid as much as $70,000 per year. There was a lot of clear, ungrammatical,  mincing-no-words comparisons of one country and culture with another,  observations that were relevant even as they might be difficult to print.  This was a world where people were judged less by their ideas than by the  practical implementation of them; here virtue was in the results. If there  was such a thing as an American Empire, it was here at this party.    Bob Innes, tall, red-haired, and extremely personable, was a fireman’s  kid, born in 1950, who had grown up in an Irish-Italian neighborhood on  Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue, near Ebbets Field. “I never got over the  Dodgers deserting Brooklyn for Los Angeles,” he told me. “The three  greatest villains of the twentieth century were Hitler, Stalin, and Walter  O’Malley,” the Dodgers’ owner. Innes was now building from scratch a  Yemeni coast guard.    “I was the product of a mixed marriage,” he began in homey deadpan. “My  mother was from Brooklyn, my father from the Bronx. In the late 1950s my  father retired to fireman’s heaven, Arizona: the real mythic west of the  Apaches, that’s before it became suburban and upscale,” he sneered. On the  streets of Phoenix, Innes learned Spanish from his Mexican friends. With  good grades he got accepted to Stanford, which his parents couldn’t  afford. With no scholarship from Stanford, he went to the U.S. Coast Guard  Academy in New London, Connecticut.    Though we live in the jet age, 70 percent of all intercontinental cargo  travels by sea, making the seas more strategic than ever. Most countries  that claim to have navies really have coast guards. Though the U.S. Coast  Guard consists of only thirty-eight thousand seamen and five thousand  civilians, it is the largest coast guard in the world, as well as the  world’s seventh largest navy. At first Innes served off the coasts of  Greenland, Canada, Wake Island, and South Vietnam. “I saw the last U.S.  aircraft leave Tan Son Nhut, where it was decided which dependents got on  and which didn’t.    “What did I learn from the experience in Vietnam?” he asked himself out  loud, letting the silence formulate his next statement. “I learned that  honor and integrity are personal qualities, not institutional ones, not  ones we should expect the state to always have. If you don’t like the  policy, tough. Bad things happen in this world. You do the best you can in  your job, and let the crybabies write the books.”    In the 1980s, Innes administered Coast Guard training programs in West  Africa and every place in Latin America except for Bolivia and Paraguay,  which don’t have seacoasts. His Spanish had become fluent. He was reading  Cervantes in the early-seventeenth-century original text. He arrived in  Monrovia, Liberia, in April 1980 just as Master Sgt. Samuel K. Doe staged  a coup against President William Tolbert, and body parts were being  paraded in the streets. “West Africa was Haiti on a pan-continental scale.  The problems in South America weren’t even close. The high culture that in  South America is a thing of beauty no longer exists in West Africa. But  then there was Colombia. . . .”    Innes was in Colombia from 1987 to 1990 as the U.S. Coast Guard, police,  and naval attaché. He also worked for the Drug Enforcement Administration.  “Yemen can be hell in a handbasket, but it’s paradise compared to the  Colombia of that era.”    Manuel Noriega held the reins of power in Panama, providing a haven for  insurgents and narco-traffickers along the Panamanian-Colombian border.  The Iran-Contra scandal raged still, which hindered Washington from  providing the Colombian military the support it needed to battle the  guerrillas and drug lords. The period also saw a closing act of the deadly  drama between cocaine kingpin Pablo Escobar and the Colombian government.    Innes told me of an incident in the Amazon region of southeastern Colombia  in the late 1980s. In one village, he and the Colombian troops  accompanying him found all of the adults crying because their children had  been kidnapped. Unlike previous kidnappings, no one had demanded a ransom.  He and a force of local soldiers took a boat upriver. In a clear-  ing they discovered a dozen bodies of children with various body organs  removed in a not so delicate fashion. The local police chief and others   believed the carnage was committed by smugglers and dealers in the   lucrative underground trade in body organs for transplant. A wealthy and  unknowing foreigner from another continent—Innes never found out who—had a  child who desperately needed a liver transplant. Such a foreigner would be  willing to pay anything to find a liver that matched for his child, and he  wouldn’t necessarily ask about how it was done.    “In Colombia,” Innes continued, “there was no distinction between military  conquest, enslaving Indians, kidnapping, narco-trafficking, or a black  market for body organs, so long as it turned a profit. Drugs are the lure  that promises to break the cycle of poverty. By local standards the  cartels were not inhuman. For many, drugs represented a means of escaping  abject poverty.”    Narco-trafficking was, among other things, an economic weapon of the  rising middle and upper-middle classes against the government, the  traditional families, and the oligarchs who controlled the coca, the sweet  coal, and the emeralds—the real wealth of the country.    “Violent, untimely death,” he went on, “was normal for young men in many  parts of Colombia. It’s an intimate fact of their lives, it’s what most of  them expected. Because they know they are going to die young and in pain,  they want to do right by their families, breaking the cycle of poverty.  Narco-traffickers knew this. In Colombia, minors would never be tried and  sentenced as an adult regardless of the crime, so criminal organizations  sent children to commit horrible acts on their behalf. The  narco-traffickers kept their promises to these kids, financially rewarding  their families if they were killed or caught. There is a big show of  moving the kids’ parents into new little homes, and of sending the  siblings off to private schools. That is more than the state could ever do  for them. In Colombia, every pubescent teenager could be your assassin. In  Yemen, crime operates within limits. Islamic law provides a vigorous moral  compass.”    I should go to Colombia, I thought.    Innes retired from the Coast Guard in the late 1990s and was recalled to  active duty after September 11, 2001.    “I was mowing my lawn in Louisiana when the twin towers were hit. Now I’ve  got forty guys under me, only forty, but they’re a beginning. These guys,”  he told me, getting intense, “were kicked out of the other Yemeni armed  services, because they were smart, they spoke English, they asked too many  questions and so nobody here trusted them. They were demoralized. ‘No,’ I  tell them. ‘Don’t you all understand! Before [Robert] Clive consolidated  India for the British in the eighteenth century, Yemen, right through the  Middle Ages, was the haunt of those like Sindbad the Sailor. Aden was  among the largest ports in the world for a thousand years. The coast here  constitutes an incredible strategic geography. When you look at the  expanding desert, the maritime environment is the only non-bleak future  this country has.’    “After the [French tanker] Limburg was hit by al-Qaeda,” Innes went on,  “insurance premiums for ships entering Yemeni waters went up 254 percent  for a while. Yemen needs a twenty-first-century coast guard, like Jordan  and the UAE [United Arab Emirates]. And these people are willing to learn;  they’re not like others in the region who just want to hire mercenaries.”								
									 Copyright © 2005 by Robert D. Kaplan. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.