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Blood From Stones: The Secret Financial Network of Terror (Hardcover)

~ (Author) "I was doing my monthly expense reports at the Washington Post's West Africa bureau, based in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, on September 11, 2001..." (more)
Key Phrases: diamond deals, blood diamonds, terrorist funds, Sierra Leone, United States, Holy Land (more...)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

At first glance, this book is an account of how Farah happened on al-Qaeda's diamond-smuggling operations while he was the Washington Post's bureau chief in West Africa in 2001. Farah details the sequence of events that led to his now famous expose of the Mephistophelian alliance between al-Qaeda and Liberia's notorious former president Charles Taylor, and the summary rape and ruin of West Africa while Taylor orchestrated the inequitable trade of diamonds for uniforms, weapons and cars to perpetuate the nightmarish strife. However, this is not where the book endsâ€"it's where a new unsettling story begins. After Farah's article ran in the Post, he and his family were forced to leave Africa for their own safety. On arriving home, Farah says, he was met by a bitter and embarrassed CIA determined to discredit him in order to cover the fact that they knew nothing about al-Qaeda's involvement in West Africa. Over time, the CIA's behavior led to the revelation of damning information about the United States's entire network of intelligence agencies, rife with infighting, disorganization and lack of central control. Farah's drum-tight presentation of evidence to substantiate his allegations will be difficult to dispute, and his stark and straightforward writing style makes this book hard to put down. Maps not seen by PW.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


From The Washington Post

One of the first new laws the Bush administration promulgated following the Sept. 11 terror attacks was an executive order that made it easier to freeze the bank accounts of suspected terrorists and their supporters. By Nov. 7, more than $20 million had been seized in accounts allegedly linked to al Qaeda or its backers, and by March of this year, that figure had grown tenfold.

But if Washington Post reporter Douglas Farah's gripping new book is to be believed, the administration was shutting the stable door after the horse had already gone. In essence, Farah's tale is a simple one, told in spare, newspaperman's English. In the fall of 1998, shortly after al Qaeda had bombed two U.S. embassies in East Africa, Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah, a senior associate of Osama bin Laden, had arrived in Monrovia, the capital of the tiny West African state of Liberia, and the seat of its kleptocratic gang boss of a president, Charles Taylor.

Earlier that year, a Nigerian-led regional security force had finally expelled Taylor's allies from their capital, Freetown. The Revolutionary United Front (RUF) of neighboring Sierra Leone, whose fighters were fellow graduates of Col. Moammar Gaddafi's revolutionary training camps in the Libyan desert were driven out handily. But the RUF maintained control over the country's huge, easily exploited diamond deposits in the east. From there the stones were smuggled across the border into Liberia -- where, in exchange for huge commissions paid to Taylor and his cronies, the RUF could sell them to dealers for export and resale in Antwerp, Belgium, the world's largest gem market. The RUF used the cash for arms to continue its bloody and protracted struggle for power in Sierra Leone.

For a terrorist or other criminal, the advantages of diamonds are legion. They are small and easy to hide or move around, and they are practically as convertible as cash. "It is a point of honor among diamond buyers," Farah writes, "to ask no questions about the provenance of the stones they buy." Abdullah did not buy any diamonds on that first visit, but by the summer of the following year, the Clinton administration -- spurred by the embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania -- had begun to tighten the financial net around al Qaeda's conventional funds. So al Qaeda created a pipeline through which the group could move millions, perhaps tens of millions, of dollars from the banking sector into the shadow world of gem and gold smuggling and informal money transfer, or hawala.

The man who made this all possible is a Senegalese mercenary -- he says he is a used car dealer -- named Ibrahim Bah. While Farah's just-the-facts stylistic discipline is generally welcome, Bah -- who knew Taylor and his RUF buddies from Libyan training camps, spent the 1980s in Afghanistan and the Lebanon, and turned down a million-dollar proposal from the CIA -- is rendered but thinly in the pages of Blood From Stones. If it is a virtue to leave the reader wanting more, then Farah is virtuous to a fault when it comes to Bah; he's a character who cries out for anecdote and adjective.

As the Sept. 11 hijackers were finalizing their preparations in the summer of 2001, Abdullah and two other senior al Qaeda operatives were set up in a safe house rented by Bah in Monrovia. The pace of their purchasing became so frenzied that the RUF's other customers were complaining about being frozen out.

It would be almost impossible to know how much of their money the leaders of al Qaeda salted away in this fashion before the 19 hijackers struck, even if the operation had been under surveillance. But -- one is tempted to add "of course" -- it was not.

For anyone who has followed the various inquiries into Sept. 11, the intelligence and law enforcement failures that preceded the attacks have become an easily recalled and deeply depressing litany. But Farah gives us a whole new raft of missed leads, bungled opportunities and bypassed chances to have disrupted al Qaeda's diamond trade. As he says, this would by no means have stopped the attacks, "but it would have left the nation less unprepared for the war it now faces."

Even today, after NGO investigators and war crimes prosecutors have substantiated Farah's reporting, the U.S. government prefers not to acknowledge it. As recently as March, a State Department official told a congressional panel on the war against terror in Africa that he was not aware of any evidence of an al Qaeda presence in the region. As Farah observes, "rhetoric in the war on terror has masked a lack of sustained interest in fighting the threat on the ground" -- much as has been the case with the long-running federal war on drugs. Late last year, a small team of financial specialists from the FBI's counter-terrorism division visited South Africa and Sierra Leone to research the diamond trade and its terror links. Their mission grew out of congressional interest that was sparked by Farah's reporting. In the immortal words of law enforcement officers everywhere, the investigation is continuing. There's no word on what they've found, but at least they're looking.

Reviewed by Shaun Waterman
Copyright 2004, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Broadway; 1 edition (May 4, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0767915623
  • ISBN-13: 978-0767915625
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.4 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #622,894 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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23 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Required reading, September 9, 2004
By John Pitman (Georgia, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Blood from Stones
By Douglas Farah

If the 9/11 Commission's report on intelligence shortfalls prior to 9/11 was hailed for its scope and completeness, it nonetheless failed to recognize the considerable role played by black market diamonds in al Qaeda's pre-attack strategic planning. Indeed, the report specifically downplays the activities of a small but clearly committed cadre of Qaeda operatives who bought millions of dollars worth of illegally mined diamonds from warlords in Liberia and Sierra Leone, saying reports of the group's use of African "conflict diamonds" lacked "persuasive evidence."

Given the secretive nature of the diamond business and the physical isolation and insecurity of Sierra Leone's and Liberia's interior (where most of the diamond deals were done), the commission's researchers might have been forgiven this omission, especially if other sources of information had not existed. But this was not the case. In fact, an exceptionally well researched record of al Qaeda's African diamond operations did exist. It was not buried in sensitive intelligence documents or stored on inaccessible government computers. It was all in the public record - specifically in the archives of The Washington Post, in two years' worth of articles by Douglas Farah that formed the backbone for his stunning book Blood from Stones.

That Farah's painstakingly researched portrait of al Qaeda's (indeed, many of the world's major terror groups') secret financial network was willfully dismissed by the commission is in large part a reflection of the powerful culture of denial in the American intelligence community - a culture the commission rightly detailed as partly responsible for pre-9/11 failures.

Fortunately for policy makers and readers interested in the shadowy regions of the global financial system, Farah's book offers an critical analysis of al Qaeda's strategic motives for buying diamonds, as well as the networks the group and its affiliates used to quickly and quietly move immense sums of cash around the world.

Farah's reporting is sharp, incisive and personal, informed by an impressive array of documents and interviews with American, European and other intelligence officials, as well as Farah's own on-the-ground reporting in Liberia, Sierra Leone, the Gulf, Pakistan, Europe and Washington.

Blood from Stones reads like a classical primer on investigative journalism. From Farah's serendipitous discovery of the link between al Qaeda and West Africa (a Liberian source recognized several al Qaeda operatives in a post-9/11 issue of Newsweek that Farah had brought to a meeting) to his journeys to Sierra Leone's diamond fields, the hushed diamond buying rooms of Antwerp and Brussels, and the bustling souks and markets of Pakistan and Dubai, Blood from Stones is written with a precision verging on scientific. But perhaps more impressive than the bibliography of documents and intelligence files are Farah's interviews with current and former government officials who had, in the years leading up to 9/11, picked up on al Qaeda's effort transfer its assets out of formal finance and banking systems - but whose warnings were mishandled, misdirected or simply ignored.

These interviews illustrate the challenge American investigators faced as they sought to track a shadowy and agile enemy. In a series of candid interviews with former Treasury Department officials, Farah describes the molasses pace (and reluctance) with which the American intelligence community shifted gears from tracking criminals through the formal international finance system to the hidden-in-plain-sight but maddeningly secretive networks of traditional hawala money traders.

It is not surprising then, that Farah's first reports of an unexpected and non-traditional link between Islamic fundamentalists and West African warlords were greeted with suspicion by American intelligence. As Farah points out in his book signing appearances, "The first reaction from the CIA and others in American intelligence was: `If we don't already know about it, it can't be true.'"

Bureaucratic blinders are not uncommon in Washington's eternal inter-agency turf wars. But the CIA's steadfast reluctance to accept Farah's reporting - even after much of it was validated by European intelligence services - went beyond what might be considered the standard brush-off tactics employed by the Agency against an inconvenient journalist. Farah documents in troubling detail efforts by the CIA to discredit him and his sources, including a terrifying account of the detention and intimidation of Farah's key African source by US intelligence operators.

That the CIA allocated significant resources to destroy the credibility of the man who had guided Farah through the labyrinthine relationship between al Qaeda, the Liberian warlord-turned-president Charles Taylor, and the brutal and bizarre Sierra Leonean rebel group the Revolutionary United Front, is an indication not only of the Agency's desperate desire to cover its own failures, but also of the US intelligence community's deeper disregard for Africa and its perennial crises.

To be fair, Blood from Stones gives credit to American officials who resisted the Agency's groupthink and valiantly tried to raise interest in Washington in the lawless areas of West Africa - regions where the terms "rebel group" and even "government" are often euphemisms for mafia-style criminal syndicates. In addition to the former Treasury Department officials who noted al Qaeda's move to protect its cash from international seizure Farah gives high marks to former US Ambassador to Sierra Leone Joe Melrose, and Representatives Frank Wolf (R-Virginia) and Tony Hall (D-Ohio).

The revelations Farah records in Blood from Stones may yet receive a stamp of approval from the American intelligence community. But even if public recognition doesn't come from the spooks, one hopes that bureaucratic pride hasn't prevented the CIA and other agencies from putting this book on the must-read list for every agent and analyst engaged in the global war on terror.

John Pitman, former Voice of America West Africa correspondent, 1998-2000.
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A true 5-star performance, May 9, 2004
By A Customer
This is an amazing piece of work from a man who has risked it all to get the facts that weave together this masterful story. It's style makes it an enjoyable and hard to put down, though its content is not that of the usual quick-and-easy read. It is the perfect book for those interested in the facts behind terrorism.
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Blood From Stones (my review), May 5, 2004
By A Customer
The reason Blood From Stones is one of the most readable books on terrorism is due to Farah's straightfoward writing. Unlike other authors, Farah is concise, and wastes no time with personal emotions. Instead he presents cold, hard, solid facts, like a journalist is supposed to do.

Blood From Stones is a should-read for everyone skeptical of American intelligence and for anyone skeptical of the US's ability to win the War on Terror

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars How about just buying synthetic diamonds?
I read through most of this book in the bookstore and found it quite disturbing. I'm not qualified to rate the accuracy of the authors claims, however, it wouldn't surprise me if... Read more
Published on March 13, 2007 by D. Goodpasture

5.0 out of 5 stars The diamond trade under scrutiny
Douglas Farah was not the first person to write about the conflict diamond trade but he was the first one to make the US government pay attention. Read more
Published on March 10, 2007 by Lehigh History Student

5.0 out of 5 stars Why the "war on terror" won't work is explained.
Want to try and understand why the Patriot Act and actions (all belatedly) by the Homestead Security powers will not work in the face of groups that are non-country specific and... Read more
Published on January 4, 2006 by Siriam

3.0 out of 5 stars The Spy Who Loved Them and Left Them
I suppose Mr. Farah is the type of journalist who loves to be loved. In reading twice through Blood From Stones, I felt as if Mr. Read more
Published on December 23, 2005 by William Kral

5.0 out of 5 stars Great, Informative Book
This is a fantastic book for everyone interested in Africa, the diamond trade, or the money trail fueling global terrorist activity. Read more
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Must Read
Farah's expose of Al Qaeda buying blood diamonds in West Africa is as important as it is frightening. Read more
Published on August 7, 2004 by A Big Fan

1.0 out of 5 stars Spun from whole cloth
The author is a liberal "journalist" on an ego trip, attempting to make us believe he was leaps and bounds ahead of the entire national security apparatus in his... Read more
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5.0 out of 5 stars Breakdown in Understanding Financing of Terrorists
Disturbing is an understatement when I try to come to grips with the American intelligence community? Read more
Published on June 12, 2004 by Norman Goldman

3.0 out of 5 stars the good, the bad and the slightly irrelevant
The intial parts of the book which focus on the diamond trade in collapsed west african states was fascinating and a breeze to read due to it's succinct writing style. Read more
Published on May 18, 2004

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