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Authors: Matthew Palmer

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BOOK: The American Mission
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The Marine clearly did not believe that the underfed African girl in the dirty gray shawl was Alex's child.

“Uh, do you have any identification papers for her, sir, a passport or something?”

“Her passport is in my travel bag in my trailer on the other side of the camp. Do you think we should stop there on the way out and pick it up?”

The Marine shook his head. He had real problems to deal with. Refugee paperwork was not his concern. He gestured for Alex and Anah to board.

When all of the international staff was on board, the Sea Knights rose with surprising agility from the desert surface. Two of the helicopters were flying empty.

Through the window, Alex had a perfect view of the chaos and carnage in the camp. A line of shiny white UN vehicles was pulling out onto the main road to El Genaina, carrying the well-armed peacekeepers to
safety.

T
HREE
Y
EARS
L
ATER
1

J
UNE
12, 2009

C
ONAKRY

C
heck this one out. Twenty-two years old. Absolutely stunning. Says she wants to go to Disney World, but she has a one-way ticket to New York. Why do they always say that they're going to Disney World? You'd think they'd just won the Super Bowl or something.”

Hamilton Scott, Alex's partner on the visa line at the U.S. Embassy in Conakry, Guinea, leaned around the narrow partition that separated their interview booths, dangling an application for a tourist visa. The woman in the visa photo clipped to the upper corner bore a striking resemblance to the supermodel Naomi Campbell.

It was admittedly unprofessional, but Alex understood what Ham was doing. Visa-line work could be excruciatingly monotonous, and in a third-world hellhole like Conakry, the applicants would say or do just about anything to gain entrance to the United States. The vice consuls often resorted to black humor or informal games like Visa Applicant Bingo as a way to keep themselves sane.

“Do you think she'd sleep with me for a visa?” Ham asked with mock seriousness.

“Twenty-two? Isn't she a little old for you, Ham?”

“Ordinarily, yes. But this girl's exceptional. And there's no way she qualifies as a tourist.”

“Qualify” was a kind of code word in visa work. The law said that anyone applying for a visa to the United States had to prove that he or she was not secretly intending to emigrate. The challenge for the applicants was demonstrating that they had strong and compelling reasons to come back after visiting the U.S. In practice, this meant money. Rich people were “qualified” for visas. Poor people struggled to overcome the supposition that they were economic migrants. In the euphemistic language of government, they were “unqualified.”

Ham turned back to the applicant and explained to Ms. Hadja Malabo that, sadly, she lacked the qualifications for an American visa and should consider reapplying when her “situation” had changed. Ham's French was flawless, a consequence of four years at a boarding school in Switzerland. He was polite but, Alex thought, somewhat brusque in rejecting Ms. Malabo's application.

Ham leaned back around the partition.

“I'm almost through my stack, only four or five left. How you doing?”

Alex looked at the pile of application packages still in front of him. There were at least twenty left. He and Ham were the only two interviewing officers at post, which meant about fifty nonimmigrant visa interviews a day for each of them. Ham made his decisions with a brutal efficiency. Alex took more time with each applicant. Most would come away empty-handed, but he wanted to give each person who came into his interview booth the sense that they had had a chance to make their case and that the consul had at least given them a fair shot. For most Guineans, their brief moment with a consular officer was as close as they were going to get to the United States.

“I still have a few to go,” Alex admitted.

“Give me some of yours.” Ham reached over and took nearly half of the stack out of Alex's in-box. “If we can finish in less than an hour, we can grab a sandwich and a beer at Harry's bar. My treat. Gotta meet with the Ambassador after lunch to talk over the report on human trafficking I did for him last week.” Ham paused for a moment. “I'm sorry, Alex,” he said carefully. “You know I don't mean to rub that in.”

The Ambassador had been giving Ham increasingly significant reporting responsibilities, something relatively rare for a first-tour Vice Consul but understandable given that Ham's full name was Hamilton Wendell Scott III and that both I and II had been ambassadors in half a dozen countries. Ham was just punching his consular ticket in a hardship post, something all junior officers had to do, before heading off for the salons and soirees of Western Europe and a diplomatic career with an unlimited upside. No doubt, Ham's father considered his son's stint in Conakry a “character-building” experience. He could bore future generations of American diplomats with war stories about life on the visa line in Guinea when he was ambassador to Sweden or Hungary or some such place.

For Alex, however, stamping passports looked like a permanent fixture of the next thirty years of his career. There wasn't much else a Foreign Service Officer who had lost his security clearances was good for. The contrast between Ham's upward trajectory and the flat, featureless plain that represented Alex's career prospects could not have been any starker. Both knew it, and both generally avoided talking about it.

Having crossed the invisible line, however, Ham seemed determined to charge forward.

“Have you given any more thought to the Centrex offer, Alex?” he asked with characteristic directness.

“I've written two letters,” Alex replied, setting the passport he had picked up back on top of the pile. “One accepting the job and one turning it down. I've almost sent each one of them at least five times.”

“It's a good job. Centrex Resources is a top-flight firm with global reach. Oil and gas is a big business in Africa now, and you'd be doing real policy work for them.”

“It's a great opportunity,” Alex agreed. “In truth, I'm not quite certain why they reached out to me like that. I didn't apply. It's tempting. But my appeal is pending with Diplomatic Security, and I'm hoping that they'll agree to restore my clearances.” After a brief pause, he added, “This time.”

“Alex, DS is like the Gestapo. They don't own up to their mistakes. And without clearances, processing visa applications is about all you'll be able to do in the Service. Head of government relations for the Africa division at a company like Centrex is just another kind of diplomacy. I think you should jump at it.”

Ham's assessment of the odds DS would restore Alex's clearances was unsparing but almost certainly accurate.

Alex remembered vividly the look of satisfaction on the face of the low-level agent who had informed him that the Assistant Secretary for Diplomatic Security had decided that—as a result of both his evident issues of mental instability and his failure to seek treatment through authorized channels—Alex's access to information would be restricted to “Sensitive But Unclassified.” In other words, he could use the departmental phone book and read the press guidance, but that was about it. For an ambitious young political officer, it was a professional death sentence.

What had really burned Alex was that the sanctimonious prick with an army-regulation haircut had been reading to him from Alex's medical file, including notes from his therapy sessions with Dr. Branch. The agent refused to explain how he had acquired the confidential records. Alex had told no one that he was seeing a shrink, and he had paid his bills in cash to avoid leaving a paper trail with the insurance company. Going to the State Department's doctors wasn't really an option either. Foreign Service Officers with Top Secret security clearances knew that
their access to information could be “suspended indefinitely” if they sought counseling for mental or emotional trauma.

“February fifth,” the agent read, “patient presents with nightmares, headaches, and trouble concentrating. Occasional panic attacks and difficulty with emotional control. Preliminary diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder related to service in Darfur. Prescribed Lexapro at thirty milligrams daily.”

There were things that Alex had told Dr. Branch that he had never told anyone else. That this officious little martinet was somehow privy to this private information was infuriating.

“March thirteenth,” the agent continued, “patient reports that the nightmares are increasing in both frequency and intensity. Vivid images of violence in Darfur coupled with feelings of inadequacy and guilt. Maybe a side effect of current medication; possible root issues with patient's loss of his father at an impressionable age. Recommend switching to Zoloft, beginning with twenty milligrams daily and stepping up to fifty depending on patient response.”

The agent had read a few more entries, but it was cruelty without purpose. The judgment had already been delivered from on high. Diplomatic Security had decreed Alex Baines a dangerous risk to the safeguarding of classified information. The interview was just checking a box. At the end, the agent had handed Alex a form for him to sign, acknowledging that he had been informed that he was no longer allowed to either access or produce classified information. He instructed Alex to keep a copy for his personal files.

Maybe they were right not to trust him, Alex reasoned. Sometimes he didn't even trust himself. It had been nearly three years since the sack of Camp Riad, but not a day went by that he didn't think about it. Closing his eyes, he could see Janjaweed militia on horseback riding at full tilt through the crowded refugee camp, automatic rifles slung over their backs and polished black lances in their hands. He could hear the wet smack of a spearhead being driven clean through a human body,
the incessant buzzing of flies, and, above all, the rhythmic cadence of helicopter blades beating the dry desert air.

“Alex, you still with me?” Ham asked. “You looked like you went to Bermuda for a moment there.”

“No, not Bermuda.”
Not by a long shot
. “Just thinking about what you said. It makes a lot of sense, but it's still a damn difficult thing to do. I know it's a bit corny, but this is an honorable profession. It's about ideas and ideals. Centrex is about maximizing shareholder profit.”

Rather than laughing at him as Alex had half expected, Ham nodded thoughtfully. Under his somewhat more cynical exterior, the son and grandson of American ambassadors believed the same thing.

“Have you asked Anah what she thinks?”

Alex brightened at the mention of his daughter.

“She's not thinking about much these days except summer vacation. She can hardly wait.”

“Maine again?”

“She wouldn't miss it.”

One of the challenges of raising children in the Foreign Service was that the constant moving around the globe made it hard for kids to develop a sense of belonging. They grew up as rootless “third-culture kids” who did not look on the United States as home. Many families tried to compensate for this with regular visits to someplace in America that the kids could think of as theirs. For Alex and Anah, it was Alex's mother's house in Brunswick. Alex could get only a few weeks off from work, but Anah typically stayed in Maine for the entire summer. She loved the beach and the tide pools and the dark pine forests. Most of all, however, she loved that there was so much family. Alex suspected that it reminded her on some level of the big, sprawling tribal family she had come from. Anah had a score of cousins in and around Brunswick who were her constant companions for the summer months. They had embraced the black girl from Sudan as family without reservation.

The youngest of three, Alex was the only one who had left Brunswick and the first in his family to finish college. His brother had done a year at the University of Maine in Orono in forestry before dropping out and going to work for the paper company. His sister worked part-time at a coffee shop and full-time as the wife of a lobsterman. Their father had been a mechanic at the naval air station where he had worked on the P-3 Orions that patrolled the Atlantic coast looking for Soviet submarines. A longtime smoker, he had died of throat cancer when Alex was twelve.

Reluctantly, Alex and Ham turned back to the stacks of passports in front of them. The application on the top of Alex's pile belonged to an elderly man with the unwieldy name Rafiou Alfa Ismael Pascal Gushein. In Guinea, having six or seven names with a mishmash of tribal, Islamic, and French roots was not at all unusual. Gushein entered the interview booth with a young man who introduced himself in French as the applicant's nephew. His uncle, he explained, spoke neither English nor French, only the tribal Soussou language.

Alex sat on a bar stool behind two inches of bulletproof glass. A narrow slit allowed him to pass documents back and forth with the applicant. The glass wall established a psychological as well as a physical barrier between the consular officer and the applicant that was utterly intentional. It made it easier for the officers to say no.

Alex appraised Mr. Gushein while he flipped quickly through the passport. The applicant looked considerably older than his sixty-four years with his snow white hair and deeply lined face, but he stood tall and straight in the booth, and looked Alex right in the eye with an easy confidence. Alex pegged him for a village elder or headman. Someone used to automatic respect.

The passport was old and worn, but unused. A series of stamped dates on the back page indicated that Mr. Gushein had applied for a U.S. visa six times previously and been refused each time. One of Alex's Guinean staff had pulled the old applications out of the file and
bundled them with the passport. Scribbled notes from previous generations of consular officers explained the reason for the refusal.

“Son living illegally in the United States,” said one.

“Poor risk,” said another.

Two of the previous forms said simply “214(b),” the section of immigration law that makes clear all visa applicants are assumed to be intending immigrants who must establish strong and compelling ties to their home country. Another two of the applications were blank, handled by consular officers who were apparently too busy to even explain their reasons for a decision of no consequence to them but of enormous importance to Rafiou Alfa Ismael Pascal Gushein.

“Mr. Gushein,” Alex asked, “why do you want to go to the United States?”

His nephew translated into Soussou, a language of which Alex knew no more than a few words.

“My son lives there,” the nephew replied, translating Mr. Gushein's response. “I have not seen him for many years.”

“Where does he live?”

“Chicago.”

“What does he do in Chicago?”

BOOK: The American Mission
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