US war veteran now fighting to save Africa’s elephants
NAIROBI, Kenya — A decorated U.S. war veteran with two decades’ experience in military intelligence, Lt. Col. Faye Cuevas spent half her career providing intelligence support to U.S. counter-insurgencies in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Horn of Africa. Now she is using her expertise to fight a different kind of conflict: the war on wildlife poaching.
Calling herself “the accidental conservationist,” Cuevas, an air force officer and a trained lawyer originally from Le Center, Minnesota, is not your typical wildlife enthusiast. She is determined to use her skills, honed in conflicts all over the world, to help save the planet’s remaining wild elephants.
“If you start to really untangle how poaching happens — how poachers are armed, how they’re connected into larger networks and how those networks can move ivory and horn on a global scale, who protects them? Who provides logistics? — it resembles a war in anything but name,” Cuevas said.
In the U.S. Air Force, Cuevas worked on America’s controversial drone program, collecting intelligence on individuals and organizations identified as threats. “Getting left of boom” was the term used to predict and prevent the next bomb attack.


