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WSWS : News
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Clinton visit inaugurates Colombian intervention
Wider Andean war feared
By Bill Vann
30 August 2000
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President Bill Clinton's eight-hour visit to the Caribbean
port city of Cartagena August 30 marks the initiation of Plan
Colombia, the blueprint for an open-ended US military intervention
on the South American continent.
A week before the presidential trip, Clinton authorized a $1.3
billion military aid package for the government of President Andres
Pastrana, brushing aside demands by Congress that the Colombian
government carry out measures that would supposedly protect human
rights. These included provisions for the suspension of military
personnel charged with gross violations of human rights,
and the prosecution of right-wing paramilitary groups that are
responsible for widespread massacres and assassinations in Colombia.
We think it's necessary to get the money out now,
said a senior State Department official, defending Clinton's decision
to invoke national security needs in waiving the human rights
requirements. We've already seen the difficulty down there
with the program because of delays.
More than $1 billion of the aid will go directly to the Colombian
armed forces, in the form of new military equipment, US advisers
and training. This will include the delivery of 18 Black Hawk
and 42 Huey 2 Helicopters. US Green Berets will be sent to train
three new Colombian counterinsurgency battalions.
The Colombian intervention is being carried out under the pretext
of the war on drugs. The new US-trained units will
have the mission of wresting a swath of territory comprising nearly
half of the country from the control of guerrillas to ensure that
eradication efforts aimed against the cultivation of cocathe
plant that is refined into cocaineproceed without interference.
Powerful herbicides are then to be sprayed on the coca fields
from small aircraft. Scientists warn the impact of these chemicals,
both on the population in these areas and on the country's ecology,
could prove catastrophic.
The escalation of the war on drugs being prepared
in Colombia will clearly be directed at the most oppressed and
impoverished sector of the population that makes its living from
the cultivation of the coca plant. It is a war that will kill,
terrorize and chemically poison thousands upon thousands of poor
peasants, driving them from their land and depriving them of a
means of subsistence.
Those who make the super profits from the drug tradethe
bankers who launder the money and the major exporterswill
adapt themselves to whatever changes the war creates in business
conditions, just as they have in the past. Ironically, the growth
of Colombia's role in cocaine trafficking is itself the product
of earlier US efforts to curb the drug trade in Bolivia, Peru
and Ecuador.
Clinton has touted the nonmilitary component of the US aid
package, claiming that Washington has no intention of becoming
directly involved in Colombia's 40-year-old civil war. In fact,
the so-called nonmilitary funds account for barely $200,000 of
the $1.3 billion package. A large portion of these funds will
go to the government and the military for human rights training,
consisting of State Department and Pentagon officials instructing
Colombian officials in how best to contain and deflect criticism
of the inevitable increase in bloodshed that the massive influx
of US arms aid will produce.
Indeed, the days leading up to the Clinton visit have seen
uninterrupted carnage on the part of Colombian soldiers and the
right-wing paramilitary groups that work in collaboration and
under the protection of the Colombian military.
Barely a week before the US president enacted the aid package,
Colombian troops massacred six children who were on an excursion
with their school class outside a village in the department of
Antioquia. Several others were wounded. All of the victims were
between eight and ten years old. While the army initially claimed
that the children were caught in a crossfire between
the troops and guerrillas, witnesses said there were no rebels
present and the only shots came from the soldiers.
On August 24, a massacre of at least 25 people by right-wing
paramilitaries was reported in the municipality of Puerto Concordia
in southeastern Colombia. The following day, the bodies of six
farm laborers were found by the roadside in the eastern department
of Sucre. Scrawled on the vehicle in which the workers were traveling
were the words guerrillas out and death to outlaws.
Finally, on August 27, a group of 60 armed men from the main
rightist paramilitary band laid siege to a residential area south
of the port city of Cienaga, less than 100 miles from Cartagena.
Dragging 20 people from their homes in the early morning hours,
they executed 10 with gunshots to the head and kidnapped another
four. The paramilitary leaders describe this type of operation
as a social cleansing.
One by one the victims were forced to their knees and shot.
Among the deadwho ranged in age from 20 to 54were
farm workers, a nurse, a butcher, a fruit vendor and a janitor.
The Clinton administration's claims notwithstanding, the influx
of huge amounts of US military equipment along with several hundred
trainers and advisers will inevitably
mean a dramatic escalation of the country's civil conflict and
a vast increase in this grim slaughter of unarmed peasants, workers
and youth.
The paramilitaries, led by a former US-trained Colombian army
officer, have received the bulk of their weapons and ample logistical
support from the country's military. While the armed rightist
thugs are themselves deeply involved in the country's cocaine
industry, they have also enjoyed intimate ties with Washington.
According to one long-time Colombian agent of the US Drug Enforcement
Agency, the DEA attempted to negotiate a pact with paramilitary
leader Carlos Castano in which the rightist death squads would
have received US weapons and support in return for helping capture
and extradite 200 drug traffickers to face trial in the US.
Castano has publicly voiced his support for Plan Colombia,
clearly confident that a substantial share of the US aid will
wind up in the hands of his forces, which have grown rapidly in
the last several years with the backing of powerful Colombian
business interests.
The US has pledged to limit its presence in the country to
500 military advisors and another 300 civilian military
contractors, but the aid agreement includes a provisiontermed
the empire clause by the plan's criticsthat
allows the dispatch of more troops in the event there is evidence
of aggression. In other words, should those who are the
targets of the military aid choose to resist, and should US soldiers
become the targets of their wrath, the conditions will emerge
for an escalating involvement of US military forces.
The initiation of the US military aid program has drawn expressions
of concern from governments in neighboring countries. Officials
in Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela voiced fears that an all-out war
against the guerrillas could send waves of refugees flooding across
their borders and quickly regionalize the conflict. The Brazilian
Foreign Ministry expressed similar worries, and warned about potential
damage to the Amazon's sensitive ecosystem from extensive herbicide
use. In each of these countries, the military has deployed increased
forces near the Colombian border in anticipation of an escalation
of the conflict.
The Clinton visit is itself emblematic of the military aggression
the Pentagon is preparing against Colombia. In planning the visit,
the Colombian capital of Bogota was ruled out as far too dangerous
for the US president and instead Washington chose Cartagena.
More than 5,000 members of the Colombian security forces as
well as several hundred Secret Service agents are to be deployed
in the city itself, while military units will be conducting operations
in the surrounding rural areas to avoid any potential threat.
In an attempt to present the proper image to the US president,
security forces launched a round-up of the Caribbean port's hundreds
of homeless street children, taking them to a center outside of
town where they are to be held until Clinton leaves. Human rights
advocates described the police action as kidnappings,
adding that most of the children had been taken against their
will. Street vendors, who account for a large section of the country's
informal economy, have likewise been driven from the city.
Under a security decree, all marches and demonstrations were
banned from the day before Clinton's visit until the day after.
Unions and civic groups vowed to defy the order. Whatever
the decree says, we are going to carry out rallies on August 30,
said Estaban Barboza, general secretary of the local United Confederation
of Labor. And if they beat us, it will be worse for them.
The Pastrana government has hailed the visit, hoping to use
it to salvage some vestige of popular support. Initially, the
Colombian authorities had planned to call a civic holiday, but
US officials vetoed the idea, making it clear they want as few
people on the streets as possible.
In the end, Colombia remains a society torn by class divisions
and social polarization, with more than half of its 40 million
people living in extreme poverty and being driven into greater
misery each day by the worst depression in the country's history.
While structural adjustment programs dictated by the
International Monetary Fund and the major world banks suck out
what little resources were directed towards ameliorating the desperate
social conditions facing the country's majority, a thin layer
of Colombian bankers and businessmen have become fabulously wealthy,
many of them through their connection to the drug trade.
Whatever Washington's pretensions of waging a war on drugs
and upholding human rights, the US intervention will inevitably
be directed at defending the wealth and privileges of this small
minority through the ruthless suppression of Colombia's workers
and peasants.
See Also:
Clinton to visit Cartagena
US intervention heats up Colombian conflict
[16 August 2000]
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