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Clinton begins final push for passage of Colombia aid bill
By Patrick Martin
4 May 2000
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In a speech May 2 to the Council of the Americas, a lobbying
group for corporations with investments in Latin America, President
Bill Clinton called on Congress to approve a huge $1.6 billion
plan to boost military and economic aid to Colombia. The measure
would set the stage for broader US military intervention throughout
the Andean region of South America.
The United States would make the largest contribution to the
$7.5 billion Plan Colombia drawn up by Colombian President
Andres Pastrana. European and other Latin American countries would
be expected to contribute lesser amounts once the US portion is
approved.
The House of Representatives passed an aid bill in March, by
a lopsided bipartisan margin. Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott,
in a face-to-face meeting with Pastrana in Washington two weeks
ago, agreed to bring the legislation to a vote in May. A spokesman
for Lott said only procedural issues were holding up passage of
the bill, which would make Colombia the third largest recipient
of US military aid, after Israel and Egypt.
In his speech Tuesday, Clinton portrayed the conflict in Colombia
between the Pastrana government and several guerrilla groups as
a struggle for democracy against terrorism and drug trafficking.
He warned in apocalyptic terms of the possible consequences of
the collapse of the Colombian regime, saying, Make no mistake
about it. If the oldest democracy in South America can be torn
down, so can others.
Clinton told the assembled corporate executives and think tank
officials that defeat of the guerrillas in Colombia was essential
for the realization of a Free Trade Area of the Americas that
would stretch from Alaska to Argentina by 2005. We have
to win in Colombia. We have to win the fight for the free trade
area in the Americas, he said. We have to prove that
freedom and free markets go hand in hand.
Reuters News Agency described the purpose of the aid package
in unusually blunt terms, in a dispatch reporting Clinton's speech.
The goal, the agency said, was to dent the rebels' military
power and force them to moderate radical socialist demands at
year-old peace talks and to negotiate a swift end to their uprising
that has claimed more than 35,000 lives in just 10 years.
The political goals of the two main guerrilla groups, the Armed
Forces of National Liberation (FARC) and the National Liberation
Army (ELN), can hardly be characterized as socialist. Both groups
espouse an eclectic ideological mixture of Maoism, Castroism and
nationalism. But the long-running conflict is clearly seen by
Washington both as an obstacle to its plans to establish a US-dominated
hemispheric trading bloc, and a significant strategic threat.
The latter issue concerns not only Colombia's key geographical
position as the land bridge between Central America and South
America, bordering on Panama, but its importance in US oil supply
calculations. The oil factor was spelled out most explicitly by
Paul Coverdell, a Republican senator from Georgia, in an op-ed
commentary published in the Washington Post last week.
He wrote:
The destabilization of Colombia directly affects bordering
Venezuela, now generally regarded as our largest oil supplier.
In fact, the oil picture in Latin America is strikingly similar
to that of the Middle East, except that Colombia provides us more
oil today than Kuwait did then. This crisis, like the one in Kuwait,
threatens to spill over into many nations, all of which are allies
...
Let me restate the crisis: We import as much oil from
this hemisphere as we do from the Middle East; more Colombians
than Kosovars have been forced to flee their homes; 35,000 Colombians
are dead. That's why the situation demands our immediate attention.
From 1990 to 1999 Colombia's oil production rose by 78 percent,
the bulk of it going to the United States. Colombia is the seventh
largest US oil supplier, while neighboring Venezuela is number
one. Colombia's proven oil reserves are tiny compared to Venezuela's
73 billion barrels, but its unexplored reserves are believed to
be substantial, as much as 25 billion barrels.
It is these material interests, not concerns for democracy,
which impel US ruling circles toward military intervention in
the region, in which all five nationsVenezuela, Colombia,
Ecuador, Peru and Boliviaare increasingly wracked by political
instability and violence.
As for Clinton's remarks on terrorism, it is a well-established
fact that the principal terrorist force in Colombia is not the
guerrillas, but right-wing paramilitaries closely linked to the
military. According to reports by human rights groups, right-wing
death squads accounted for 78 percent of all human rights violations
and political murders last year.
A United Nations report released April 14 said that members
of the military participated in the paramilitary groups, organizing
massacres and spreading death threats. The security forces
also failed to take action, and this undoubtedly enabled the paramilitary
groups to achieve their exterminating objectives, the report
added.
The threat of right-wing terror is so pervasive that President
Pastrana's chief representative in talks with the FARC and ELN,
Victor G. Ricardo, resigned April 26 after receiving numerous
death threats from the paramilitaries for alleged concessions
to the guerrillas. Ricardo stepped down two days after announcing
the terms of an agreement with the ELN, the second armed guerrilla
group to sign a cease-fire with the regime.
Under the agreement the government will pull troops out of
1,800 square miles, comprising three counties in the states of
Bolivar and Antioquia. But the ELN, which has an estimated 5,000
men under arms, agreed to much more restrictive terms than those
accorded FARC in the latter's base area in southwest Colombia.
It agreed not to impose its own government in the demilitarized
zone or to use the zone as a base for more extensive military
operations.
The accord also establishes an "international verification
commission" of four or five nations to assure that both sides
are abiding by the agreement, the first time that outside countries
have been given a formal role in the civil war and the first time
that countries other than the United States have been involved
in any way. Press reports mentioned Norway, Spain, Venezuela and
Germany as likely candidates for the commission, as well as Cuba,
which has past ties with the ELN leadership.
Pastrana announced the agreement in a speech to the nation
in which he declared, In no way will there be any impact
on the rights and obligations established for all residents in
accordance with the national Constitution and the reigning legal
order. That means all of the civil authorities established in
the area will continue in the exercise of their functions with
no alteration whatsoever."
Colombian radio networks broadcast a parallel statement by
Nicolás Rodríguez, the ELN's top commander, pledging
to take serious steps toward the construction of a solution
to this conflict by methods other than war."
The likelihood, however, is not peace but a more irregular
and savage form of civil war, since the right-wing paramilitary
groups have heavily infiltrated the demilitarized area, encouraged
by local landlords. Moreover, the ELN zone is far more important
strategically to the Colombian military, since it sits astride
the country's main waterway, the Magdalena River, and highways
leading from Bogota to the coast. The area is also rich in gold
and oil, and is adjacent the oil center of Barrancabermeja, home
of the country's main oil refinery.
See Also:
Republicans, Clinton White
House back funding for US military intervention in Colombia
[5 April 2000]
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