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WSWS : News
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US-backed "Plan Colombia" to escalate bloody civil
war
By Patrick Martin
31 January 2001
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Thousands of government troops are being assembled on the border
of a rebel-held zone in southern Colombia on the eve of the scheduled
launching of a US-backed military offensive. Some 600 soldiers
were flown into the region January 23 on US-built C-130 transport
planes, reinforcing the 2,500 soldiers already in place.
Under the Plan Colombia, approved by the Clinton
administration last year, President Andres Pastrana will end a
de facto truce with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC), the country's largest anti-government guerrilla force,
on January 31.
The Clinton administration and the Republican-controlled Congress
approved Plan Colombia last summer, including $1.3 billion in
US aid, the bulk of it directed to the Colombian armed forces,
as well as a significant increase in the number of US advisers
working with the police and military. The military buildup includes
the recruitment of 10,000 more soldiers to form special mobile
units, and training pilots and crew for 60 new attack helicopters
to be supplied by the US. Some 33 helicopters are expected to
be in use by the time the offensive begins.
The FARC has enjoyed undisputed control of most of Putumayo
province, near the border with Ecuador, for two years. The Colombian
military has been kept outside the 16,000-square mile zone, under
an agreement between Pastrana and the FARC which led to inconclusive
peace negotiations. The FARC broke off the talks in November,
citing the threatened resumption of military action.
Since then, a series of bloody incidents has taken place, including
the assassination of a prominent legislative leader who was monitoring
the peace talks, bomb attacks on government and US officials,
and atrocities by a right-wing paramilitary group, the United
Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC).
The 8,000-strong AUC has long operated as a fascist auxiliary
for the Colombian police and army, but it is now playing an increasingly
independent role, and its principal leader, Carlos Castano, now
rivals the military chiefs and the president in influence within
the country's ruling circles.
In one of the most brutal incidents in the decades-long civil
war, AUC commandos butchered dozens of men in the farming village
of Chengue, in Sucre province in northern Colombia, earlier this
month. They marched into the community of avocado growers January
17, rounded up the residents in the main square, and killed 26
men by crushing their heads with heavy stones and a sledgehammer.
This gruesome procedure was apparently chosen for two reasonsto
avoid gunshots which might alert FARC guerrillas, and to maximize
the terrorizing effect.
According to a detailed reconstruction of the massacre published
January 28 in the Washington Post, survivors said
military aircraft undertook surveillance of the village in the
days preceding the massacre and in the hour immediately following
it. The military, according to these accounts, provided safe passage
to the paramilitary column and effectively sealed off the area
by conducting what villagers described as a mock daylong battle
with leftist guerrillas who dominate the area.
Villagers from Chengue sent letters to Pastrana and to human
rights groups in April, after right-wing paramilitary groups began
activities in the region, and again in October, warning that they
were being targeted for violence. The government made no response.
Six of those who signed the letter were murdered January 17.
The military commander in Sucre province, General Rodrigo Quinones,
became notorious for his close collaboration with right-wing death
squads. He was charged in the murder of 57 trade unionists and
human rights activists while serving as the regional head of naval
intelligence in the early 1990s, but a military court acquitted
him. Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the Washington
Office on Latin America recently issued a report which called
specifically for Quinones' removal, and the general was transferred
to another post.
Last year right-wing paramilitaries carried out a massacre
in the town of El Salado, near Chengue, using similar methodsthe
military sealed off the town, allegedly fighting a pitched battle
with guerrillas, while the AUC killers moved in. Anders Kompass,
the representative of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
in Colombia, told the Post, We are very worried and
very suspicious about the coincidences. This involves the same
officer in charge, the same kind of military activity before and
after the massacre, and the same lack of military presence while
it was going on.
The ties between the AUC and the armed forces are so brazen
that even the Clinton administration itself was compelled to admit
it. In one of Clinton's final acts, the day before leaving office,
he signed a letter to Congress conceding that the Colombian military
has not complied with human rights conditions that were included
in the Plan Colombia aid package.
Clinton had already waived compliance with the human rights
conditions last August, as he was empowered to do under the law.
His January 19 letter merely reaffirmed that the position in Colombia
remains essentially the same.
While moving closer to a full-scale confrontation with FARC,
Pastrana has sought to neutralize the second largest guerrilla
group, the National Liberation Army (ELN), offering it territorial
concessions in its base area in northern Colombia, around the
town of San Pablo. The ELN, which has long enjoyed Cuban backing,
opened talks in Havana with the government and released dozens
of captured soldiers and policemen as a goodwill gesture. ELN
leader Nicolas Rodriguez said he might accept a regional cease-fire,
something FARC has so far refused.
Pastrana's overtures to the ELN, and his overall policy of
negotiations with guerrilla groups, have sparked increasingly
bitter conflicts within Colombia's ruling elite. Alvaro Uribe
Velez, a prospective candidate of the opposition Liberal Party,
has denounced the proposed cease-fire with the ELN as an
irreversible act that would fracture the country.
Uribe, linked by Colombian media reports to the UAC and other
fascist paramilitary groups, is the most right-wing of three politicians
seeking the nomination of the Liberal Party, which is favored
to win next year's presidential election. Pastrana cannot succeed
himself and his Conservative Party is trailing badly in the polls.
The Liberal Party has backed Plan Colombia and is expected to
continue the warfare against the guerrilla groups.
The Colombian conflict threatens to spill into neighboring
countries, including Venezuela, Ecuador and Brazil. The governments
of Venezuela and Colombia have staged a war of words in recent
months, culminating in the mutual recall of ambassadors, after
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez permitted leaders of the FARC
to attend a session of the Latin American Parliament held in Caracas.
Colombian officials called it an aggressive act, a meddling
in our internal affairs, while Chavez retorted that the
Colombian oligarchy was responsible for the increasing
violence.
Both Ecuador and Brazil have stepped up military operations
in the dense Amazonian jungles where they share borders with Colombia.
Ecuador has requested a military aid package from Washington,
while allowing the US to set up an airbase at Manta, from which
planes conduct surveillance flights over Colombia.
Brazil is deploying a $1.4 billion radar system, the Amazon
Vigilance System (Sivam), also financed with US aid, to monitor
small-plane flights over the huge region. Last October Brazil
offered to share Sivam data with the United States, Colombia and
other bordering countries. It will also spend $3.5 billion over
the next eight years for new supersonic fighter planes and transport
planes for moving troops.
Outgoing Clinton administration officials defended the widening
of the Colombia conflict. Undersecretary of State Thomas R. Pickering
declared, I think this is evolving now into not just a pure
Colombia issue, but an Andean regional issue, something it has
always been. I think in future years there will be a broader regional
aspect to this as we plan and propose to the Congress new budgets
for this kind of activity.
In a significant editorial shift, the Washington Post
argued that both the incoming Bush administration and the Colombian
government itself should adopt a more aggressive posture and dispense
with the claim that the purpose of the military conflict is to
halt the flow of narcotics. Mr. Pastrana should shut down
the safe zones for the guerrillas and accept that while some negotiations
may be useful, sweeping political treaties will not end the conflict,
the newspaper wrote. The United States, for its part, should
stop pretending that it is only supporting a campaign against
the drug traffic in Colombia. If it is to continue training and
equipping the Colombian army, the new administration cannot avoid
involvement in the larger Colombian conflict.
See Also:
US targets Venezuela:
Bush plans aggressive policy in Latin America
[30 December 2000]
Clinton visit inaugurates
Colombian intervention
Wider Andean war feared
[30 August 2000]
US Congress approves
$1.3 billion military package for Colombia
[30 June 2000]
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