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US moves towards deeper intervention in Colombia civil war
By Patrick Martin
9 August 2001
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There was little reporting and less commentary in the national
media on the actions of the House of Representatives July 24,
giving its approval to $676 million in military, social and economic
aid to Colombia and six other countries in the Andean region of
northwestern South America. The House approved the Bush administrations
$15.2 billion foreign aid bill by a vote of 381-46, after 12 hours
of debate focused largely on US policy in Colombia.
The aid package represents the second installment of Plan
Colombia, the US program of stepped-up backing for the Colombian
government in the ongoing civil war with several rural-based guerrilla
groups. The Clinton administration introduced Plan Colombia last
year, and a government offensive against the guerrillas has been
under way since January, with mixed results.
All told, the US government supplied more than $1 billion in
weapons, equipment and training to Latin American armies and police
in 2000, more than all the economic and development aid for the
largely impoverished region.
The House cut $55 million from the Bush administrations
initial request for Colombia, a reflection of uneasiness over
the growing extent of the US role in that region, but it defeated
efforts to cut another $100 million and transfer the funds to
international medical treatment programs.
More significantly, the House by voice vote retained a ceiling
of 800 on the combined US military and contractors (mainly retired
military personnel) employed as advisers and technical support
for the Colombian armed forces.
The Clinton administration, to win congressional support for
the adoption of Plan Colombia last year, agreed to limit the total
US military personnel to 500 and the number of US contractors
to 300. The totals reached 200 civilians and 200 military this
spring, and US officials estimated that the ceiling of 300 civilians
would be reached by the end of the year, with a projected 500
contractors next year.
The Bush administration sought to eliminate the ceiling on
contractors, allowing an indefinite expansion of the number of
Americans employed as airplane and helicopter pilots, aircraft
mechanics and in other technical specialties, as well as civilian
advisers to the military and police. The House approved a compromise
plan, worked out between Republican Congressman Jim Kolbe and
Democrat John Conyers, to allow more than 300 civilians but retain
the overall cap of 800 civilian and military personnel combined.
US military advisers
At a press conference in Bogota after the passage of the legislation,
Ambassador Anne Patterson said that the US military advisers would
be shifting to smaller and shorter but more frequent training
missions. The effect will be to expand US influence in the Colombian
military, with the goal of training at least one battalion in
each brigade of the Colombian armed forces. With infinite cynicism,
she suggested that such training would improve the human rights
record of the Colombian military.
The main US army unit involved, however, the 7th Special Forces
Group, was responsible for training the infamous Atlacatl Battalion
in El Salvador, which carried out some of the most hideous massacres
in the civil war of the 1980s. The Special Forces Group recently
completed the training of more than 2,000 Colombian troops as
a specialized jungle warfare brigade. These troops are now being
deployed against the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia,
the major rebel group).
The Bush administration has relabeled Plan Colombia as the
Andean Counterdrug Initiative, acknowledging its wider
geographic scopePanama, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia
and Brazil are all now includedwhile maintaining the pretense
that the intervention is aimed at reducing the flow of narcotics
from the region into the United States.
The ceiling of 800 total US personnel applies only to the number
in place in Colombia at any one time. It does not include hundreds
more military advisers and contractors who are deployed in Ecuador,
where a US-run airbase is being built near the port city of Manta;
in Peru, where US civilian personnel were involved in the shoot-down
of a missionary plane in April, killing a young woman and her
child; and elsewhere in the region. Nor does it include thousands
of American personnel outside the war zone who are engaged in
logistics, telecommunications or direct operational support (the
Peru plane shoot-down, for instance, was guided by a US radar
station based in Vieques, Puerto Rico).
The entire region is being transformed into a zone of military
operations against the guerrillas of the FARC and the ELN, two
groups which have waged sporadic warfare against the Colombian
government for several decades. The FARCs base is southern
Colombia, particularly the province of Putumayo, along the border
with Ecuador, and the Amazonian jungle region where Colombia,
Peru and Brazil come together. The smaller ELN is based in north-central
Colombia, in the province of Bolivar.
Successive US administrations have justified intervention in
the Colombian civil war with the claim that they were not engaged
in fighting guerrillas but in fighting narcotics trafficking,
especially the growing of coca, the plant from which cocaine is
derived. Colombia grows an estimated 90 percent of the worlds
coca, a figure which reflects the impact of US-backed coca eradication
programs in Bolivia and Peru, the original centers of cultivation.
From the standpoint of their relation to narcotics, however,
there is little to distinguish the rival sides in the civil war.
Coca production is one of the principal agricultural activities
in Colombia, especially in the southern half, and coca farmers
are taxed by whoever holds power in their locality, whether it
be the FARC and ELN, descended from Maoist and Castroist elements
of the 1960s, or the Colombian military and its allies in the
right-wing UAC death squads.
The most significant military event so far this year, for instance,
was the offensive by the UAC in southern Bolivar province against
the ELN, disrupting the cease-fire agreement between the ELN and
the government. President Andres Pastrana had agreed to a partial
halt in military operations against the ELN, similar to that already
in effect with the FARC. When the UAC militia moved in, with army
backing, they began collecting taxes from the coca farmers and
using the revenue to buy weapons and supplies. The cynicism of
Bush administration policy is that, in the name of the war
on drugs, it is arming the Colombia military, and indirectly
the fascist death squads, who pursue cocaine profits with enthusiasm.
The defoliation campaign
In the five southernmost provinces, where the FARC is strongest,
systematic spraying of the coca fields with herbicides began last
December. More than 125,000 acres of coca plants have been destroyed,
according to government figures, regularly updated, that bear
an eerie resemblance to the body counts of the Vietnam War. Despite
this destruction, however, the actual total coca acreage in Colombia
has increased by 11 percent over the past year, as more and more
impoverished farmers turn to the one crop that has a seemingly
assured and profitable market.
The campaign of defoliationa word avoided by the Bush
administration because of its association with Vietnamis
only the first phase of the stepped-up US role. The second began
last week when US-supplied Blackhawk helicopter gunships first
went into action against FARC guerrillas near the village of Juan
Jose in eastern Colombia.
The armed forces command portrayed the firefight, in which
60 rebels were reportedly killed, as a major battlefield victoryitself
an indication of the dismal past performance of the Colombian
military. Helicopter gunships and jet fighters systematically
strafed the village, reportedly using information from US spy
satellites for targeting. Aerial footage of fleeing guerrillas
was shown repeatedly on Colombian television in an effort to boost
the militarys image.
The spraying and fumigation campaign has provoked an increasing
outcry within Colombia as reports mount of the widespread health
impact. The chemical herbicide glyphosate, produced by US-based
Monsanto Corp. and sold commercially under the Roundup name, is
blamed for a host of health problems in the affected areas, including
respiratory and intestinal illnesses, skin rashes in children,
dead animals and ruined food crops.
The governors of four southern Colombian provinces traveled
to Washington in March to protest the sprayings. A second delegation
arrived in August and held a press conference in Washington to
publicize the dangers of the defoliation campaign. They noted
that Roundup, while legal for spraying in the United States, carries
warnings to use protective eye covering and to avoid inhalation,
spraying on water supplies or allowing domestic animals to graze
in sprayed fields. Such precautions are of course impossible for
peasants sprayed without warning while cultivating their fields.
The Washington-based World Wildlife Fund has also called for suspension
of the fumigation until the potentially grave environmental
impact can be studied.
On July 23 a judge in Bogota ordered a halt to the spraying
program, acting on a legal complaint filed by Indian communities
in the Amazonian jungle region of southeast Colombia. After Ambassador
Patterson warned that a shutdown in spraying might trigger a cutoff
in US military assistance, the Pastrana government obtained a
clarification from the judge, who ruled that the ban
would apply only to the areas where the plaintiffs liveda
few square milesrather than to the country as a whole. Large-scale
spraying resumed July 31.
Subcontracting out a war
In the face of deep public opposition in the United States
to intervention in a guerrilla warto say nothing of the
enormous hostility which such an intervention would provoke throughout
Latin Americathe Clinton and Bush administrations have relied
on subcontractors to perform roles which would have been assigned
to uniformed personnel in previous American wars.
There are 11 US-supplied spray planes now in Colombia, with
14 more on order. Some of the pilots are Colombian, others US
and other foreign nationals supplied by DynCorp, a big US defense
contractor with a long record of participation in State Department,
CIA and Pentagon projects overseas. The company was awarded a
$170 million contract for support operations in Colombia in 1998.
Another subcontractor, Military Professional Resources Inc.,
recently completed a contract with Colombias Ministry of
Defense. MPRI is notorious for its role in the former Yugoslavia,
where it first trained Croatian military units before a campaign
of ethnic cleansing against the Serb-population in the Krajina
region, then worked with the terrorists of the Albanian KLA.
A third US company, Aviation Development Corporation of Montgomery,
Alabama, has CIA contracts for flying surveillance planes over
coca-producing areas in the Amazon rainforest. ADC personnel were
flying the spotter plane in Peru which targeted the missionary
flight in which Veronica Bowers and her infant daughter were killed.
While DynCorp and other companies mainly supply pilots, mechanics
and trainers, some contractors are being hired for directly military
roles. Former Navy SEALs are reportedly operating a riverine patrol
in northeastern Peru, manning four gunboats based in the city
of Iquitosthe destination of the doomed missionary flight.
Unlike US military personnel, contract employees are not bound
by congressional restrictions on engaging in combat, either in
Colombia or the neighboring countries.
As the level of US involvement in Colombia increases, there
are signs that the Bush administration will drop the drug
war pretext and declare its political motivation openly.
A newly published study by the influential RAND Corporation declares
Colombia the most serious foreign and security policy crisis
in the Western Hemisphere since the Central American wars of the
1980s. It dismisses the focus on drug interdiction, saying
it misses the point.
The report criticizes President Pastranas agreement to
a limited cease-fire with the FARC in a Switzerland-sized region
in the south, and warns that the rapid growth of the guerrilla
armyfrom 3,000 fighters to 20,000 in the past 15 yearsposes
real dangers to the survival of the US-backed regime in Bogota.
The United States ought to rethink whether this distinction
between counternarcotics and counterinsurgency can be sustained,
and whether Colombia and its allies can be successful in the war
against drugs if the Colombian government fails to regain control
of its territory, the RAND study concludes.
Brutal battles in dense jungles, helicopter gunships strafing
villages, widespread spraying of chemical defoliants, hundreds
of American military advisers, billions in US aid for a corrupt
and unpopular regime, RAND Corporation studies justifying military
escalation: it is no wonder that comparisons are frequently made
between the current situation in Colombia and the early stages
of US intervention in Vietnam.
There are of course many important differences, not the least
of which is the vastly different international context in which
the conflict in Colombia is unfolding. But one similarity is particularly
striking: the virtual absence of any serious public discussion
in the United States as the US government involves itself ever
more deeply in a bloody civil war.
See Also:
US-backed Plan Colombia
to escalate bloody civil war
[31 January 2001]
Clinton visit inaugurates
Colombian intervention
Wider Andean war feared
[30 August 2000]
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