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As Green Berets deploy in war zone
Colombian president seeks massive US intervention
By Bill Vann
1 February 2003
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In a remarkable comment to the international press last month,
Colombias President Alvaro Uribe Velez called upon Washington
to mount a military intervention in his country equal in scope
to the one that is now being prepared against Iraq.
I believe that the drug-trafficking and terrorism conflict
in Colombia is more serious for the democratic stability of the
continent in the medium and long term than the Iraq conflict itself,
said Uribe. If they are mounting this deployment in the
face of Iraq, why dont they consider a similar one to put
an end once and for all to the transport of cocaine between Colombia
and California, for example.
Uribe, a right-wing pro-Washington politician who took office
six months ago, made the comments at the swearing in ceremony
for Ecuadors new president, Lucio Gutierrez, in Quito January
14. He repeated the statement in several interviews and told other
Latin American presidents present for the inauguration that he
intends to press for his proposal in bilateral meetings with Washington
as well as in multilateral forums. He indicated that European
countries as well as Latin American military forces could be invited
to contribute naval and air power to interdict traffic in drugs
and arms.
The plea for a full-scale US military intervention in the region
is a reflection of the desperation of Uribe and the Colombian
oligarchy that he represents in face of the countrys deepening
economic and social disintegration. Even as the military presence
has increased in Colombia, there is a sense within the countrys
ruling elite that the attention of official Washington is fixated
exclusively on the Persian Gulf and that it is not paying attention
to the mounting crisis in Latin America.
Colombia is already the third-largest recipient of US military
aid, with some $2 billion having gone to Plan Colombia, a military
program initiated by the Clinton administration ostensibly to
combat cocaine production in the country. The Bush administration
has since September 11, 2001 designated the US intervention in
Colombia as part of its worldwide war on terrorism.
It has explicitly permitted the use of US military assistance
in prosecuting a counterinsurgency campaign against two Colombian
guerrilla movements: the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC) and the National Liberation Army (ELN).
Last month, the Pentagon carried out a qualitative escalation
of the US intervention in Colombia, sending a contingent of 70
Special Forces troops to the province of Arauca, one of the countrys
most violent regions, to train a newly formed Colombian army brigade.
The mission of this new unit will be fighting the FARC and
ELN and protecting the Cano-Limon oil pipeline from attack. The
pipeline carries oil pumped out of the fields operated by the
California-based Occidental Petroleum. This marks the first time
that US soldiers have been sent with the stated assignment of
training Colombian forces to combat the guerrillas. Previously,
they operated under the official pretext that the military was
being assisted in cocaine eradication efforts. It was claimed
that the conflict with the guerrillas was a concern only to the
extent that the FARC and the ELN hampered the battle to wipe out
illicit drug crops.
One US official said last month that the Green Berets are training
the Colombian troops not only to guard the 490-mile-long pipeline
against attacks, but to sniff out the guerrillas.
In other words, they will be teaching the same kind of counterinsurgency
search-and-destroy tactics that were employed in Vietnam,
El Salvador and elsewhere with catastrophic results for the civilian
population.
While US officials have insisted that the Green Berets are
assigned to training duties only and are strictly prohibited from
engaging in combat, Colombian newspapers have already published
photographs of heavily armed US troops operating together with
Colombian forces.
The connection between the impending war in Iraq and the growing
US intervention in Colombia is not just in Uribes head.
Colombia is the seventh-largest exporter of crude oil to the US
market, and it is believed to have some of the greatest untapped
reserves in the world. Given the threat of war disrupting oil
supplies from the Persian Gulf, together with the continuing effects
of the employers strike in Venezuela, oil coming out of
Colombia could provide a crucial margin in an attempt to hold
down prices.
The expanded US military presence in Arauca has contributed
to a steady escalation of violence in the oil-rich northeastern
province. Uribe declared the province a rehabilitation and
consolidation zone last September, giving the military extraordinary
powers to arrest and hold people without charges, search homes
and restrict internal movement.
Just this week, Uribe announced proposals to reinforce the
Colombian military presence in the province and the appointment
of a new governor. The last one, a retired army colonel, resigned
saying that the situation was uncontrollable.
Colombias Minister of Defense Marta Lucia Ramirez, meanwhile,
has unveiled plans for a dramatic increase in the size of Colombias
armed forces. The proposed buildup includes the creation of 11
new mobile brigades, the strengthening of the military intelligence
apparatus and the addition of 10,000 new members to the National
Police. Some 35,000 additional soldiers would swell the armys
ranks.
Meanwhile, the Uribe regime has proposed the recruitment of
a vast network of informants that is supposed to include some
1.5 million Colombians. The military has reportedly attempted
to initiate this program in the zones of conflict by pressuring
school children with threats and bribes to inform on their neighbors.
The government has also proposed the recruitment of at least 15,000
peasant soldiers to carry out vigilante activities
in the rural areas.
The recently initiated negotiations between the
government and the right-wing paramilitary outfit known as the
United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) are widely seen as
a bid to legalize and reorganize these elements as part of the
governments new official vigilante force.
The AUC functions as an auxiliary force of repression, operating
in close collaboration with the military while receiving ample
financial support from both drug traffickers and the Colombian
oligarchy. Human rights groups have estimated that it is responsible
for over 80 percent of civilian deaths in Colombias protracted
civil war. Its death squads target not only suspected guerrilla
supporters, but union activists, human rights advocates and leaders
of peasant and social action groups. Last year, more than 8,000
such killings were recorded in Colombia.
The AUC leadership proclaimed a truce as a precondition
for the talks with the government, but it has continued the killings,
including the recent massacre of 11 farmworkers in the province
of Antioquia.
While the US State Department declared the AUC a foreign
terrorist organization and officially requested the extradition
of two of its principal leaders, Washington has in practice turned
a blind eye to the close collaboration between the army and the
death squads. It has also flaunted US laws requiring a severing
of such ties as a condition for military aid to Colombia. There
is substantial evidence that the CIA and Pentagon themselves played
a major role in forging the intimate connections between the military
and AUC under a US-supervised reorganization of Colombias
military intelligence apparatus over a decade ago.
With the dialogue between AUC and the Uribe regimebrokered
by the Catholic Church hierarchythe conditions are being
created to legitimize the death squads and provide them with direct
state funding.
During a brief visit to Bogota in December, Secretary of State
Colin Powell gave Washingtons blessing to the negotiations
with a group that the US government has described as terrorist,
while repeating for the record the State Departments extradition
request. The US will stand behind President Uribe as he
moves down this road, he said.
For its part, the Colombian government has indicated that it
is prepared to shelve arrest orders issued against the AUC leaders
supposedly wanted by Washington.
Retired US Army Lt. Gen. Gordon Summer, who served as the Reagan
administrations special envoy to Latin America, provided
a somewhat more candid assessment in an interview with the Washington
Times. The battle is never too crowded to have friends,
he said. First have them answer the law, cut out the drugs,
and embrace human rights. Try to bring them under the tent, to
fight against the guerrillas, who are the biggest threat.
The Bush administration successfully pressured for an end to
peace talks with the main guerrilla movement over a year ago.
Unlike the FARCwhich the US also branded as a terrorist
organizationthe AUC is a vocal proponent of the economic
policies prescribed by Washington and the International Monetary
Fund. We are defenders of business freedom and of the national
and international industrial sectors, declared the right-wing
paramilitaries principal leader, Carlos Castaño,
one of those whose extradition the State Department has requested.
With the governments protection, these paramilitary elements
are already being used with numbing regularity against opponents
of Uribes social and economic policies. According to human
rights groups, three out of every four murders of trade union
leaders and activists worldwide take place in Colombia. More than
150 unionists were assassinated last year, while scores more were
reported disappeared.
Last month, security forces raided the headquarters of the
CUT union federation in Cali, while prosecutors have sought the
arrest of other union leaders on terrorism charges
for organizing protests against death squad murders of their members.
The Uribe government is implementing policies that can only
intensify the class struggle. It recently reached an agreement
with the IMF on a $2.1 billion standby loan conditioned on the
implementation of far-reaching privatization and austerity measures.
To cut deficit spending, it is firing 40,000 public employees
while drastically reducing social services. Among the agencies
that are to be eliminated outright is Colombias National
Geological Service, which conducts surveys of the countrys
mineral resources. This task is now to be left entirely in the
hands of Occidental and other foreign oil monopolies.
Following the Bush administrations instructions that
it proceed with free market policies, the Uribe regime
has carried out a tax reform that provides a windfall
for the countrys wealthy while raising the sales tax as
well as fuel and transportation costs. It has advanced a restructuring
of the countrys pension system, cutting benefits and raising
the retirement age. A labor reform raises the maximum
working day to 16 hours, freezes salaries and attacks other workers
rights.
The governments policies, aimed at fulfilling debt payment
requirements that consume nearly 40 percent of the national budget,
are deepening the pervasive social misery in a country where at
least 20 percent of the economically active population is unemployed
and 70 percent of the people live in poverty.
Behind Uribes call for a massive US military intervention
lies the growing fear within Colombian ruling circles that these
conditions will give rise to a social explosion that will prove
a far greater threat to their wealth and privilege than the conflict
with the guerrillas.
See Also:
As US intervention
grows
Colombian army lays siege to Medellín neighborhood
[19 October 2002]
As workers launch
general strike
Colombias President Uribe intensifies repression
[19 September 2002]
Colombian government
steps up civil war preparations
[31 August 2002]
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