|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : South
& Central America
After capture of Pentagon contractors:
Wider US war threatened in Colombia
By Bill Vann
21 February 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The threat of a wider US war in Colombia just as Washington
is preparing to unleash an invasion of Iraq has escalated sharply
following the killing of a Pentagon contractor and the abduction
of three others by guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces
of Colombia (FARC).
The incident occurred February 14 after the airplane in which
the four Americans and one Colombian soldierwho was also
killedwere flying made an emergency landing in an area in
the south of the country that has long been a FARC stronghold.
The circumstances surrounding the downing of the Cessna aircraft,
as well as the identity and mission of its American passengers,
remain shrouded in mystery as both Pentagon and US State Department
officials have refused to release any information.
Even after the body of the one US contractor killed was flown
back on Sunday, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher refused
to identify the dead man, claiming it was out of respect
for relatives.
The US government plane had landed near the town of Florencia,
about 250 miles south of the Colombian capital of Bogota. Apparently,
the two men killed had attempted to resist capture. Officials
said that the plane was traveling from Bogota to a military base
at the southern town of Tres Esquinas.
The incident marks the first time that a US citizen acting
in an official capacity has been killed since Washington began
a steady escalation of its military intervention in Colombia under
the Carter administration. Today, the South American country trails
only Israel and Egypt as the third-largest recipient of US military
aid.
About $2 billion in arms aid has poured into Colombia, first
under the pretext of combating cocaine. Since September 11, 2001,
however, the Bush administration has proclaimed the US intervention
to be part of its global war on terrorism.
It has now explicitly assigned weaponry and US military personnel
to assist the Colombian army in waging a four-decade-old counter-insurgency
campaign that has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives. It likewise
unveiled a new program that last month brought 70 US Special Forces
soldiers to the war-torn province of Arauca where they are to
organize Colombian army troops in the protection of a 500-mile
pipeline that carries oil from fields operated by the Los Angeles-based
Occidental Petroleum Corp.
The four Americans on the plane apparently were not involved
in drug eradication, as claimed by some official sources, but
electronic spying on the FARC guerrillas. Washington Post columnist
Robert Novak cited sources in the US Embassy in Bogota as saying
that the civilian contractors were from a company called California
Microwave Inc based in Sunnyvale, California.
The unit, now a subsidiary of the Northrop Grumman arms-manufacturing
giant, specializes in airborne reconnaissance and surveillance
systems. Mission planning involves the use of computer-aided
systems to provide planners with checklists of activities necessary
to ensure a successful mission by the warfighter, according
to the companys web site. In other words, the mission in
Colombia was in all likelihood one of providing targeting information
for air strikes by Colombian warplanes against FARC positions.
Washingtons use of such contractors has become increasingly
pervasive in recent years. Such arrangements are used both to
increase the amount of military-related personnel on the ground
in given countries beyond the numbers authorized under existing
legislation and to use contractors to perform the kind of activities
that are specifically prohibited for soldiers in uniform.
At present, there are some 500 US military advisers in Colombia
and at least another 300 civilian, many of these ex-military personnel.
In addition, some 83 US helicopters are being used in the Colombian
counterinsurgency campaign.
The Colombian government has deployed some 4,000 troops in
an attempt to recover the three Americans. US FBI agents as well
as military personnel have joined the operation.
Meanwhile, a Congressional delegation visiting Colombia issued
threats that the abduction of the three Pentagon contractors would
provoke severe retaliation from the US military.
Rep. Tom Davis, a Virginia Republican and chairman of the House
Governmental Reform Committee, told the Colombian press, I
dont think there is any question that this precipitous act
by the FARC is going to meet with very strong retaliation. Precisely
what happens is being discussed as we speak, but theyve
made a very grave error. He added that the incident had
proven that the FARC was not a legitimate group, but
rather bandits and outside the law and would bring
a greater commitment from the US.
We have many areas in the world where we are involved,
but Congress and this administration will carry out whatever actions
are necessary, added Rep. James Moran, a Virginia Democrat.
The details of what will happen are being discussed, but
the FARC committed a very serious error and are going to have
to pay a very high price for this.
Davis described the US contractor who was killed as someone
who had a stellar career serving our military and working
here in Colombia.
Colombias right-wing president Alvaro Uribe Velez, has
utilized the incident as the pretext for ramming through new anti-terrorist
legislation that would expand even further the near-dictatorial
powers that his government has assumed since taking office last
year.
The proposed laws would create a whole series of new terrorist
crimes. Membership in an organization deemed terrorist by the
government, for example, would carry an automatic penalty of five
to 10 years in prison, while anyone found to be a leader or chief
of a terrorist cell could be jailed for 30 to 40 years.
In addition, anyone promoting terrorism in general
could be imprisoned for two to five years, even if they had no
participation in any alleged act of violence.
In a further measure that would impose an iron censorship over
the Colombian media, the legislation states that any newspaper
or broadcast network that reports information that could
interfere with the effective development of operations by the
military and police, places the lives of members of the public
forces in danger... or carries out any other act that attacks
public order, public moral health, improves the position or image
of the enemy or stimulates terrorist activities to cause a greater
impact through their actions, will incur a prison sentence of
eight to 12 years along with the shutdown of the offending
media outlet.
Meanwhile, Colombias civil war has continued to intensify.
At least 70 people were reported killed in clashes in the province
of Arauca between FARC guerrillas and right-wing paramilitary
units backed by the Colombian army.
The fighting erupted last Sunday afternoon when FARC guerrillas
attacked the paramilitaries near the border between Arauca and
Casanare. Last week, the FARC also reported killing 46 paramilitaries
in Putumayo province.
See Also:
As Green Berets deploy in war zone
Colombian president seeks massive US intervention
[1 February 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |