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As hunt for captured contractors continues
US escalates Colombian military intervention
By Bill Vann
1 March 2003
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Over the past month, the Pentagon has nearly doubled the number
of US military forces it acknowledges are deployed in Colombia,
while special operations units are joining directly in a massive
search-and-rescue operation that has been mounted to locate three
US military contract personnel captured after their plane was
downed over guerrilla-held territory February 13.
Another Pentagon contractor and a Colombian military intelligence
agent were killed in the incident after they apparently resisted
capture by elements of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC).
According to figures supplied by the Bush administration, the
number of US military personnel on the ground in Colombia has
climbed from 208 in January to 411 last week. A State Department
spokesman disputed published reports that 150 special operations
troops had been sent to join the manhunt in the dense jungles
of Caqueta province in southern Colombia, where the contractors
were captured.
State Department spokesman Philip Reeker claimed on February
25 that only 49 new troops had been brought in to hunt for the
captured Americans and that the other 101 new arrivals represented
pre-planned deployments of military planners. Whatever
the case, the incident in Caqueta and the buildup that has followed
signals a significant shift in both the size and focus of Washingtons
military intervention in the war-torn South American nation.
The Bush administration has continued to withhold any details
on the identity or the mission of the Americans captured in Caqueta.
The one who was killed, however, was identified as Thomas Janis,
56, a retired career soldier and Vietnam veteran thought to have
been the pilot of the downed Cessna aircraft.
Janis and the other three Americans worked for California Microwave
Systems, a subsidiary of Northrop Grumman, one of the Pentagons
largest contractors. The company specializes in aerial surveillance
equipment. US and Colombian sources have indicated that the plane
was involved in an attempt to target leaders of the FARC for an
attack by the Colombian armed forces.
The FARC has declared the three Americans prisoners of
war, offering to release them in exchange for the guerrilla
groups own imprisoned members. At the same time, it has
warned that the massive military operation that has been mounted
in search for the captured Americans could put their lives in
danger. An estimated 3,000 Colombian troops, backed by helicopter
gunships and US military and FBI advisors, are involved
in the manhunt. Both the US and Colombian governments have ruled
out any prisoner exchange.
The province where the search is taking place was once a huge
demilitarized zone established in 1999 as part of a truce between
the Colombian government and the FARC. But the truce, which was
opposed by the Bush administration, ended a year ago and Colombian
troops and right-wing paramilitary squads rushed back into the
area, unleashing a wave of killings of suspected guerrilla sympathizers.
The FARC, however, continues to control much of the jungle and
the outlying villages.
The incident in Caqueta has had the effect of sharply accelerating
what is already a qualitative expansion of US involvement in Colombias
civil war. The US has sent some $2 billion in military aid to
Colombia, making it the third-largest recipient of such assistance,
trailing only Israel and Egypt.
The countrys right-wing president, Alvaro Uribe Velez,
has sought an expanded US involvement in the country ever since
he was elected last May, suggesting recently that Washington should
mount a military operation in Colombia on a similar scale as the
one being prepared against Iraq.
Colombias Vice President Francisco Santos felt compelled
last week to deny that the steady increase in the number of US
military advisers on Colombian soil represented a
Vietnamization of the Colombian conflict. Suggestions
to the contrary, he affirmed, were the work of enemies of
the US aid to Colombia.
Meanwhile, the Bush administration has shifted the axis of
US involvement in Colombia from the so-called war on drugs,
which was the pretext for the Plan Colombia military
aid program begun under the Clinton administration, to the global
war on terrorism. The effect has been to free up military
resources that had previously been provided for coca-eradication
efforts to be used in counterinsurgency campaigns against the
FARC and another guerrilla movement, the National Liberation Army,
or ELN.
The downing of the US spy plane over Caqueta is only one in
a series of setbacks for this counterinsurgency campaign that
together could pressure Washington to increase its direct military
involvement. On Wednesday, 23 Colombian troops died when a US-supplied
Black Hawk helicopter crashed in the mountainous northeast of
the country in the midst of an anti-guerrilla operation. While
military sources initially blamed the crash on weather conditions,
peasants in the area reported that they heard gunfire before the
helicopter went down. The US has supplied Colombia with nearly
50 Black Hawks for use as gunships and to transport troops.
Meanwhile, the campaign has increasingly focused on protecting
US oil interests in Colombia, with the deployment of some 70 US
Special Forces troops and the allocation of $98 million for the
training of a new Colombian brigade to guard the oil pipeline
that is jointly operated by Los Angeles-based Occidental Petroleum
and Ecopetrol (Empresa Colombiana de Petroleo), Colombias
state-run oil company. With a war against Iraq imminent and continuing
disruption of supplies from Venezuela, a steady flow of oil from
Colombia has become an increasingly important US interest.
Part of this battle to secure US domination of the countrys
oil wealth is being waged against Colombias oil workers,
one of the most combative sectors of the countrys workforce.
Colombian army troops and police are continuing to occupy the
countrys two main oil refineries in Cartagena and Barrancabermeja
after they were brought in February 21 to suppress a protest march
by workers inside the Barrancabermeja facility. Nine workers were
wounded and 15 arrested in the confrontation, which saw security
forces use tear gas and rubber bullets against the workers.
The union representing some 6,000 employees at state-run Ecopetrol
is currently negotiating a contract and has denounced attempts
by the government to roll back gains won over decades by the oil
workers. In particular, it has opposed provisions allowing the
contracting out of work, which is says is part of the Uribe governments
preparations to privatize the countrys oil resources.
Workers have charged that the government is conducting a lockout
by militarizing the refineries, while management insists that
it is guarding against sabotage and subversion,
implicitly threatening the union with the same treatment meted
out to the guerrillas.
The union has also denounced a deal between the government
and Texaco-Chevron that cedes control of one of the countrys
main natural gas fields in La Guajira to the multinational for
another 12 years after the current contract expires next year.
Under the existing deal, Ecopetrol was to take over both the gas
reserves and the infrastructure in December 2004.
The union, the USO, has also pointed to deals ceding control
of pipelines to the foreign oil companies, the elimination of
subsidies on gas prices, the slashing of maintenance budgets for
the refineries and a halt to independent exploration for new oil
reserves as warnings that the Uribe government is planning to
sell off the countrys petroleum resources to the multinationals.
The oil workers union issued a statement denouncing the repressive
measures of the Uribe government and linking them to the Bush
administrations war drive: behind the policy of smashing
the USO there is hidden a perverse proposal for paving the way
to the liquidation of Ecopetrol as the public property of the
Colombians and to deprive the nation of the exploration, exploitation,
refining, transportation, distribution and technological investigation
of petroleum and other strategic fuels for national development.
The attack is not separate from Bushs crusade to
trade blood for oil, which was justly denounced last
week by formidable demonstrations of millions of people throughout
the world against the unjust war against Iraq that is promoted
by North American imperialism.
The oil workers union has suffered persistent repression at
the hands of both the military and the right-wing death squads.
Since 1988, more than 80 oil workers, including a number of union
leaders, have been murdered, without any action taken by the government
against their killers.
See Also:
After capture of Pentagon
contractors:
Wider US war threatened in Colombia
[21 February 2003]
As Green Berets deploy
in war zone
Colombian president seeks massive US intervention
[1 February 2003]
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