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US-backed border massacre brings South America to brink of
war
By Bill Van Auken
5 March 2008
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The Colombian militarys massacre last Saturday of 17
members of the guerrilla movement FARC, including its second in
command, on Ecuadoran soil has brought tensions in the region
to an unprecedented level, raising the serious threat of armed
conflict.
Both Ecuador and Venezuela have massed thousands of troops
on their borders with Colombia, while breaking off diplomatic
relations with the right-wing government of President Alvaro Uribe
in Bogota and expelling its ambassadors and diplomatic personnel
from Quito and Caracas.
Authorities in Bogota initially claimed that the killing of
the FARC leader Raul Reyes and the other guerrillas was a matter
of Colombian troops pursuing and killing them in battle. A forensic
investigation by Ecuador, however, established that murdered FARC
members were the victims of a bombardment launched while they
were sleeping and that some of them were then finished off by
Colombian ground forces, execution-style.
Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa denounced the attack as a
gross violation of Ecuadors sovereignty and warned that
the actions of the Uribe government threatened to turn the region
into another Middle East.
Indeed, the killing of Reyes, who served as the FARCs
main international representative, pursuing diplomatic contacts
in Europe and Latin America, had all the earmarks of a targeted
assassination.
Colombian police officials made no secret of the fact that
the targeting was carried out by US security forces, which are
extremely active in the south of the country near the Ecuadoran
border. US intelligence resources were used to track Reyess
satellite phone, according to the Colombian officials. The US
has funneled some US$5 billion in military aid into Colombia under
the aegis of Plan Colombia, an operation that was
launched on the pretext of waging a war on drugs,
but which has increasingly been focused on a counterinsurgency
campaign against the FARC, a rural-based guerrilla movement that
has been fighting government forces for 40 years and which has
controlled up to 40 percent of Colombian territory.
Correa indicated in a televised address Monday that the attack
was launched in the context of intense discussions involving the
Ecuadoran government and Reyes over the release of nearly a dozen
high-profile hostages held by the FARC, including the former presidential
candidate Ingrid Betancourt and three captured US military contractors.
I regret to inform you that the conversations were very
advanced for the freeing in Ecuador of 12 hostages, among them
Ingrid Betancourt, said Correa. It was all frustrated
by the militarist and authoritarian hands. We cannot discount
that this was one of the motives of the [Colombian] incursion.
The French Foreign Ministry also revealed Tuesday that it had
been in discussions with Reyes over the release of hostagesparticularly
Betancourt, who holds French citizenshipand that the Colombian
government was informed of these contacts.
Betancourts ex-husband denounced the actions of the Uribe
government as abominable, charging that it launched
the attack to block any agreement on a hostage release.
The principal committee in support of Ingrid Betancourts
release in France issued a statement declaring its dismay
over the turn of events. When the exit door was wide open,
dark intentions have preferred to slam it violently shut,
it said.
Last December, the Colombian government attempted to sabotage
the last efforts to broker a hostage release, launching a massive
bombardment of the area in which the FARC was supposed to let
the hostages go on New Years Eve. Only 10 days later was
it possible for the guerrillas to safely release the two hostages,
Clara Rojas, a former vice presidential candidate, and former
congresswoman Consuelo Gonzáles.
Uribes motives are obvious. He has no interest in any
negotiated agreement with the FARC, humanitarian or otherwise.
Like his patrons in Washington, he has taken the position of no
negotiations with terrorists and is seeking to maintain
himself in power through a relentless campaign of military suppression.
The threat that a release of Betancourt and the American contractors
would undermine this US-backed policy led to last Saturdays
attack in Ecuador.
The Uribe government has attempted to distract international
attention from its aggression with a flood of accusations against
both the FARC and the governments of Correa in Ecuador and President
Hugo Chavez in Venezuela. It has claimed that computers captured
in the FARC camp in Ecuador revealed that Caracas had supplied
the guerrilla movement with funding and arms and that the government
in Quito had likewise supported it. The Uribe government claimed
it would bring charges against Chavez in the International Criminal
Court.
It also claimed that it contained information suggesting that
the FARC was attempting to buy uranium to make a dirty bomb.
This means the FARC is taking big steps in the world of
terrorism to become a global aggressor, Gen. Oscar Naranjo,
director of Colombias national police, said during a news
conference.
Both Caracas and Quito dismissed the charges. The Venezuelan
government announced that it had captured its own computer from
a Colombian drug trafficker implicating the Colombian police chief
in drug deals.
The US State Department initially stressed that the crisis
was a bilateral matter to be worked out diplomatically between
Ecuador and Colombia, while condemning the Chavez government for
intervening in the matter.
On Tuesday, however, US President George W. Bush made a public
statement from the White House unconditionally supporting the
Colombian regimes military aggression.
Announcing that he had spoken with Uribe earlier, Bush declared,
I told the President that America fully supports Colombias
democracy, and that we firmly oppose any acts of aggression that
could destabilize the region. I told him that America will continue
to stand with Colombia as it confronts violence and terror and
fights drug traffickers.
He went on to demand that Congress immediately pass a US-Colombian
free trade agreement, declaring it a matter of national
security.
Significantly, both of the candidates for the Democratic presidential
nomination echoed Bushs unconditional support for the right-wing
government of Uribe and its aggression against Ecuador.
Senator Hillary Clinton, speaking Tuesday to the Spanish-language
television network Telemundo, asserted that the Colombian
state has the right to defend itself against terrorist drug-trafficking
organizations which have kidnapped innocent citizens, including
Americans.
She added, In supporting the FARC, [Venezuelan President]
Chavez is openly taking the side of illegal groups that are threatening
Colombian democracy and the peace and security of the region.
Taking a nearly identical position, Senator Barack Obama issued
a statement declaring, The Colombian people have suffered
more than four decades at the hands of a terrorist insurgency
and the Colombian government has every right to defend itself
against the FARC.
Neither of the Democrats evinced the slightest concern for
the violation of Ecuadors sovereignty, much less the suffering
inflicted on the Colombian people by decades of massacres and
assassinations perpetrated by the Colombian military and its allies
in the right-wing paramilitary death squads.
The message was unmistakable. No matter which party wins the
White House in November, Washingtons pursuit of its strategic
interests in Latin America by means of aggression and provocation
will continue unabated.
See Also:
The referendum defeat
in Venezuela: A warning to the working class
[4 December 2007]
Venezuela: the class
issues in Chavez's constitutional referendum
[28 November 2007]
US attacks Venezuela:
"press freedom" as a pretext for intervention
[6 June 2007]
Bush pledges more funds
for Colombia's dirty war
[24 November 2004]
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