News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Editorial: A Plan B for Colombia |
Title: | US CA: Editorial: A Plan B for Colombia |
Published On: | 2008-11-22 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-11-23 02:51:26 |
A PLAN B FOR COLOMBIA
Bush Administration Policies to Fight Drug Trafficking and Rebels Have
Proved Less Than Effective.
Human rights activists in Colombia have long accused their government
of a horrific war strategy: In order to prove it is making progress
against leftist rebels and criminal gangs, the military inflates its
body count by killing innocent civilians, mostly impoverished young
men, and attributing their deaths to combat. Now we know it's true.
President Alvaro Uribe has fired 27 soldiers and officers, including
three generals, and the commander of Colombia's army, Gen. Mario
Montoya, recently stepped down.
These atrocities, however, are not the work of a few rogue soldiers.
More than 1,000 civilians are believed to have been killed outside
combat since 2002, and human rights groups have reported that almost
half of the extrajudicial killings were committed by army units.
Worse, these units had been vetted by the U.S. State Department and,
under the Plan Colombia aid package, cleared to receive U.S. funding.
We need a new plan for Colombia. The bi-national goal was to halve
drug production and diminish the power of drug-trafficking rebels and
paramilitaries. But according to a General Accountability Office
report issued last month, coca cultivation actually rose about 15%
between 2000 and 2006. Uribe has employed U.S. military aid to
successfully fight the rebels, but that has not offset the failings of
the larger plan.
This is the result of President Bush's foreign policy, a jumble of
economic incentives, relentless coca eradication and military aid.
What's needed now are new goals for U.S. involvement in Colombia and
new standards by which to measure progress -- not to mention a
revision of the military vetting process. And with a Democrat in the
White House and a more solidly Democratic Congress, Plan Colombia is
surely headed for an overhaul.
The military atrocities should prod the Obama administration toward
more streamlined, effective policy; human rights abuses should be
addressed through Plan Colombia, and economic development through the
proposed (and stalled) free-trade agreement. That Colombia is still
struggling to create a culture subject to the rule of law is
inarguable. But during that process, the U.S. should provide
meaningful help to its ally, not rubber-stamp its dysfunction in
pursuit of an outdated, ineffective drug policy.
Bush Administration Policies to Fight Drug Trafficking and Rebels Have
Proved Less Than Effective.
Human rights activists in Colombia have long accused their government
of a horrific war strategy: In order to prove it is making progress
against leftist rebels and criminal gangs, the military inflates its
body count by killing innocent civilians, mostly impoverished young
men, and attributing their deaths to combat. Now we know it's true.
President Alvaro Uribe has fired 27 soldiers and officers, including
three generals, and the commander of Colombia's army, Gen. Mario
Montoya, recently stepped down.
These atrocities, however, are not the work of a few rogue soldiers.
More than 1,000 civilians are believed to have been killed outside
combat since 2002, and human rights groups have reported that almost
half of the extrajudicial killings were committed by army units.
Worse, these units had been vetted by the U.S. State Department and,
under the Plan Colombia aid package, cleared to receive U.S. funding.
We need a new plan for Colombia. The bi-national goal was to halve
drug production and diminish the power of drug-trafficking rebels and
paramilitaries. But according to a General Accountability Office
report issued last month, coca cultivation actually rose about 15%
between 2000 and 2006. Uribe has employed U.S. military aid to
successfully fight the rebels, but that has not offset the failings of
the larger plan.
This is the result of President Bush's foreign policy, a jumble of
economic incentives, relentless coca eradication and military aid.
What's needed now are new goals for U.S. involvement in Colombia and
new standards by which to measure progress -- not to mention a
revision of the military vetting process. And with a Democrat in the
White House and a more solidly Democratic Congress, Plan Colombia is
surely headed for an overhaul.
The military atrocities should prod the Obama administration toward
more streamlined, effective policy; human rights abuses should be
addressed through Plan Colombia, and economic development through the
proposed (and stalled) free-trade agreement. That Colombia is still
struggling to create a culture subject to the rule of law is
inarguable. But during that process, the U.S. should provide
meaningful help to its ally, not rubber-stamp its dysfunction in
pursuit of an outdated, ineffective drug policy.
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