News (Media Awareness Project) - US IL: Column: Unfulfilled Foreign Policy |
Title: | US IL: Column: Unfulfilled Foreign Policy |
Published On: | 2002-03-25 |
Source: | Chicago Sun-Times (IL) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-24 14:56:43 |
UNFULFILLED FOREIGN POLICY
On Saturday, March 14, in the Colombian city of Cali, two American citizens
were shot to death. They had been negotiating with FARC leftist guerrillas
for the release of their kidnapped father. U.S. authorities in Colombia
learned of the killings but issued no statement. Indeed, they did not even
inform their newly installed superior, Otto Reich, assistant secretary of
state for inter-American affairs.
I was told about the killings last Wednesday by Congressional sources, who
had been alerted Tuesday by a U.S. Embassy official in Bogota. I contacted
Reich, who was traveling with President Bush in Latin America. It was the
first Reich knew of the killings seven days earlier, and he was not happy
about being in the dark.
Colombian police, following the U.S. Embassy's example, said nothing
publicly. One police official told congressional contacts in Washington
that the embassy "suppressed" news of the killings. State Department
officials informed me this was part of internal drug wars-- contradicting
Colombian police sources. A U.S. drug enforcement officer said the brothers
were "party to" a money-laundering investigation, possibly as witnesses and
informants. Whatever the truth, the U.S. government kept the murder of
American citizens under cover.
This fits a pattern established during the Clinton administration and
continued by the Bush administration's Clinton holdovers in Latin American
policy positions. Since 1990, 73 American citizens have been taken hostage
in Colombia (more than 50 by narco-terrorist guerrillas). Since 1995, 12
have been murdered. These atrocities go unmentioned as the United States
minimizes the tragedy of a Western Hemisphere neighbor left prostrate by
terrorists.
The 11th and 12th murders stemmed from the FARC kidnapping last Dec. 20 in
Colombia of an American citizen held for ransom. His sons, Jaime Raul
Orejuela, 30, and Jose Alberto Orejuela, 28, residents of Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., arrived in Cali March 13 to negotiate the release of Jaime Sr. One
day later, as the brothers left a fast-food restaurant, motorcycle-riding
gunmen shot them in the back.
The Orejuela family once dominated the Cali drug cartel, but Colombian
police sources say it is not clear how the two murdered brothers and their
father were related to major drug kingpins. A State Department spokesman
said Jaime Sr. was indicted in a 1992 U.S. drug case, but a Justice
Department source found no such indictment. A police official told my
congressional sources the killings followed a botched attempt to kidnap the
brothers after ransom negotiations collapsed.
In response to my questions, the State Department said that the United
States is "cooperating with Colombian authorities" in investigating the
murders. In fact, the State Department has largely ignored Americans held
prisoner and murdered in Colombia, dating back to three missionaries
abducted by the FARC nine years ago and probably killed since then.
The missionaries' families have been frustrated in failing to receive a
report needed to obtain death certificates. "These families have suffered
enough and should not be held hostage to the bureaucratic indifference that
would further delay this overdue notification," Chairman Dan Burton of the
House Government Reform Committee wrote the State Department Dec. 15.
"Bureaucratic indifference" has been the watchword. With Reich's assumption
of command delayed by the Democratic-controlled Senate, Clinton holdovers
remain in key posts. News about the Cali killing was suppressed by the
Bogota embassy on orders of Ambassador Anne Patterson, a career diplomat
who held Latin American policy-making posts in the Clinton administration.
The decision at the White House Feb. 26 not to extend the war on terrorism
to Colombia has yet to be reversed. On March 6, a bipartisan resolution was
introduced by the Republican chairman and senior Democrat on the House
International Relations Committee-- Representatives Henry Hyde of Illinois
and Tom Lantos of California-- calling for a change in policy. "Any attack
on an American citizen is an attack on America," George W. Bush has
declared. So far, however, Colombia is excluded.
On Saturday, March 14, in the Colombian city of Cali, two American citizens
were shot to death. They had been negotiating with FARC leftist guerrillas
for the release of their kidnapped father. U.S. authorities in Colombia
learned of the killings but issued no statement. Indeed, they did not even
inform their newly installed superior, Otto Reich, assistant secretary of
state for inter-American affairs.
I was told about the killings last Wednesday by Congressional sources, who
had been alerted Tuesday by a U.S. Embassy official in Bogota. I contacted
Reich, who was traveling with President Bush in Latin America. It was the
first Reich knew of the killings seven days earlier, and he was not happy
about being in the dark.
Colombian police, following the U.S. Embassy's example, said nothing
publicly. One police official told congressional contacts in Washington
that the embassy "suppressed" news of the killings. State Department
officials informed me this was part of internal drug wars-- contradicting
Colombian police sources. A U.S. drug enforcement officer said the brothers
were "party to" a money-laundering investigation, possibly as witnesses and
informants. Whatever the truth, the U.S. government kept the murder of
American citizens under cover.
This fits a pattern established during the Clinton administration and
continued by the Bush administration's Clinton holdovers in Latin American
policy positions. Since 1990, 73 American citizens have been taken hostage
in Colombia (more than 50 by narco-terrorist guerrillas). Since 1995, 12
have been murdered. These atrocities go unmentioned as the United States
minimizes the tragedy of a Western Hemisphere neighbor left prostrate by
terrorists.
The 11th and 12th murders stemmed from the FARC kidnapping last Dec. 20 in
Colombia of an American citizen held for ransom. His sons, Jaime Raul
Orejuela, 30, and Jose Alberto Orejuela, 28, residents of Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., arrived in Cali March 13 to negotiate the release of Jaime Sr. One
day later, as the brothers left a fast-food restaurant, motorcycle-riding
gunmen shot them in the back.
The Orejuela family once dominated the Cali drug cartel, but Colombian
police sources say it is not clear how the two murdered brothers and their
father were related to major drug kingpins. A State Department spokesman
said Jaime Sr. was indicted in a 1992 U.S. drug case, but a Justice
Department source found no such indictment. A police official told my
congressional sources the killings followed a botched attempt to kidnap the
brothers after ransom negotiations collapsed.
In response to my questions, the State Department said that the United
States is "cooperating with Colombian authorities" in investigating the
murders. In fact, the State Department has largely ignored Americans held
prisoner and murdered in Colombia, dating back to three missionaries
abducted by the FARC nine years ago and probably killed since then.
The missionaries' families have been frustrated in failing to receive a
report needed to obtain death certificates. "These families have suffered
enough and should not be held hostage to the bureaucratic indifference that
would further delay this overdue notification," Chairman Dan Burton of the
House Government Reform Committee wrote the State Department Dec. 15.
"Bureaucratic indifference" has been the watchword. With Reich's assumption
of command delayed by the Democratic-controlled Senate, Clinton holdovers
remain in key posts. News about the Cali killing was suppressed by the
Bogota embassy on orders of Ambassador Anne Patterson, a career diplomat
who held Latin American policy-making posts in the Clinton administration.
The decision at the White House Feb. 26 not to extend the war on terrorism
to Colombia has yet to be reversed. On March 6, a bipartisan resolution was
introduced by the Republican chairman and senior Democrat on the House
International Relations Committee-- Representatives Henry Hyde of Illinois
and Tom Lantos of California-- calling for a change in policy. "Any attack
on an American citizen is an attack on America," George W. Bush has
declared. So far, however, Colombia is excluded.
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