News (Media Awareness Project) - Colombia: War Against Terrorism Could Finally Bring Peace to |
Title: | Colombia: War Against Terrorism Could Finally Bring Peace to |
Published On: | 2002-03-19 |
Source: | Salt Lake Tribune (UT) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-24 17:07:18 |
WAR AGAINST TERRORISM COULD FINALLY BRING PEACE TO COLOMBIA
WASHINGTON -- To say that things are looking up in Colombia is to
voice a dangerous expectation. With its seemingly endless civil war,
its long-powerful and vicious Marxist guerrillas and its bloody drug-
running, Colombia does not lend itself to hopeful conjecture.
And yet, after seven decades of so many kinds of conflict that the
country has become a kind of perverse political science laboratory,
it seems that the country has turned a corner.
Indeed, the Bush administration's decision this week to remove
restrictions on aid to Colombia may well be the turning point toward
some eventual solution.
One could not have foreseen last Sept. 11 that the terrorist attacks
against the United States would within only six months send shock
waves to shake up the long-stagnant Colombian conflict, but that is
what has happened.
As more and more officials, both in Washington and in Colombia
itself, are now including the war against the guerrillas as another
part of the president's "war against terrorism," an entirely new
situation is arising in that Andean country.
The first warning that something was really changing came just this
winter. Andres Pastrana, the Colombian peacemaker/president, suddenly
got fed up with the Marxist guerrillas of the FARC, whom he had
awarded only four years ago a huge, Switzerland-size piece of land,
supposing the grant would cause them to negotiate seriously for
peace. Instead, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia cynically
used the land gift to regroup, build up their forces, and kidnap and
hold for ransom more and more innocent people.
In February, the president ordered them out of what had come to be a
revolutionary Brigadoon, commonly called "Farclandia."
Then something amazing happened.
Instead of fighting, the guerrillas, who have long been acting as the
well-paid praetorian guard of the drug traffickers, just melted away
into the jungles and impassable high mountain ridges from which they
had originally come. Many escaped dressed as peasants.
And President Pastrana, a cultured ex-journalist who had nevertheless
been ridiculed over the past year for his "faith" in the guerrillas'
intentions, became the hero of Colombia.
"Pastrana's stubbornness has now gained him great respect," a highly
placed Colombian politician told me. "History will treat him very
well, because he put all his prestige behind the process, and now he
has brought Colombia to the point where we can face the end of the
problem. Now, no one can ever go back and give them what Pastrana
did. That period is over. The FARC is no longer looked upon as a
romantic group -- in fact, they are not even insurgents any more, but
merely an illegal army."
A number of propitious elements and events have come together to
create a turn of mind in both Bogota and Washington. On the military
side, even while President Pastrana was having hopeless peace talks
with the FARC, the Colombian military was solidly built up. The
country now has 150,000 men under arms, twice what it had four years
ago. For the first time, too, because of disgust with the conflict
and the new effectiveness of the army, volunteers are replacing
conscripts and now constitute fully half the force.
New rapid-response units have been formed, and $1 billion in U.S. aid
has led to the dispatching of Black Hawk helicopters and, only
recently, increased intelligence sharing. (American satellite data
could greatly help the Colombians spot guerrilla concentrations in
the future.)
In addition, in the wake of 9/11, the United States' 1997 designation
of the FARC as a "terrorist organization" has received new support
from other countries, particularly those in Europe, who had hitherto
resisted such designation.
Only this week, the Bush administration took a dramatic step. It
announced that it will ask Congress next week to remove all
restrictions on U.S. military aid to Colombia, particularly those
imposed under the Clinton administration, such as the one that
restricted U.S. aid money for use only against the drug traffickers
and not the guerrillas. Since this was an impossible division to be
made, the monies were never as effective as they could have been. The
administration's proposals will be included in legislation asking for
additional funds to fight global terrorism.
In the past two years in particular, events have been moving on in
Colombia, a potentially rich country but one whose history has been
defined by conflict and slaughter.
In just the 20th century, Colombia has gone from "la violencia,"
which was an old-style fight between political parties, to a more
classic liberation movement vs. government conflict, to a unique
guerrilla/drug trafficker insurgency against the armed forces.
And now there is this new stage, where the reformed and renewed
government forces have the potential to seize the initiative -- and
eventually instigate internal social reforms in the Colombia of the
future.
This could well be the defining moment so many have been waiting for,
but still, one does well to remember that this moment is only
beginning.
WASHINGTON -- To say that things are looking up in Colombia is to
voice a dangerous expectation. With its seemingly endless civil war,
its long-powerful and vicious Marxist guerrillas and its bloody drug-
running, Colombia does not lend itself to hopeful conjecture.
And yet, after seven decades of so many kinds of conflict that the
country has become a kind of perverse political science laboratory,
it seems that the country has turned a corner.
Indeed, the Bush administration's decision this week to remove
restrictions on aid to Colombia may well be the turning point toward
some eventual solution.
One could not have foreseen last Sept. 11 that the terrorist attacks
against the United States would within only six months send shock
waves to shake up the long-stagnant Colombian conflict, but that is
what has happened.
As more and more officials, both in Washington and in Colombia
itself, are now including the war against the guerrillas as another
part of the president's "war against terrorism," an entirely new
situation is arising in that Andean country.
The first warning that something was really changing came just this
winter. Andres Pastrana, the Colombian peacemaker/president, suddenly
got fed up with the Marxist guerrillas of the FARC, whom he had
awarded only four years ago a huge, Switzerland-size piece of land,
supposing the grant would cause them to negotiate seriously for
peace. Instead, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia cynically
used the land gift to regroup, build up their forces, and kidnap and
hold for ransom more and more innocent people.
In February, the president ordered them out of what had come to be a
revolutionary Brigadoon, commonly called "Farclandia."
Then something amazing happened.
Instead of fighting, the guerrillas, who have long been acting as the
well-paid praetorian guard of the drug traffickers, just melted away
into the jungles and impassable high mountain ridges from which they
had originally come. Many escaped dressed as peasants.
And President Pastrana, a cultured ex-journalist who had nevertheless
been ridiculed over the past year for his "faith" in the guerrillas'
intentions, became the hero of Colombia.
"Pastrana's stubbornness has now gained him great respect," a highly
placed Colombian politician told me. "History will treat him very
well, because he put all his prestige behind the process, and now he
has brought Colombia to the point where we can face the end of the
problem. Now, no one can ever go back and give them what Pastrana
did. That period is over. The FARC is no longer looked upon as a
romantic group -- in fact, they are not even insurgents any more, but
merely an illegal army."
A number of propitious elements and events have come together to
create a turn of mind in both Bogota and Washington. On the military
side, even while President Pastrana was having hopeless peace talks
with the FARC, the Colombian military was solidly built up. The
country now has 150,000 men under arms, twice what it had four years
ago. For the first time, too, because of disgust with the conflict
and the new effectiveness of the army, volunteers are replacing
conscripts and now constitute fully half the force.
New rapid-response units have been formed, and $1 billion in U.S. aid
has led to the dispatching of Black Hawk helicopters and, only
recently, increased intelligence sharing. (American satellite data
could greatly help the Colombians spot guerrilla concentrations in
the future.)
In addition, in the wake of 9/11, the United States' 1997 designation
of the FARC as a "terrorist organization" has received new support
from other countries, particularly those in Europe, who had hitherto
resisted such designation.
Only this week, the Bush administration took a dramatic step. It
announced that it will ask Congress next week to remove all
restrictions on U.S. military aid to Colombia, particularly those
imposed under the Clinton administration, such as the one that
restricted U.S. aid money for use only against the drug traffickers
and not the guerrillas. Since this was an impossible division to be
made, the monies were never as effective as they could have been. The
administration's proposals will be included in legislation asking for
additional funds to fight global terrorism.
In the past two years in particular, events have been moving on in
Colombia, a potentially rich country but one whose history has been
defined by conflict and slaughter.
In just the 20th century, Colombia has gone from "la violencia,"
which was an old-style fight between political parties, to a more
classic liberation movement vs. government conflict, to a unique
guerrilla/drug trafficker insurgency against the armed forces.
And now there is this new stage, where the reformed and renewed
government forces have the potential to seize the initiative -- and
eventually instigate internal social reforms in the Colombia of the
future.
This could well be the defining moment so many have been waiting for,
but still, one does well to remember that this moment is only
beginning.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...