News (Media Awareness Project) - US FL: Editorial: Clueless In Colombia |
Title: | US FL: Editorial: Clueless In Colombia |
Published On: | 2002-01-21 |
Source: | News Herald (FL) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-24 22:54:32 |
CLUELESS IN COLOMBIA
Not Pulling Back: Despite Warnings, Bush Follows Clinton Into The Mire.
The demands of an all-out war on terrorism do not seem to have imposed a
sense of priorities or proportion on U.S. policymakers, who act as if they
believe this country can conduct numerous vaguely defined wars on numerous
fronts without losing focus. The latest evidence is an apparent
intensification of U.S. involvement in the ongoing civil war and drug war
in Colombia.
One of the last acts under the Clinton administration was to authorize $1.3
billion in aid and equipment for the Colombian government, which is
fighting a war against narcotraffickers that is inextricably linked to a
civil war that has plagued the country at various levels of intensity for
at least 40 years. Despite warnings from numerous Latin American experts
that this would inevitably get the U.S. involved in Colombian domestic
politics - allied to a military with a less-than-sterling human rights
record - the Clintonites pushed ahead. The Bush administration gave signals
early on that it would reconsider this commitment, but it's not pulling back.
Recently, U.S. Ambassador to Colombia Anne Patterson turned over 14 Black
Hawk helicopters to the Colombian military. "We will continue working
together to liberate Colombia, the region and the hemisphere from
narcotics," she bravely declared.
Sure. That will happen about the same time the war on terror eliminates
evil from the world for all time. Unfortunately, U.S. taxpayers will
continue to pay for this exercise in folly in Colombia.
Not Pulling Back: Despite Warnings, Bush Follows Clinton Into The Mire.
The demands of an all-out war on terrorism do not seem to have imposed a
sense of priorities or proportion on U.S. policymakers, who act as if they
believe this country can conduct numerous vaguely defined wars on numerous
fronts without losing focus. The latest evidence is an apparent
intensification of U.S. involvement in the ongoing civil war and drug war
in Colombia.
One of the last acts under the Clinton administration was to authorize $1.3
billion in aid and equipment for the Colombian government, which is
fighting a war against narcotraffickers that is inextricably linked to a
civil war that has plagued the country at various levels of intensity for
at least 40 years. Despite warnings from numerous Latin American experts
that this would inevitably get the U.S. involved in Colombian domestic
politics - allied to a military with a less-than-sterling human rights
record - the Clintonites pushed ahead. The Bush administration gave signals
early on that it would reconsider this commitment, but it's not pulling back.
Recently, U.S. Ambassador to Colombia Anne Patterson turned over 14 Black
Hawk helicopters to the Colombian military. "We will continue working
together to liberate Colombia, the region and the hemisphere from
narcotics," she bravely declared.
Sure. That will happen about the same time the war on terror eliminates
evil from the world for all time. Unfortunately, U.S. taxpayers will
continue to pay for this exercise in folly in Colombia.
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