Pubdate: Tue, 1 Aug 2000 Source: Blade, The (OH) Copyright: 2000 The Blade. Contact: 541 North Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660 Website: http://www.toledoblade.com/ Author: Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist A PALE SHADOW OF VIETNAM LONDON---- Fifteen years ago, long before Barry McCaffery became a general, I was riding the hills south of San Agustin with my teenaged sons when a Colombian army skirmish line swept up over the lip of the plateau. They passed us without a word, and vanished down the other side of the mountain, searching for the FARC guerillas who also operated in the area. Small incident, nobody hurt. But the point is that the war in Colombia is 36 years old. The guerillas have been around far longer than the current government or the drug cartels, and it is neither America's fault nor America's business. "We are winning this war they have declared on Colombia," said Colombian President Andres Pastrana in a belligerent national television broadcast on July 20. "The country knows well that I will not accept peace at any price...." In other words, no more Mr. Nice Guy. Now I have the whole U.S. military machine behind me. Mr. Pastrana's frustration with the peace process that he launched just after the presidential elections two years ago is easy to understand. He met Manuel Marulanda, legendary leader of the main guerrilla group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), and granted him a Switzerland-sized safe haven in the southeast of the country while they negoatiated a peace settlement. But there is no peace. One reason is that the guerrillas have a profound mistrust of peace deals with Colombian governments. Mr. Pastrana feels that his willingness to negotiate isn't getting him anywhere, and meanwhile his own political position in Colombia has collapsed. In March, after allegations of coca-corruption in the congress --- Do the cartels pay off Colombian congressman? Do bears defecate in the woods? --- Mr. Pastrana tried to call a referendum to reform congress and hold fresh elections. Instead his governing coalition disintegrated. The shipwrecked president suddenly found himself with no political support to speak of, a collapsing economy, and a becalmed peace process. So he grabbed the first piece of flotsam to float by: "Plan Colombia." Plan Colombia was originally Mr. Pastrana's own initiative, presented to Washington two years ago. At that time it envisaged a variety of economic and social programs that he hoped would transform the poverty on which the guerrillas feed --- a "Marshall Plan" for southern Colombia, as he put it. Two years later it has reemerged from the Washington machine as a plan for a mini-Vietnam. The real father of the revised "Plan Colombia" is Gen. Barry McCaffery, a soldier who realized early on that political skills, not military one are the road to fame and fortune. As President Clinton's drug czar, he has a whole "war on drugs" that can be fought solely in terms of public relations, and he has exploited it for all it's worth. General McCaffery's version of "Plan Colombia" redefines the FARC as "narco-terrorists," and provides hundreds of millions of dollars of military operations against them. Mr. Pastrana has grabbed this plan like a drowning man grasping a straw, and it gives general McCaffery a whole war to run. So everbody wins except rural Colombians, who can look forward to being sprayed from the air with the fungus Fusarium oxysporum (guaranteed to wilt coca plants) in between the gun ship attacks. Colombia will never be a full-scale Vietnam, because the united States will not do that again. But it will be an extravagantly stupid mess. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck