Pubdate: Thu, 19 Oct 2000 Source: Point Reyes Light (CA) Copyright: 2000 Tomales Bay Publishing Company/Point Reyes Light Contact: http://www.ptreyeslight.com/ Author: David V. Mitchell AFTER CLINTON & MCCAFFREY THE DELUGE Is anyone else surprised that Republican Tom Campbell of San Jose, US Senator Dianne Feinstein's opponent, is the only candidate for national office we hear making much noise about the US being drawn into Colombia's 36-year civil war? Congress has authorized President Clinton's and drug czar Barry McCaffrey's spending $1.3 billion to purportedly revive Colombia's flagging war against cocaine production. However, this explanation is not only dishonest, it will probably lead to our going to war. And if that happens, our strongest allies will probably be the biggest cocaine producers in the world. The civil war essentially pits 17,000 guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) against 7,000 members of rightwing paramilitaries collectively known as the Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC). FARC and the AUC, which both finance their forces through trafficking in coca, are each stronger than the Colombian military. The main difference between FARC on the left and AUC on the right is that the guerrillas traffic in coca grown by peasants while the paramilitaries traffic in cocaine grown by agribusiness. More appalling yet, the AUC is headed by Carlos Castano, whose late brother Fidel was part of the Medellin drug cartel before leading the paramilitaries. Castano, as previously noted in this column, freely admits the AUC gets 70 percent of it financing from drug trafficking. One lab found last year in the center of AUC territory was capable of processing eight tons of cocaine per month. Hidden in the jungle, the lab covered seven square miles. Some of its buildings were four stories high. "Human rights groups insist the paramilitaries act with the connivance, if not the active support of the Colombian army," noted The San Francisco Examiner last Aug. 27. In short, we are about to give almost $1.3 billion to a military that's in cahoots with cocaine producers we've spent 30 years trying to wipe out. In July, The San Francisco Chronicle editorialized that the FARC has "the resources to endanger both soldiers on the ground as well as those in military helicopters. Make no mistake: American soldiers are going to be engaged in combat." Worse yet, the more pressure the US puts on Colombia's guerrillas, the more they spread out into neighboring countries. Both the AUC and a second guerrilla group, the National Liberation Army (ELN), have already begun operating in neighboring Ecuador. Venezuela, Peru, Panama, and Brazil have said they are alarmed at the prospect of our drug war spilling over into their countries. The borders these countries share with Colombia range from jungle to isolated mountain tops. "We have to be alert to avoid the Vietnamization of that region, said Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez last month. Also worried are the nations of Western Europe, who had pledged $2 billion toward the Colombian drug war but are now reluctant to pony up. Even the Colombian government is unprepared to contribute the $4 billion it had pledged to the anti-drug war. In addition, at least 38 humanitarian organizations, including the International Red Cross and World Vision, have refused to accept US money for helping refugees displaced by the fighting and for finding peasants alternative crops to coca. The Colombian government appears unwilling or unable to protect aid workers, The Chronicle noted in an editorial this month. Yet we're blithely marching off to a war that Latin America, Europe, and international charities won't touch. And we're doing it with hardly a peep of opposition from Congress although President Clinton did have to waive standard human-rights requirements in order to supply arms to the brutal Colombian military. The world knows it is watching a disaster in the making. "Someday, people will look back and ask, 'What were they thinking,'" commented a Chronicle editorial last July 25. "The situation is turning surreal. The United States is about to plunge into an undeclared war yet Colombia barely registers on the political radar and has been mostly ignored by the major-party candidates for US president." Only Congressman Campbell is bold enough to point out the terrible folly of getting into another unwinnable war, but it appears our parttime Stinson Beach incumbent will be easily reelected despite voting for this madness. Even drug czar McCaffrey, who convinced President Clinton to go to war, has announced he will retire before the next president takes office. I have not read his letter of resignation, but it he could have succinctly described his contribution to the Clinton Administration with the old French proverb: "Apres nous le deluge." Epilogue: The line "after us the deluge" has been attributed to King Louis XV and Madame de Pompadour but "was original with neither," sniffs Bartlett's. - --- MAP posted-by: Thunder