Pubdate: Sun, 01 Jul 2001 Source: Liberty Magazine (US) Copyright: 2000 Liberty Foundation Address: Box 1118, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Contact: http://www.libertysoft.com/liberty/index.html Author: Shannon Seibert Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n1017/a01.html War Correspondence THE EXTENSION OF DRUG PARANOIA BY OTHER MEANS Welcome To Colombia, Where The American-Directed Drug Policy Is To Shoot First And Ask Questions Never. Last year, the United States agreed to spend $1.3 billion on Plan Colombia, its latest effort in the War on Drugs. As part of the plan, America will give the Colombian military 16 Blackhawk, 30 Huey II, and 15 UH-1N helicopters. It will also send some 500 ground troops and 300 contract civilian workers to act as "advisors," as well as 85 Green Berets to train Colombia's soldiers in anti-drug operations -- mostly destroying coca fields and fighting narco-traffickers. Because of its focus on crop eradication, Plan Colombia promises to fail spectacularly. Eradication efforts typically result in a temporary decrease in the amount of illegal crops in the targeted area, with increased production in regions that are not under attack. In 1995, the United States stepped up its anti-drug campaign in Peru and Bolivia, spending nearly a billion dollars over the course of five years in military assistance and "alternative development" programs in an effort to eradicate coca fields in those two countries. And while land dedicated to coca cultivation in Peru and Bolivia fell from 361,250 acres in 1995 to 122,500 acres by 2000, land under coca fields more than doubled in Colombia, from fewer than 168,000 acres in 1995 to 340,250 acres in 2000. Last December crop spraying began in Colombia in the southern provinces of Caqueta and Putumayo, where about 75% of Colombian coca was grown at the time. The campaign against coca fields there resulted in a region-wide doubling of coca leaf prices over the last six months, encouraging farmers in other regions to discard "legitimate" crops in favor of coca. And an estimated 10,000 farmers from Putumayo have moved to the neighboring province of Narino to reestablish themselves in the coca business. As for the long-term effectiveness of eradication efforts, the United Nations Drug Control Project (UNDCP) recently released a report that Peruvian farmers who had abandoned their fields in the late 1990s are once again returning to coca cultivation in response to the increased value of the crop. While Plan Colombia won't have much effect on the flow of illegal drugs, it is helping the United States get its foot back in the door to South America, and it gives a great boost to Colombia's military in their efforts to put down a 40-year- long insurrection by leftist revolutionaries. The leftist guerrilla movement in Colombia originally formed in the 1960s as a militant political movement with the stated intent of toppling the National Front government. The guerrilla's methods of acquiring capital to support their efforts against the government have never been pleasant -- extortion, bribery, and kidnapping have long been standard practices. In the past two decades, the guerrillas have lost most, if not all, of the political idealism they held in the 1960s, and the movement is now no different from any other criminal organization. In addition to the continued extortion, bribery, and kidnappings, the guerrillas take in enormous amounts of money for providing "protection" for coca growers and drug traffickers in Colombia. In the early 1980s, the Colombian military began training and supplying right-wing paramilitaries to protect banks, businesses, and farmers from guerrilla strong-arming. The military's support of the paramilitaries was openly acknowledged for nearly ten years, until the abysmal human rights record of the paramilitary groups and the para's self- professed involvement in the drug trade finally forced the Colombian military to withdraw official recognition of them in 1989. The Colombian government now claims that it no longer holds any ties to the paramilitary groups, despite considerable evidence to the contrary. Consequently, the U.S. is feeding $1.3 billion dollars of aid to a government that supports paramilitaries who are themselves involved in drug trafficking, undermining the entire cause of the drug war. As the military beefs up its forces with U.S.-supplied helicopters and surveillance equipment, and adds American-trained battalions to its forces, the guerrillas have, in turn, stepped up their recruitment efforts among Colombia's native Indians. Boys and girls as young as twelve are being enticed to join the ranks of the guerrillas with tales of great profit and adventure -- and, when that doesn't work, they are simply threatened or coerced. As a result, guerrilla forces have swelled to 17,000, up 5,000 in the past year. Paramilitary groups, in response, have stepped up their attacks and have become more ruthless and indiscriminate in targeting "suspected'' guerrillas or guerrilla-sympathizers. And as violence escalates in Colombia, it is crossing the borders into neighboring countries. In Ecuador, Colombian paramilitary groups pursue and battle Colombian guerrillas, who are attacking Ecuadorean oil pipelines. Violence has broken out along Colombia's borders with Peru and Brazil, as Colombian guerrilla and paramilitary groups clash with the Peruvian and Brazilian militaries. In southern Venezuela, Colombian guerrillas have begun kidnapping Venezuelan ranchers and oil workers to generate further revenue, and Panama is voicing concerns that Colombia's war will soon threaten her boundaries. Ecuador, Peru, Brazil, and Panama have all requested increased U.S. aid to help them contain the violence streaming over their borders; Ecuador alone has requested $400 million over the next four years. The Pentagon is already spending $62 million in Ecuador this year to build an "advance post for combatting narco-trafficking" (military officials prefer to not call it a "base" -- though living quarters for 200 American military and civilian contract personnel are being built there). Further complicating matters is the election of Hugo Chavez as president of Venezuela last year. Chavez is disdainful of United States involvement in the area and has barred U.S. "counternarcotics" flights over Venezuelan airspace. Chavez is widely believed to sympathize with and even support the Colombian guerrillas, though he publicly denies it. He played host to a group of Colombian guerrillas last year, even allowing one to have time on the speaker's floor of the Venezuelan Congress to denounce the Colombian government; and Venezuelan military weapons have been found in the possession of Colombian guerrillas. As America becomes more heavily involved in Colombia's campaign against the "narco-guerrillas," the situation threatens to progress into a war between sovereign nations. President Clinton presented Plan Colombia last year as "vital to national security interests" because it is instrumental in protecting America "from the threat posed by illicit drugs imported from other nations." "National security interests" and "threats posed by drugs" were more than sufficient justification for Congress, and the plan passed with overwhelming support. Though a few dissenting voices over human rights abuses by Colombia's military came from Democratic quarters, many Republicans requested that even more than the proposed $1.3 billion be given Colombia to help fight the War on Drugs. The Bush administration is gearing up to expand Plan Colombia to encompass Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, and, if Chavez agrees, Venezuela to help keep the Andean region "safe from drug traffickers." Public opposition to the plan was a non-issue. Aside from the occasional newspaper headline, most Americans are unaware of the destruction caused by drug eradication efforts in South America. (See "Bush's War On Drugs," ( http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n1017/a01.html ) below.) Given the repeated incidences of drug-war violence, the documented futility of crop eradication and the commonsense understanding that shifting coca crops around the Andes will do nothing to keep cocaine from flowing into our country, one is left with the question: "Why are we so strongly committed to fighting the drug war in Colombia?" The answer to that question lies in the United States' thirst for increased presence in Latin America for political and economic reasons that are in no way related to the "dangers" posed to American citizens from imported narcotics. After its debacle in Vietnam, the United States found it more difficult to openly pursue its pro-American (though not necessarily pro-democracy) agenda in Latin America. The "fight against communism" no longer proved sufficiently popular to warrant outright military activity and the loss of Americans' lives on foreign soil. However, by virtue of its control of the Panama Canal, the United States maintained a military presence in Panama at Howard Air Force Base -- the United States' southern headquarters for military operations. Howard provided the United States with a hub from which to monitor activity -- drug-related and otherwise - -- throughout Latin America. At the turnover of the canal in December of 1999, the United States was forced to withdraw completely from Panama -- leaving the U.S. military effectively locked out of Latin America, until Colombia's President Kastana approached President Clinton with his proposal for Plan Colombia. United States' involvement will only serve to fuel the flames of violence within Colombia, a violence for which the country has long been notorious. The past 200 years of Colombian history have included four dictatorships, two official civil wars, a military coup, and perpetual unrest in the countryside. From 1948 to 1958, Colombia was engulfed in what was universally called "La Violencia,' a period of civil violence that killed and displaced hundreds of thousands. In the last decade alone, 35,000 Colombian civilians have been killed in the political crossfire. The present conflict is merely the latest chapter in this long tale of political violence -- the continuation of an unofficial civil war that has raged for nearly 40 years. Throughout its long history, this civil war has become increasingly complicated as it has evolved into a triangular conflict between the government, leftist guerrillas, and right-wing paramilitary "death squads," where questionable alliances have formed and defining lines between "right" and "wrong" have become virtually undetectable. In the end, Plan Colombia will mean spending billions of dollars for nothing, except more violence, death, and destruction in a long-suffering land. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk