Pubdate: Sun, 05 Aug 2001 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2001 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: John Otis SPECIAL REPORT: REBEL HELD IS THE FARC A DRUG CARTEL? By Earning Millions From The Narcotics Trade, The Guerrillas Help Finance Their War Effort. MARANDUA, Colombia -- After a monthlong army dragnet in the Colombian jungle that led to the capture of a Brazilian drug kingpin, authorities were elated. They pointed out that the smuggler, Luiz Fernando Da Costa, had admitted working hand-in-glove with the FARC, or Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, to export tons of cocaine to Brazil every month. Yet Colombian officials seemed at odds over what it all meant. As Da Costa was paraded before television cameras at a remote military base in eastern Colombia, then-Defense Minister Luis Fernando Ramirez steadfastly refused to call the FARC a drug cartel and urged Colombians to support peace talks with the rebel group. By contrast, the army's top brass described Da Costa as a kind of smoking gun, ironclad evidence that the guerrillas had mutated into camouflage-clad dope peddlers. "We have the proof," Colombian army chief Jorge Enrique Mora said. "Anyway you slice it, the alliance between drug traffickers and the FARC is obvious." The debate over the guerrillas' ties to Colombia's booming drug-trafficking industry has gone on for years. As far back as 1984, Lewis Tambs, then the U.S. ambassador to Bogota, used the term "narco-guerrillas" to describe the FARC. But these days, the polemic is much more than an argument over semantics. If a consensus emerges that the FARC has evolved into an international drug cartel -- meaning the rebels exist to get rich off the production and exportation of drugs -- support for Colombia's 21/2-year-old peace process would evaporate, analysts say. Pressure would mount on the army to crush the guerrilla group. "The consequences of accepting these postulates are clear," Eduardo Pizarro, a Colombian academic who has written several books on the FARC, said in a speech at the National Defense University in Washington, D.C. "Given that it is only viable to carry out negotiations with political actors, the delinquent composition of the guerrillas would oblige the state to give them treatment exclusively penal and military in nature." What is clear is that drug profits have fueled the FARC's explosive growth over the past decade and that Colombia provides most of the cocaine and heroin sold on U.S. streets. According to Alfredo Rangel, a Colombian military analyst, profits from the drug trade now make up 48 percent of the rebels' income, amounting to nearly $180 million annually. Others say the figure runs higher. The FARC, which has grown from 6,000 to 17,000 troops over the past decade, also rakes in millions of dollars by extorting businesses and kidnapping civilians. Until 1982, rebel leaders considered the cultivation of drug crops counter-revolutionary and prohibited them in many areas under their control. But as the crops became more lucrative, the FARC began levying a 10 percent tax on fields of coca and opium poppies, the raw materials for cocaine and heroin, and collecting fees for every narcotics flight leaving rebel-controlled zones. Besides raising money for the war effort, the practice helped consolidate control over the peasantry. After the breakup of the Medellin and Cali drug rings in the early 1990s, the FARC's involvement in the narcotics trade grew. The so-called "mini-cartels" that sprang up often turned to the rebels for protection. Now, says Anne Patterson, the U.S. ambassador to Colombia, "the FARC is into narco-trafficking in a big way." "There is no question that the FARC is involved in the internal transportation and production of drugs. As for exportation, we are not sure, but we think so," she says. Patterson notes that individual rebels could be targeted by U.S. law enforcement agents if it becomes clear they are involved in the export of drugs to the United States. FARC leaders, however, say the guerrilla organization plays no role in cocaine production or drug smuggling inside or outside Colombia. They say narcotics use among rebel troops is prohibited. "We are not drug traffickers," says rebel spokesman Raul Reyes. "The FARC is a guerrilla army of men and women who are fighting 24 hours a day to change the country. The rest of what they say is lies." Some observers view the growing tendency to paint the rebels as narco-traffickers as part of a campaign to drum up support for U.S. military assistance to Colombia. Last year, the U.S. Congress approved a $1.3 billion package of mostly military aid to help the Bogota government combat drug traffickers. Critics note that much of the assistance is being used to target the rebels. "Calling the FARC narco-guerrillas justifies everything we are doing in Colombia," says Bruce Bagley, a Colombia expert at the University of Miami. "It's all rhetoric. You play fast and loose with the truth, because it's convenient for policy purposes." Still, according to U.S. and Colombian officials, evidence suggests that the FARC has become a drug-trafficking organization. Da Costa, for example, told investigators after his arrest last spring that the rebels control nearly every facet of the drug trade in Colombia's eastern jungles, according to Gen. Fernando Tapias, chief of the nation's armed forces. The rebels, Tapias says, helped Da Costa export more than 200 tons of cocaine to Brazil during the past year, receiving $500 for each kilogram of the drug and $15,000 for every narcotics flight that left the area. Jorge Visbal, head of the Colombian Ranchers Federation, maintains that the guerrillas systematically stash their drug profits in foreign bank accounts. However, scant evidence of personal enrichment among FARC members has emerged. Rafael Pardo, a former Colombian defense minister, insists that the FARC funnels most of its drug money into the war effort and, therefore, remains a legitimate guerrilla organization. Rebel leaders "are not living at Hilton hotels," adds Daniel Garcia-Pena, a former Colombian peace commissioner. "If they were in it for the money, why would they bother with all this Marxist-Leninist rhetoric? Why would they live in the mountains and wake up at 5 a.m. to march?" Eduardo Gamarra, who heads the Latin America and Caribbean Center at Florida International University in Miami, says Colombians of all stripes have been stained by the illegal drug trade, including former President Ernesto Samper, who won the 1994 election with the help of $6 million from the Cali cartel. The FARC, Gamarra says, is capitalizing on Colombia's status as the world's leading producer of cocaine. Drug income allowed the rebels to fight on as other insurgent groups signed peace pacts or went down to defeat after the Soviet Union collapsed, Garcia-Pena says. Unlike Marxist guerrilla groups elsewhere, the FARC never depended on Moscow or Havana for funding. "The left in the rest of the democratic world has had to sit down and say, 'Oh my God, this socialism thing didn't work out too well,'" Garcia-Pena says. "The tragedy here is not so much that the FARC has caved in, but that it has remained unaltered." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake