Pubdate: Fri, 18 Jan 2002 Source: The Post and Courier (SC) Copyright: 2002 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 COLOMBIA'S PHONY PEACE The last-minute intervention of the United Nations has averted a showdown between the Colombian military and the country's powerful Marxist guerrillas. But the agreement between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) to resume negotiations is unlikely to advance the peace process. All-out war loomed when Colombian President Andres Pastrana issued an ultimatum to the FARC to begin serious negotiations to end the nation's 40-year civil war. In fact, the president gave the FARC two deadlines to respond positively to his peace overtures, threatening to send in the army to drive the guerrillas out of the safe haven granted to the guerrillas three years ago for the purpose of advancing the peace process. When the FARC ignored the deadlines, U.N. special envoy James LeMoyne and 10 European and Latin American ambassadors flew into guerrilla territory, an area that is twice the size of the state of New Jersey. They managed to persuade FARC leaders to resume negotiations with the government, and President Pastrana agreed to hold back the army. But the international intervention has left an unsettled situation. The time limit that President Pastrana set for the safe haven three years ago when he launched his peace initiative expires automatically on Sunday. It would be a mistake to extend it. Over the past three years, President Pastrana has tried every possible means to get the FARC to negotiate seriously. Time and time again, talks have been broken off and then resumed. Ultimatums have been issued and then withdrawn. All the while, the FARC has been acquiring modern weapons. It seems unlikely that the leaders of the FARC have had a sudden conversion to peacemaking. For the past three years, they have used the safe haven as a holding area for thousands of victims of kidnappings for ransom and to increase production and trafficking of narcotics. President Pastrana must recognize that his experiment in granting the FARC what is virtually its own state within a state has failed. The FARC has increased in size and strength while prospects for peace have dwindled. The FARC will talk peace seriously when the facts on the ground tell them that they cannot achieve power by military means. While they hold such a huge slice of territory, they have no incentive to put down their guns and form a political party to contest elections, as their revolutionary comrades in other Latin American nations have done. President Pastrana will be sorely tempted to allow the guerrillas to keep their safe haven until his term ends in six months time. A race against the clock is now on to get agreement on a cease-fire before the Sunday deadline. It is more important for Colombia to be one country again. The army, police and elected officials must regain control over the area that the guerrillas have put to such ill use. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh