Pubdate: Tue, 13 Aug 2002
Source: The Monitor (TX)
Copyright: 2002 The Monitor
Contact:  http://www.themonitor.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1250

CHAOS IN COLOMBIA U.S. ACTIONS NOT HELPING TO END VIOLENCE

Despite brave words and even brave actions in the face of inauguration-day 
violence, incoming Colombian President Alvaro Uribe Velez faces an almost 
impossible job in trying to end a civil war that has raged at various 
levels of intensity for at least four decades.

Unless he changes the policies and approach he has discussed most 
prominently so far, he is unlikely to succeed.

Early last Wednesday, inauguration day, homemade mortar shells were fired 
in the capital of Bogota near the presidential palace. At least 19 people 
were killed and about 70 wounded, but the inauguration proceeded.

The next day Uribe traveled to Valledupar in a conflict-ridden northern 
region of Colombia, and vowed to crack down on anti- government guerillas, 
chiefly the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, with an army 
of civilian informers equipped with radios to report unusual activities.

The show of determination didn't lead to even a momentary let-up in 
violence. On Friday FARC soldiers fought right-wing paramilitaries near the 
northern town of Santa Rosa for control of a gold mine and coca crops, 
leaving 52 dead. In central Colombia a rebel ambush killed four policemen.

Sanho Tree, a policy analyst at the Institute for Policy Studies who has 
spent considerable time in Colombia and appeared in the segments on 
Colombia in John Stossel's excellent recent television special on the drug 
war, said the Colombian violence won't end soon.

"Nobody believes either side can win militarily," Tree said. "Escalating 
the conflict will only delay a negotiated solution - and create unnecessary 
casualties."

Unfortunately, the United States is not playing a constructive role.

The more military equipment it sends to the Colombian government the more 
aggressively FARC will pressure peasants to grow more coca. The more 
aggressively the U.S. presses the drug war - crop spraying is scheduled to 
double next year - the more it drives up the price of the coca it is unable 
to destroy. It's almost like a perverse price support system for successful 
narcotraffickers.

The best bet would be for the United States to stop pressuring Colombia to 
intensify the drug war. That wouldn't lead to instant peace; any solution 
is likely to take years if it happens at all. But it's the most 
constructive first step.
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MAP posted-by: Beth