Pubdate: Tue, 26 Feb 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 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism) LIFT RESTRICTIONS ON COLOMBIA AID President Andres Pastrana staked his political career on bringing Colombia's long and bloody civil war to an end by granting the largest rebel army, the Revolutionary Armed Forces (FARC), a safe haven the size of Switzerland. He hoped that his daring concession, virtually providing the left-wing guerrillas with their own country, would bring them to the negotiating table and eventually bring peace to the troubled land. He has failed after giving his all for peace. Now he must wage war with a will. It has long been clear that the guerrillas will not seek peace until they come to realize that they cannot win power by force of arms. Only a show of government strength and resolve will bring the FARC back to the peace process. The concession granted the FARC was a brave but essentially naive initiative that had precisely the opposite effect that the president sought. The FARC used the peace zone to prepare for war. Over the past two years, the guerrillas have had carte blanche to carry out terrorist operations, bombing power lines, kidnapping Colombian citizens for ransom and assassinating public figures. It was the kidnapping of a senator, seized after guerrillas hijacked a commercial airliner, that prompted Mr. Pastrana to lower the curtain on his campaign for peace. The FARC then followed up with the kidnapping of a presidential candidate. More dangerous still than their guerrilla operations, the FARC is in business with the narcotics cartels. In return for protection of the coca plantations and processing plants, the drug barons have been pumping money into the narco-terrorists' FARC's war machine. Congress should lift restrictions on the use of U.S. military arms and equipment. The $1.3 billion plan, which includes the provision of military training and support for the Colombian army, has been strictly limited to narcotics elimination. But the FARC and the cartels have become so intertwined that it is impossible to separate the guerrillas from the drug traffickers. Helicopters and other military equipment provided by the United States serve no useful purpose if they cannot be used to fight the guerrillas who protect the drug barons and their nefarious business. It is in the American interest to support Colombia, a besieged democracy situated in the heart of South America. The lawless lands controlled by the guerrillas are the source of most of the cocaine and heroin that poison our society. Moreover, the FARC has links with other terrorist groups and poses a threat to neighboring countries. The FARC and a second guerrilla group called the National Liberation Army are left-wing extremists. The Colombian Self-Defense Forces, which operate as death squads, are on the far right. All three organizations are on the State Department's terrorist blacklist. The struggle in Colombia should be seen as part of the global war against terrorism that the United States is leading. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel