Pubdate: Mon, 04 Mar 2002 Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Copyright: 2002 Cox Interactive Media. Contact: http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28 Author: Frida Ghitis Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/area/Colombia Note: Frida Ghitis, who was born in Colombia, lives in Decatur and is an international journalist and author. Her latest book is "The End of Revolution: A Changing World in the Age of Live Television." WAR RAGES ANEW IN COLOMBIA Colombia is at war. The peace process has ended and the bombings have begun. Government forces have unleashed their weapons against the same guerrillas whose leader met with the country's president only three years ago. The peace process that opened with great fanfare amid high hopes for bringing an end to an insurgency that refused to die after nearly four decades proved fruitless and, once again, the conflict is propelled to a level that undoubtedly will bring even greater pain to the country's long-suffering civilians. Most Colombians support the government's decision to say "No mas" -- no more talks, no more concessions and, especially, no more kidnappings and killings by guerrillas. But the administration of President Andres Pastrana, armed with hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. aid, must tread carefully if it is to keep public support as it wages what must be viewed as a just war. The final act that brought on the end of the peace process, the drop that caused "the cup of indignation to overflow," as the president put it, was the recent hijacking of a passenger plane by members of the main guerrilla group known as FARC. The plane was forced to land in a remote area, and one of the passengers, a senator who leads the congressional committee on peace talks, was taken away as a hostage. Pastrana -- and practically everybody else -- called it an act of terrorism, a violation of international law, and decided you cannot negotiate with terrorists. The president decided to take away the Switzerland-size enclave it had given to guerrillas as part of the peace process and mobilized thousands of soldiers to do battle. If this is a war against violence, against terrorism and against the systematic targeting of civilians, then the war must take on all the perpetrators of those acts. Colombia's war is complicated. There are three well-armed armies in addition to the government's: two leftist guerrilla groups and one right-wing paramilitary militia. The United States has named all three as terrorist organizations. But most attacks on civilians are committed by the paramilitaries with the acquiescence and sometimes the assistance of government forces. The leftists guerrillas, purportedly fighting for justice and equality for a desperately poor people, failed to win the hearts of the Colombian people. Theirs was a cause once viewed by romantic idealists as just. But most Colombians don't support the FARC. They simply want the fighting to end. The sentiment is most intense among impoverished peasants who live in the battlefields of the insurgency, whose sons are conscripted into the army and whose families are caught in the middle, subjected to right-wing massacres by paramilitaries who accuse them of siding with the left. The United States has made Colombia its third largest recipient of foreign aid after Israel and Egypt. Until now, the aid, mostly for military equipment and training, has been channeled to the war on drugs (drugs help finance the guerrillas.) The American approach is changing, however. After Sept. 11, the Bush administration will no doubt want to support Pastrana's war against the now-labeled terrorists without the cover of the war on drugs. Colombia is slated to receive more than $500 million in aid from the United States this year. Most of that will go to this newly intensified war. The only way to keep the carnage from spiraling out of control is for the Colombian government, and its backer, the United States, to do everything possible to wage this war as a just one -- one aimed at bringing an end to violence from all sides, from leftist guerrillas and from right-wing paramilitaries. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom