Pubdate: Sun, 04 May 2003 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2003 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: Gary Marx COLOMBIAN MILITIA SCOFFS AT PEACE End To Civil War Faces Rocky Road In The Mountains Of Northwest Colombia -- As Colombian President Alvaro Uribe tries to make peace with right-wing paramilitary groups, there is at least one man who is determined to continue the war. Sitting in a bush camp with two dozen heavily armed troops, Comandante Rodrigo heads one of Colombia's most powerful paramilitary factions. He is also one of the most defiant leaders, saying he has no intention of joining peace talks with the government until the leftist guerrillas who he is battling do the same. "It's not a road to peace but a road to unconditional surrender," said Rodrigo, who heads a faction known as the Metro Bloc. "To abandon the fight without achieving our goals is to renounce the future. What we've done up to now is just warm-ups," he added. What Rodrigo has done the past 15 years is go from the comfort of a middle-class home to the heart of Colombia's brutal civil conflict. As one of a handful of paramilitary leaders, he has assembled a 1,500-man force that has swept across this strategic region in a ruthless campaign to push out leftist guerrillas. Now Rodrigo stands as a major impediment to Uribe's controversial effort to demobilize the paramilitaries, a coalition of about 15,000 armed fighters that has been loosely aligned as the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, or AUC. Government officials say the exploratory talks are crucial to easing a conflict that has lasted decades, left tens of thousands dead and forced 2 million others to flee their homes. But the dialogue begun several months ago has been rocky, and experts doubt it will end in an agreement. "The government has to do something in the area of peace, but I'm not optimistic," said Rafael Nieto, a Colombian security expert. One problem is that Carlos Castano, the paramilitary's once undisputed leader, no longer commands the loyalty of powerful commanders such as Rodrigo, who denounces Castano for alleged involvement in drug trafficking. Almost one-quarter of Colombia's paramilitary forces have refused to join the talks. Another faction recently threatened to pull out over army attacks against its members. Another sticking point is Uribe's demand that the AUC commit to a verifiable cease-fire before entering formal negotiations. This presents a major problem for the paramilitaries because the Colombian military is not strong enough to shield them from attacks by the country's two powerful rebel forces. "We don't know if we can give protection," acknowledged one top government official. "Our army is so overstretched." The Issue Of War Crimes There also remains the difficult issue of how to handle war crimes. Human-rights officials say Castano and other paramilitary leaders are responsible for killing two presidential candidates and thousands of other Colombians, some by stoning and hacking. The U.S. State Department lists the AUC, along with Colombia's two rebel groups, as terrorist organizations. Castano and two top deputies also are under federal indictment in the United States for smuggling more than 17 tons of cocaine since 1997. U.S. officials, while supporting the peace talks, have said they would not drop extradition requests for Castano and the two other men. Critics have questioned how the Colombian government can make peace with such men without also demanding justice. "Amnesty for war crimes, that's a tough cookie that the government hasn't decided what to do" about, said Colombian Vice President Francisco Santos in a recent interview with the Tribune. "We certainly don't want to forget what has happened." Carlos Gaviria, a respected opposition politician, said that he supports the paramilitary peace talks but that impunity cannot be part of any deal. "Dialogue is the only route to peace," Gaviria said. "But if there are persons who committed crimes against humanity, they need to go before the courts in Colombia or the international courts." The talks with the paramilitaries are the only negotiations under way to find a peaceful solution to Colombia's four-decade-old civil war. In recent years, officials have held discussions with the country's two leftist groups, the 5,000-member National Liberation Army and the 18,000-strong Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC. The collapse of those talks catapulted Uribe to the presidency last year with a mandate to defeat the guerrillas on the battlefield. Uribe has sharply increased the size of his U.S.-backed military, which has taken the offensive in many parts of this vast South American country. Experts say the FARC has responded with hit-and-run attacks against the military while striking major cities with devastating car bombings. The goal, experts say, is to avoid heavy losses while depleting Uribe's political support. But Uribe--whose father was killed by rebels--is also under pressure to show that he is a man of peace. The Colombian president found a willing partner in Castano, a ruthless paramilitary commander who is feeling the pressure of the U.S. indictment and desperately wants a place in civil society, experts say. Under Castano's leadership, the paramilitaries, bankrolled by wealthy cattle ranchers, drug trafficking and other illegal activities, expanded rapidly out of their northern stronghold and now control large swaths of territory. They often fight alongside the Colombian military. "What Castano wants is to legalize himself, and to do this he needs to neutralize the pressure from the United States," explained Jaime Zuluaga, a political scientist at Colombia's National University. "For years he has fought for the political recognition of the paramilitaries," Zuluaga added. Castano Out Of Favor But Comandante Rodrigo said Castano has "lost control" over the paramilitaries and lacks the authority to order them to lay down their weapons. Once Castano's top deputy, Rodrigo said he broke with his former boss over financing the war through the cocaine trade. "The AUC stopped being a self-defense force and became a drug-trafficking organization," said the 38-year-old paramilitary leader. "I was against this." Rodrigo expresses equal contempt for Uribe, whom he describes as a member of Colombia's "corrupt elite" who continues to ignore the deep social problems that have fed the conflict. The son of successful Medellin attorneys, Rodrigo said he always liked weapons and joined the armed forces against his parents' wishes. But his military career ended abruptly in 1989 when human-rights officials denounced Rodrigo for forcing peasants to work as scouts for his platoon. Undeterred, Rodrigo joined a small paramilitary group then headed by Castano's brother Fidel, for whom he worked as a bodyguard, personal secretary and military commander. Admits To Massacres Rodrigo said that early on the paramilitaries massacred hundreds of civilians because of the mistaken policy of paying soldiers a bonus for each death. Others were killed simply because the paramilitaries ran across them and didn't know who they were--though Rodrigo denies participating in such actions. "Someone who is dead can't talk," he explained. "There were a lot of errors committed and a lot of atrocities." Rodrigo left briefly to work as the security chief on a banana plantation but rejoined the paramilitaries to take part in Fidel Castano's urban war against his old ally, Medellin-based drug kingpin Pablo Escobar. This time Rodrigo was on the frontlines working with local police. "It was the dirtiest war," he recalled. "We'd capture someone and we'd ask them, 'Tell us who are the members of Escobar's group.' If they didn't talk, they died." Rodrigo justified the "irregular methods" by arguing that it was the only way to take down a ruthless man like Escobar, who was killed in a 1993 U.S.-supported police raid. After Escobar's death, Rodrigo returned to fighting rebels in the northern region of Uraba, where again he conceded that his men massacred civilians sympathetic to his enemies. It was in 1999 that Rodrigo broke with Carlos Castano, who had taken over after his brother died, and set out with 70 men to this once rebel-controlled region east of Medellin to begin his own battle. His troops, now numbering about 1,500, dominate much of an area that is strategically situated between Colombia's two largest cities and is the primary source of the nation's hydroelectric power. Armed with assault rifles, machine guns and grenade launchers, the paramilitaries trudge along rugged mountain paths and settle in camps like this one, where palm fronds and black plastic cover wooden huts and makeshift buildings. 'I Like War' Many of Rodrigo's troops are former soldiers or guerrillas who appear to lack a political vision. They fight because it is the only thing they know and the only way to support their families. "I like war," said Humberto, a 39-year-old former police officer who supports his wife and two children on his $200-a-month salary. "It's where I feel most comfortable." To pay for the war, Rodrigo collects "taxes" from local businesses as well as siphons gasoline from a nearby pipeline to sell. He spends $515,000 a month. About 150 of his troops have died in the fighting. Rodrigo said he now tries to keep civilian casualties--"errors," as he calls them--to a minimum and works closely with local peasants. He insists that his fight to eliminate the guerrillas and bring social, economic and political justice to Colombia is righteous. "We will continue the conflict until there is a lasting peace," Rodrigo said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth