Pubdate: Tue, 10 Aug 2004 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Page: A1 Copyright: 2004 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Jose De Cordoba, Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Uphill Battle RAVAGED COLOMBIA SEES GLINT OF HOPE AS KILLINGS FALL OFF A Dogged President, Helped by U.S., Boosts the Army, Deals Guerrillas a Setback Death of Notorious Kidnapper CARTAGENA DEL CHAIRA, Colombia -- In 1994, guerrillas blew up the police station and killed the police chief of this jungle town on a bend of the Caguan River. For the next nine years, no police officer or prosecutor set foot on Cartagena's streets. The local judge was kidnapped. A mayor was murdered. The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, Latin America's oldest and most powerful guerrilla army, imposed taxes and dealt out a harsh justice. In time, the guerrillas took over the flourishing cocaine trade. From here, the FARC launched devastating attacks on isolated Colombian army posts. But times have changed. Five months ago, as part of a campaign by President Alvaro Uribe to extend state control throughout Colombia, elite army troops set up a base in a cavernous warehouse outside town. In June a prosecutor was reassigned to Cartagena, which isn't to be confused with the big port city also called Cartagena on the Caribbean coast. A judge arrived a few days ago. "The police are here to stay," says Capt. Alexander Collazos, the town's young police chief, who arrived here with some 70 officers in December. Townsfolk who have lived through the violent ebb and flow of Colombia's four-decade-long civil war have their doubts. And many obstacles remain before Colombia is at peace -- among them the threat from right-wing paramilitary groups and the challenge of replacing coca-leaf cultivation with other kinds of jobs. But dramatically lower political violence, strong economic growth and a revived military under a strong president suggest that Colombia just might have turned a corner in its civil war. For the U.S., any progress in Colombia is good news. Almost three times the size of California, this country of rugged Andean mountains, sophisticated cities and jungle rain forest produces some 90% of the cocaine that reaches the U.S. Washington has invested $3.3 billion here since 2000 to fight what it calls narco-terrorism. As in Iraq and Afghanistan, the U.S. and Colombia are grappling with such issues as whether there are enough "boots on the ground" to hold territory wrested from insurgents and how to bolster a fragile state in the face of terrorist attacks. Perhaps most important, the U.S. and Colombia are slowly learning how to win the hearts and minds of a suspicious population. As Mr. Uribe took power in August 2002, many felt Colombia was a failed state -- a view strengthened when FARC guerrillas fired a barrage of mortar rounds during his inauguration ceremony, killing and wounding scores of bystanders when some rounds went astray. Four hundred and twenty town mayors, about 40% of the total, had fled for their lives after the FARC issued an ultimatum: resign or die. According to government figures, police had been run out of 168 of Colombia's 1,098 county seats. In the two years before Mr. Uribe assumed power, guerrillas attacked 94 Colombian towns. The ranks of internal refugees swelled by more than 6,000 families each month. Today, only about half a dozen mayors are still in exile, according to the national mayors' group. The government says there are police contingents in all of the country's county seats. In Mr. Uribe's two years in office, guerrillas have attacked only 11 Colombian towns. And the refugee flood has been cut in half, although three million of this country's 42 million people are still displaced. Kidnappings fell 44% to 1,737 in the 12 months ending in May, while homicides dropped 20% to about 21,000 in 2003. Why the success? Generous U.S. aid has sharpened the effectiveness of a formerly demoralized and sedentary army. And the U.S.-assisted aerial spraying of coca plants with herbicide in large swaths of the country has struck at a key funding source for the rebels: drug money. Currently some 400 U.S. military advisers and 400 private contractors are working in Colombia, a figure that Congress may increase this year. Beyond the U.S. help, though, Colombia owes much of its progress to the 52-year-old Mr. Uribe. A workaholic lawyer and longtime regional politician, he won an overwhelming victory in the presidential election of May 2002. With it came a mandate to vigorously prosecute the war against the FARC, which killed his father in a failed kidnap attempt in 1983, and other insurgent groups. During his first week in office, he declared a 90-day state of emergency, under which the military was granted special powers, and pushed through a one-time $800 million tax on the nation's wealthy to help pay for the war. "My objective is to bring peace to Colombia, finish with terrorism one way or another, and negotiate in good faith with those who want to," says Mr. Uribe, who has survived more than a dozen assassination attempts including two since assuming power. Wealthy and middle-class Colombians who fled the country are returning, driving economic growth. Last year, private-sector investment was almost double that of 2002. In the first quarter of this year, new foreign direct investment soared 73% to $546 million, driven by ventures in oil and mining. Economists project growth will top 4% this year. But the president, speaking of the FARC, warns that "the snake is still alive." The last month has seen an uptick in attacks by the left-wing guerrillas, who have about 13,000 men in arms. Right-wing paramilitary warlords control another 13,000 gunmen. Last year, the paramilitary bands, loosely organized in an umbrella group known as the United Self Defense Forces of Colombia, agreed to a unilateral cease-fire and entered disarmament talks with the government. But the bands kept killing. When talks neared collapse in April, Mr. Uribe sent them an ultimatum. He accused the warlords of planning to kill him and said the army would fight until they were destroyed. Negotiations then resumed. Private Armies Some paramilitary groups were formed with government approval two decades ago to protect cattlemen and others from guerrilla extortion. But virtually all turned into private armies for drug traffickers fighting the FARC for control of drug routes. They are responsible for some of the worst atrocities of the war, and the U.S. wants to extradite many of them for drug dealing. But the warlords want recognition as political players. In late July, Mr. Uribe allowed paramilitary commanders to address Colombia's Congress, a move that was harshly criticized by the U.S. and others. As the negotiations continue, Mr. Uribe must strike a difficult balance between the contrary demands of justice and peace. Mr. Uribe, who has a 79% approval rating, is pushing for a constitutional change that would allow him to run for re-election in 2006. Currently, presidents can serve only one four-year term. That effort has met considerable opposition from politicians in the capital, and even some supporters believe Mr. Uribe would better spend his time fighting the war and pursuing economic development than negotiating with the legislature over the constitutional amendment. But many analysts believe the president will end up getting his way and win a second term. "People see Uribe as a redeemer who has come to save the nation," says Daniel Garcia-Pena, an adviser to Bogota's left-wing mayor, one of Mr. Uribe's chief political opponents. Just a few years ago, the nation seemed lost. Colombia's state and army seemed so weak that many thought the FARC could soon take Bogota. In 1998, the guerrillas had scored victory after victory. Not far from Cartagena in the jungle, the rebels ambushed an elite but understrength army battalion and killed or captured most of its 154 men. And the FARC was at Bogota's gates, intent on strangling the capital, says Gen. Hernando Ortiz, who commands the army's Bogota-based Fifth Division. To venture just a few miles outside Bogota was to risk being snagged in the FARC's kidnapping net. Motorists by the dozens were captured and held for ransom. In 1999, a whole church congregation in Cali, Colombia's third largest city, was kidnapped. Mr. Uribe's predecessor, Andres Pastrana, was elected in 1998 with a mandate to seek peace. Mr. Pastrana ceded control of a Switzerland-size demilitarized zone to the FARC, hoping the concession would jump-start negotiations for a peace treaty. But over the next three years, guerrillas kidnapped and murdered top Colombian political figures, and once even landed a hijacked commercial plane in their sanctuary. Talks went nowhere. Meanwhile, Mr. Pastrana worked to get U.S. aid to strengthen the demoralized Colombian army. In 2000, the U.S. Congress approved $1.3 billion in aid to Plan Colombia, most of which went to security forces and coca eradication. A key component of the package: 67 helicopters, whose use was at first limited to counternarcotics missions. After Sept. 11, 2001, the U.S. allowed the Colombian army to use the helicopters in counterinsurgency operations on a case-by-case basis. Congress has continued to fund Plan Colombia with about $700 million a year. A frustrated Mr. Pastrana ended negotiations in February 2002. In May, Mr. Uribe, who had long criticized the peace process because he thought the guerrillas weren't serious about laying down their arms, swept into power. 'Happy Hour' A hands-on commander-in-chief, Mr. Uribe travels to a different region of Colombia every Monday to review the local security situation with area commanders. He peppers generals with telephone calls about the progress of military operations, a practice known in the palace as "Happy Hour." Last year, he moved the government for a week to a military base in the beleaguered town of Arauca, where a car bomb went off close to a school two hours after Mr. Uribe was there. Mr. Uribe built on military reforms started by Mr. Pastrana's generals. He boosted the size of Colombia's relatively small military and police forces by about a third to about 350,000. He increased the number of professional soldiers by 8,000 to 62,000. He worked to reverse a much-criticized record of human-rights abuses. The army also created battalions of "peasant soldiers" commanded by professional officers. Most important, Mr. Uribe has doggedly pushed army commanders to pursue the war aggressively. Last year, Gen. Ortiz, helped to break the FARC's virtual siege of Bogota, flushing an estimated 2,000 guerrillas out of mountain canyons near the city. In the process, the army killed one of the top FARC commanders, known only by his nom de guerre, Marco Aurelio Buendia, similar to the name of the protagonist in Colombian novelist Gabriel Garcia Marquez's "One Hundred Years of Solitude." From his mountain hideout, Mr. Buendia ran one of the FARC's most profitable kidnapping rings. Mr. Buendia was buried in a common grave along with 14 of his comrades. "He went to his tomb with the secret of his real name," says Gen. Ortiz. Since Mr. Buendia's death, kidnapping in the area has almost disappeared, he says. This year, the army has sent some 22,000 soldiers into the sparsely populated swampy jungles of southeast Colombia, the heartland of the guerrillas and a place where they have long controlled the cocaine trade. In February, helicopters from a U.S.-trained counternarcotics battalion swooped down at night to capture Nayibe Rojas, alias Sonia, who allegedly ran the FARC's cocaine trade in southern Colombia. It will take more than military victories to achieve peace and progress in the countryside. With U.S. help, Colombia has been trying to expand social services and give people a livelihood outside of coca cultivation. But a report released by the U.S. Government Accountability Office last week says the efforts are inadequate and underfunded at a time when U.S. aid money is being swallowed up in Iraq and Afghanistan. "That's the great Achilles heel of all of this," says Gabriel Marcella, an analyst at the U.S. Army War College. In Cartagena del Chaira, most residents are wary. Some say they are tired of the arbitrary and brutal ways of the guerrillas. But the FARC's drug and military operations have provided jobs in an area with few other opportunities. Many people have family ties with the rebels and no experience of central-government rule. "The FARC lives in the hearts of many people here," says one sympathizer. Although the Colombian navy patrols the Caguan River, guerrillas still man occasional river checkpoints a few miles downstream from Cartagena. For years, rivers of cocaine money flowed through town. Cocaine was sometimes used as currency, residents say. But the aerial spraying of herbicide has devastated the coca economy here. "Coca doesn't provide any profits for the farmer," says one former grower. Corn, cattle or fishing could replace coca, locals say. But to wean Cartagena from coca, the area's peasants need to have access to markets in the district capital, Florencia, now a five-hour drive by mostly unpaved road. The town also needs more and cheaper electricity. Cartagena isn't connected to the country's electric grid. Locally generated energy is available only part of the day. People are in dire need of social services. On a recent weekend, the army tried to fill the vacuum. It choppered in two dozen doctors, who examined hundreds of townsfolk lined up by the gates of Cartagena's hospital. Across the street, nutritionists weighed malnourished children, giving their mothers bags of enriched flour. At the hospital's gate, Lt. Yolanda Lopez, an army reserve doctor, cut a path through the crowd for a skinny woman holding a newborn. "The baby is vomiting and has a fever. She needs to see a doctor right away," said Lt. Lopez. On the town square, an army master of ceremonies put on a dance contest for kids and teenagers. "Kids are getting flags, and people are getting food," said Humberto Bermudez, a restaurant owner who watched impassively. "Will it get people closer to the army? Time will tell us." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake