Pubdate: Wed, 28 Apr 2004 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2004 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: Gary Marx, Tribune foreign correspondent PARAMILITARY CHIEF'S DISAPPEARANCE SNAGS COLOMBIA PEACE TALKS BOGOTA, Colombia -- The disappearance and possible death of one of Colombia's most powerful paramilitary leaders has complicated already difficult peace negotiations between the government and the outlaw group and signals the rise of drug traffickers within the right-wing organization. Carlos Castano, a once-feared figure who has admitted killing scores of civilians during a two-decade campaign to wipe out leftist rebels, disappeared April 16 after a gun battle that killed six of his bodyguards at a ranch in northwest Colombia. Salvatore Mancuso, a top paramilitary commander, told a Colombian newspaper that Castano may have staged the confrontation to slip out of sight or create a cover to surrender to authorities in the United States, where he has been indicted on drug trafficking charges. "Perhaps all this is a strategy by Commander Castano to justify his flight to the colossus of the north," Mancuso told El Colombiano newspaper in an interview last week. "Or perhaps it's a smoke screen to leave the public limelight for a while." But most experts believe rival paramilitary leaders kidnapped or killed Castano, 39, fearing he was set to provide information about the organization's involvement in drug trafficking to U.S. officials as part of a peace deal with Colombian President Alvaro Uribe. "We think that Carlos has been assassinated, given that for some time the drug traffickers inside [the paramilitaries] have been consolidating their power," Rodrigo Franco, a former paramilitary commander, told the Tribune in an e-mail Tuesday. Peace Talks Bog Down Initiated last year and now stalled, the U.S.-backed peace negotiations seek to demobilize up to 13,000 paramilitary fighters who allied as the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, or AUC. The talks are a cornerstone of Uribe's efforts to gain the upper hand in a decades-long civil war pitting government forces--often allied with the paramilitaries--against the nation's largest leftist guerrilla group, the 18,000-member Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, and a second, smaller rebel force. "The peace talks were in trouble before, but now it's even worse," said Rafael Nieto, a former top Colombian official and security expert. "The decomposition of the AUC leadership is causing violent attacks within the group." Uribe and other top government officials have said little about the Castano incident, while the nation's top peace negotiator, Luis Carlos Restrepo, has asked the Colombian attorney general to investigate. After the attack, Castano's wife and 18-month-old daughter sought refuge at a military base, and the government reportedly is seeking to relocate them in another country. A founder and longtime public face of the paramilitaries, Castano recently has been shunted aside by more hard-line commanders who have rejected a government-backed proposal requiring those guilty of human-rights violations to confess their crimes, serve up to 10 years in prison and make reparations. Experts say Castano--exhausted by years of fighting and fearing for his life and those of his wife and child--seemed more amenable to a deal, while Mancuso and other paramilitary leaders generally oppose it. Mancuso also wants a guarantee from Colombian officials that he and other paramilitary commanders would not be extradited to the United States, where they face drug trafficking charges. Uribe said Tuesday that extradition is not negotiable. Rafael Pardo, a former defense minister, said the government's proposal offers paramilitary leaders a fair deal even as some human rights experts criticize it as being too soft on those who have committed atrocities. "For a victim, nothing is just," Pardo said. "But to make peace, they [paramilitaries] have to receive a benefit." The raspy-voiced Castano has been at war since the early 1980s, when his father was executed by leftist guerrillas. Castano and his eldest brother, Fidel, went on a killing spree as newly formed paramilitary forces roamed the countryside slaughtering rebels and their suspected sympathizers. The campaign has grown over the years as the increasingly large paramilitary forces have funded their efforts through direct involvement in the narcotics trade. But Castano was forced to rethink his strategy 18 months ago after he was indicted along with Mancuso for trafficking 17 tons of cocaine into the U.S. Castano denied the charges but later broke ties with paramilitary groups that remain heavily involved in drug trafficking. It was that decision that sparked the current division among paramilitary forces and led to Castano's increasing isolation from the top leadership of the paramilitary movement, experts say. Adding to the suspicion are rumors that Castano and U.S. officials have discussed a deal in which the leader would cooperate with American law-enforcement authorities in exchange for lenient treatment. U.S.: No Contact U.S. Ambassador William Wood said last week that U.S. officials have had no recent contact with Castano. "Other paramilitary leaders think that he's a snitch," explained Steven Dudley, an American journalist whose recent book, "Walking Ghosts," lays out the history of Colombia's paramilitary campaign. "They think it's only a matter of time before he begins cooperating with the United States." Dudley, who interviewed Castano in September, said the paramilitary commander seemed increasingly paranoid and realized that his only clout within the movement was as a player in the peace talks. But Castano's fall became complete late last month after he was excluded from a team designated by paramilitary leaders to negotiate with the government. "Once he was excluded from the peace process, my perception is that it was the beginning of the end for him," Dudley said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake