Pubdate: Fri, 22 Oct 1999 Source: Colorado Daily (CO) Copyright: 1999 Colorado Daily Contact: P.O. Box 1719, Boulder, CO 80306 Fax: (303) 443-9357 Website: http://www.codaily.com/ Author: Fernando Perez Note: Fernando Perez is a CU graduate student. THE U.S. WAR ON DRUGS AND COLOMBIA'S CONFLICT While public attention focuses on Kosovo, Iraq and East Timor, another war is going on in our hemisphere, in Colombia. The United States is providing funds supposedly intended for fighting the drug war, but which to a large extent fuel a bloody internal political conflict. For example, in the 1999 fiscal year, the United States government allocated $173.16 million of Emergency Supplemental funding for the war against drugs in addition to the previously budgeted $30 million. An emergency package of roughly $600 million has been requested for next year, the bulk of which will go to repressive measures and is used by the Colombian police and military. Without arguing whether it is even possible to solve the drug problem via repression, it is worth taking a closer look at the social context where this flow of money and military aid is being poured, and some of the consequences it has. Colombia is basically in a state of civil war, with two large communist guerrilla organizations fighting both the official army and various more or less coordinated paramilitary groups. These two guerrilla factions, the FARC, or the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, and the ELN, National Liberation Army, are well-funded via various forms of extortion -- Colombia holds the worst kidnapping record in the world today -- and from connections with the drug trade. This conflict has led to a dramatic problem of internal population displacements, with Colombia ranking fourth in the world in terms of forced population displacements. The FARC was officially born in 1964 with roots dating back to 1948 and is thus the oldest active guerrilla movement in the world. To this day various attempts at peace negotiations have failed to produce conclusive results. It is no surprise that the U.S. government has taken action over the years to fight the Colombian guerrillas, albeit always in indirect or covert manners. The infamous School of the Americas has a long list of Colombian graduates, many of which appear on documented cases of human-rights violations. Quoting a 1996 Human Rights Watch report: "Human Rights Watch has also documented the disturbing role played by the United States in support of the Colombian military. Despite Colombia's disastrous human-rights record, a U.S. Defense Department and Central Intelligence Agency team worked with Colombian military officers on the 1991 intelligence reorganization that resulted in the creation of killer networks that identified and killed civilians suspected of supporting guerrillas." One of the "cleanest" ways which the U.S. government has of helping the Colombian military -- which in most cases ends up directly helping the various paramilitary groups -- is through the "drug war" effort. Any foreign aid provided to fight drugs is usually accepted well by the general public, which seldom questions where the aid goes and how it is used. It is thus important to raise awareness about these practices, since over the years it has become clear that not only this aid is not solving the drug problem, but it is instead fueling the fire of a bloody civil war. This is a complex conflict with no angels, where both the guerrilla groups and the paramilitary are responsible for crimes and human-rights violations of all sorts. But a negotiated solution which protects civilians will remain impossible as long as the radical factions of the Colombian military and their paramilitary partners are supported with escalating budgets and technology. This militaristic approach will not only give wings to their brutality, it will equally justify the guerrilla's arguments for not committing to a negotiation process and maintaining a hard military line. So, what can common citizens do? An immediate option is to express concern to elected officials with specific requests such as: the U.S. drug policy should consider alternatives other than repression and military aid. Further, no military aid should be given to countries with appalling human-rights records, and the School of the Americas should be closed. It is disheartening to hear the U.S. government claim to the world that it defends democracy and human rights -- isn't that why Yugoslavia was bombed into oblivion? -- while at the same time it knowingly fuels brutal internal conflicts. If only a fraction of the money spent on expensive military aid went to help efforts from the democratic and non-violent sectors of society, far more good would be accomplished and the lives of many could perhaps be spared. [SIDEBAR] Some Useful Internet Resources On This Topic Include: - - Colombia Support Network: http://www.igc.org/csn/ - - Amnesty International: http://www.amnesty.org/ - - Human Rights Watch: http://www.hrw.org/ The State Department narcotics budget can be viewed at: http://www.state.gov/www/global/narcotics_law/fy2000_budget/latin_america.ht ml - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake