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FARC gives empire a black eye. U.S. responds with threats and more lies

category national | miscellaneous | news report author Sunday February 23, 2003 14:06author by Georgie Patrick Report this post to the editors

Will this be the excuse U.S. imperialism has been waiting for to directly intervene in Colombia's class war between a local mass based movement comprising 2 strong guerilla armies, a militant trade union movement, radical peasant organisations and the fascist paramilitary state?

US considers Colombian rescue mission

By Jeremy McDermott, The Scotsman, 22 Feb 2003

AFTER the murder of a CIA operative and a Colombian intelligence official by guerrillas, the United States is considering a rescue mission to free three other CIA contractors in rebel hands.

"They had shots to the back of the head that show they were assassinated in cold blood," said the US president, George Bush, in an interview with Telemundo Television.

"They [Colombian rebels] are ruthless killers and deserve to be treated as such. We are sharing intelligence and are co-ordinating the movements of troops in the jungle to try and rescue these three people."

The "ruthless killers" are the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the most powerful of Colombia's warring factions and long on the US terrorism list.

They acted quickly when a US government plane on an intelligence mission crash landed in the southern province of Caqueta, one of their strongholds. Two of the five tried to resist kidnapping by the rebels and were executed, according to witnesses. The remainder disappeared with their captives into the jungle.

"I don't think there's any question that this precipitous action by the FARC is going to meet with very strong retaliation," said Tom Davis, a member of a visiting congressional delegation.

The US ambassador to Colombia, Anne Patterson, has made a recommendation to Mr Bush on action to be taken. She refused to comment but another member of the congressional delegation, James Moran, said it was "major and appropriate".

A massive search operation for the three men has been conducted, so far fruitlessly. Yesterday army helicopters flew over the area dropping leaflets offering a £250,000 reward for information on the whereabouts of the missing Americans, a fortune in a country where most live on less than £100 a month.

But the FARC has eluded the best efforts of the security forces and will be keen to keep its prize hostages.

The US embassy has refused to comment officially on the role of the captured Americans, but sources said they were part of the Office of Regional Administration, believed to be a CIA front.

The FARC has long been looking for a way to pressure the US government over its involvement in the country's bloody 39-year civil conflict and has vowed to fight "Yankee imperialism".

Colombia is the third largest recipient of US military aid after Israel and Egypt, receiving more than £300 million a year, including training by 70 US special forces troops in the front-line province of Arauca.

But under congressional restrictions the estimated 400 US troops in the country are forbidden, to engage in combat.

Still, military sources have indicated that special forces troops could be sent into the country under a different mandate and effect a rescue.

author by seek and ye shall findpublication date Sun Feb 23, 2003 20:07author address author phone Report this post to the editors

US considers intervention in Colombia

Washington mulls tough response to kidnapping of CIA 'agents'

Martin McNamara in Caqueta, Colombia
Sunday February 23, 2003
The Observer

The United States is considering direct military intervention in Colombia for the first time following the murder of an American and the kidnapping of three others, all suspected CIA agents.
The US embassy in Colombia has recommended Washington make a 'major response' to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) rebels responsible, and American officials have confirmed that military action is being considered to recover the men from the dense jungles of the southern province of Caqueta.

They were captured after their plane crashed into the jungle suffering engine trouble. Despite the swift arrival of the Colombian army, the rebels spirited three survivors away after executing one American and the Colombian pilot who are thought to have put up a struggle.

Washington has refused to release any information about the men, entrenching the belief that they were CIA agents on a surveillance mission.

For the people of Caqueta, the prospect of a US military incursion into the province is yet another nightmare. In the past year, since the collapse of the peace process, they have seen the suspension of local government and are living under a form of martial law. Scores of ordinary people have been tortured and murdered by right-wing paramilitaries and they face a constant campaign of bombing and kidnapping by the Farc.

The murder of the first US government worker in Colombia's bitter war has again focused attention on Caqueta. This isolated province first hit the headlines in 1999 when it became central to a truce under which the Farc were given effective control of a Demilitarised Zone (DMZ) the size of Switzerland.

San Vicente del Caguán became its unofficial capital and the site for peace talks between the government and the guerrillas, but now the threat of US action hangs over the town, just a few kilometres from the scene of the plane crash. A search for the kidnapped men has been launched by troops, backed by US helicopters and intelligence planes.

Sister Bernadette, a nurse who has worked here for 20 years, said: 'Farc ran everything. They were able to train and recruit and build up their strength. That is what the peace process achieved.'

The DMZ ended a year ago and thousands of troops poured back into the region, but the Farc still control much of Caqueta.

'In the jungle and the villages, this is still a demilitarised zone,' said Father Gabriel, a local priest. 'The Farc control everything and if we want to do anything we go to them, not the military.'

The military confine themselves to San Vicente and the main roads, but even so are only partly successful. Two bombs went off near the town's central plaza last month and kidnapping has become almost a mundane activity.

Local guerrillas have perfected a technique they call pesca milagrosa - miracle fishing. The name comes from the biblical story of Jesus telling his apostles to cast their nets on the water and how they emerged bursting with fish. The guerrillas will stop a convoy of cars and buses, and take hostage those they suspect have rich friends or families.

There was a local administration and police force in San Vicente, but when the DMZ ended, they all left - or were murdered. The town hall is closed, the police station was blown up and the area left without any form of non-military government.

Then the paramilitaries turned up. 'They arrived in town one night and the next day there were five bodies in the Caguán river,' said Fr Gabriel. Funded by ranchers and cocaine barons, the paramilitaries have grown into a fearsome force in Colombia. And although illegal, they have strong links to the military. Often no one can be sure which side is responsible for murders in Caqueta.

For anyone working with the community, the risk is from both sides. The guerrillas murdered a colleague of Sister Bernadette who was seen talking to the military. She herself was stopped at an army roadblock and her medical supplies confiscated. Every day for a week she went to the local military commander's office to demand their return but also visited the local Farc commander to explain her trips, lest he decide she was an informer.

A delegation from Amnesty International recorded 17 politically motivated murders, with 78 more noted.

Areas of the Caqueta jungle have been cleared for coca growing and it is targeted by US-backed anti-cocaine measures. Coca is grown by small farmers, but the crop is the Farc's main source of income and they control every aspect of production.

Locals complain the coca spraying destroys crops and wildlife, poisons the land and causes illness. The US has just increased its budget to the Colombian government to fight the cocaine trade and bring peace to the country.

'We'll believe it when the bodies stop floating down the Caguán River,' said Fr Gabriel.

author by Jose Raniipublication date Sun Feb 23, 2003 20:39author email joeranii at yahoo dot comauthor address author phone Report this post to the editors

This guy Patrick hasn't got a clue. From the safety of 6000 miles away he can posture about the FARC and the injustices of Colombia. The fact is that the FARC is the greatest injustice facing the people of Colombia. It is an organization devoted to terror and mass murder. I could spend an hour detailing the countless injustices perpetrated by these gangsters. Mass kidnappings, very often resulting in murder of the victims, necklace bombs, no warning car bombs, body-bombs (where the FARC murder someone and then booby-trap the body), murder of Indians who try to remain neutral etc. etc.

While the drugs trade has made the FARC a financially wealthy organization, politically the leadership of the FARC is bankrupt. The government unilaterally gave them some territory a few years back, but the FARC, instead of turning it into the promised "laboratory of peace", used it as a holding center for kidnap victims and a launching pad for murder and extortion throughout the country.

It's pretty sickening to read such garbage about the FARC this weekend, which marks a full year that they have been holding the unfortunate Green Party presidential candidate Ingrid
Betancourt. How is the cause of socialism advanced by murder and kidnapping ? It isn't, and that's why the FARC has minimal popular support, especially among the urban working class. For any progressive to support these gangsters is like supporting the UDA. Thankfully FARC has about the same chance of taking power in Colombia as does the UDA.

author by McGuirepublication date Mon Feb 24, 2003 05:50author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Dear o dear o me. You guys so far far away from the conflict shouldn't take it so personal. Your fascist friends in Colombia and the U.S., like back home, are doing all they can to lie hide and murder those who want to free themselves from imperialism, don't worry.

author by ?publication date Mon Feb 24, 2003 06:01author address author phone Report this post to the editors

The FARC are not a drug trafficking organisation or "evil" as George Bush would put it, this is simply a lie promoted to justify the intervention and war against them. The FARC, National Liberation Army (ELN) and People's Liberation Army (EPL) are legitimate liberation organisations. Yes, they do detain people who have money and have not paid their taxes and that is how they fund themselves. The government calls this kidnapping but it is a form of imprisonment. Why shouldn't the people and companies that made their money through exploitation be made to contribute to the liberation struggle?

FARC: http://www.resistencianacional.org/
ELN: http://www.eln-voces.com
EPL: http://www.pcdec-ml.com

author by joe raniipublication date Mon Feb 24, 2003 20:17author address author phone Report this post to the editors

I suspect the previous writer, like most Irish people who hold such "strong" opinions on Colombia, have never been in that country. I have, many times.
For this person to defend kidnapping is quite sickening to anyone who knows families that have been devastated by this crime against humanity.
To equate kidnapping innocent people (teachers, farmers, doctors, nurses etc.etc.--ordinary people, not representatives of the state or employees of multinationals--though why these would be legitimate targets is beyond me)
is quite nauseating. Ignorance is no excuse.
Is this person old enough to remember Brian Keenan's ordeal in Lebanon ? That's repeated by thosuands of people in COlombia. Right now, as we have this exchange, there are thosuands of people squatting in fetid, dark FARC dungeons. Guilty of NOTHING. Perhaps a year or two in a FARC dungeon might be a good way to help this person see sense.
This goof says "Why shouldn't the people and companies that made their money through exploitation be made to contribute to the liberation struggle?" Truly s/he hasn't got a clue. Was Ingrid Betancourt a legitimate taget for kidnapping ? I could name a dozen more I know of, often they were murdered shortly after the kidnap, while their unfortunate relatives were left for months if not years trying to scrape together the extortion demand.

Just because groups have guns doesn't make them progressive, if that were so the UVF and UDA would be in the vanguard.
Grow up and have some sense.

(By the way, our correspondent doesn't seem to know that the FARC liquidated the EPL about 10 years ago!)

 
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