LEXIS-NEXIS® Academic Universe - Document
LEXIS-NEXIS® Academic
Copyright 2000 Times Mirror Company
Los Angeles Times
View Related Topics
March 19, 2000, Sunday,
Home Edition
SECTION: Opinion; Part M; Page 1; Opinion Desk
LENGTH: 1268 words
HEADLINE:
COLOMBIA;
IS U.S. RE-CREATING
EL SALVADOR?
BYLINE: William M. LeoGrande and Kenneth Sharpe, William M. LeoGrande is a professor
of government at American, University and the author of
"Our Own Backyard: The United States in, Central America, 1977-1992." Kenneth Sharpe is a professor of political, science at Swarthmore College and
coauthor of
" Drug War Politics: The, Price of Denial."
DATELINE: WASHINGTON
BODY:
One year ago this month, President Bill Clinton publicly apologized to
Guatemalans for decades of U.S. policy in support of a murderous military that
"engaged in violent and widespread repression," costing the lives of some 100,000 civilians. That policy
"was wrong," the president declared,
"and the United States must not repeat that mistake." One year later, Clinton is about to repeat it in
Colombia.
In the name of fighting drugs, the United States is preparing to join the
Colombian armed forces in a civil war that has been raging for more than 40
years, despite the fact they have they worst human-rights record in the
hemisphere. On Jan. 11, the president sent to Congress a request for $ 1
billion in security aid for
Colombia, up from $ 65 million in 1996 and $ 300 million last
year. Most of the money will finance a new counterinsurgency campaign against
the Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Colombia (FARC), the largest of three armed leftist guerrilla movements.
The insurgents are a serious force. Numbering about 20,000, they exercise
significant influence in more than half of Colombia's municipalities. Until
now, the United States has had the wisdom to stay out of the military's
protracted war with the guerrillas. The rationale for abandoning that restraint
is what drug czar Barry R. McCaffrey has called a
"drug emergency": a dramatic increase in coca-leaf cultivation in the southern provinces of
Putumayo and Caqueta, strongholds of the FARC. To
"secure" these areas for drug eradication, Washington plans to outfit the Colombian
army to wage counterinsurgency war.
But even if coca eradication in southern Colombia succeeds, production will
simply move elsewhere. As long as demand for drugs in the United States remains
high, and enormous profits can be made from the illicit trade, traffickers will
adapt to eradication and interdiction programs the
way they always have: by shifting from region to region and country to country.
Decades of eradication campaigns the world over tell us the war in southern
Colombia will have no significant effect on the supply of drugs entering the
United States. The idea that we can win the war on drugs by waging war on the
Colombian guerrillas is a dangerous fantasy.
The elements of Washington's counterinsurgency strategy for Colombia are taken
straight from the Pentagon's experience in
El Salvador: U.S.-trained and -outfitted rapid-deployment battalions, advanced gunships,
intensive intelligence gathering and hundreds of U.S. military advisors who
won't go into combat (just as they weren't supposed to in
El Salvador, although they did, as the Pentagon acknowledged years later).
A billion dollars of aid turned the Salvadoran military into a large,
well-equipped, politically powerful
force that murdered more than 70,000 civilians with impunity for more than a
decade. It did not win the war. The war ended when the United States finally
recognized that it was unwinnable and forced the army to accept a negotiated
peace or face a cutoff of U.S. aid.
The 40-year-old civil war in Colombia is unwinnable, too, as Colombian
President Andres Pastrana acknowledges. Elected in 1998 on a peace platform, he
has opened negotiations with the guerrillas, and rightly so. Despite their
serious human-rights abuses and involvement with coca growers, they are a
powerful force representing a constituency with real social and political
grievances. But the guerrillas are wary of negotiations. The last time they
signed a cease-fire and agreed to participate in elections, death squads of the
paramilitary right, often paid by large landowners and assisted
by the military, assassinated 3,000 activists of the left's Patriotic Union
party, including elected officials, two senators and two presidential
candidates. Since then, the right has grow even stronger, now numbering greater
than 5,000 combatants who terrorize whole regions of the country.
Pastrana cannot guarantee the personal security of the guerrillas if they lay
down their arms, just as the Christian Democrats in
El Salvador could not guarantee the security of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation
Front guerrillas in the early 1980s, at the height of the death-squad violence
there. As long as the Colombian government is unwilling or unable to control
the violent right, the guerrillas dare not agree to peace.
No one doubts Pastrana's desire to halt paramilitary violence and to sever the
ties that have long existed between the paramilitary right and the armed
forces. But Pastrana, like Salvadoran President Jose
Napoleon Duarte in the 1980s, has limited control over the military. He has
managed to reduce the army's human-rights abuses, but despite his best efforts,
he has not been able to dissolve the silent partnership between mid-level, even
senior, officers and the paramilitaries. A Human Rights Watch report last month
links half of Colombia's 18 brigade-level army units to paramilitary violence,
which is now responsible for 78% of reported abuses, including several thousand
political killings and disappearances annually. Investigations by Amnesty
International, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and the
Colombian government confirm the army's collusion in paramilitary violence.
In
El Salvador, the army had no interest in reining in the death squads because they were an
essential weapon in its war against the left. The Colombian situation is
similar;
by leaving the dirtiest work in this dirty war to the paramilitaries, the
regular army can claim a clean human-rights record as it seeks more military
aid from Washington.
In lobbying Congress for the Colombian aid package, McCaffrey echoes the
arguments made by Reagan administration officials who lobbied for military
assistance to
El Salvador and Guatemala, insisting that the death squads were independent of the armed
forces. The declassified history of those wars has revealed that such arguments
were disingenuous. In Colombia, the record of complicity is equally clear.
As in Central America, pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into the
Colombian armed forces will make them more powerful politically and less
answerable to civilian authority. Senior officers are already hostile to
Pastrana's peace overtures and his efforts to discipline officers linked to the
paramilitary right. A massive infusion of U.S.
aid will be seen by officers as Washington's endorsement of their preferred
strategy: escalating the war rather than ending it through negotiation. That
will make it harder to stop the paramilitaries and harder to convince the
guerrillas that the government's desire for peace is genuine.
This month marks the 20th anniversary (on March 24) of the assassination of
Archbishop Oscar Romero in
El Salvador. Two months before he was killed by a rightist death squad, he wrote a personal
appeal to Jimmy Carter, asking the president to abstain from increasing U.S.
military aid that
"will surely aggravate the repression and injustice" inflicted on the populace by the armed forces.
"If you truly want to defend human rights," Romero wrote,
"I ask that you . . . prohibit all military assistance." Instead, we allowed our obsession with communism to justify arming and
financing a murderous military, and
a war that could have ended with a peace accord in 1980 dragged on for another
decade, killing tens of thousands of innocent civilians. In Colombia, we are
about to let our fear of drugs lead us into an equally futile and bloody war.
We failed to heed Romero's plea 20 years ago; we ought not make the same
mistake again.
LOAD-DATE: March 19, 2000