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NO: COMMENTARY - 'Narco-guerrillas': alibi for intervention

by Dennis Grammenos

30 July 1999 14:05 UTC


        [NOTE: The shameless propaganda of the U.S. government
        gets more laughable every day.   -DG]

                        ==============================================
                        When I was training Colombian Special Forces
                        in Tolemaida in 1992, my team was there
                        allegedly to aid the counter-narcotics effort.
                        Narcotics were the cover story for a similar
                        trip to Peru in 1991.  In both cases we were
                        giving military forces training in infantry
                        counter-insurgency doctrine.
_____________________   =============================================
THE NEWS-OBSERVER
[Raleigh, NC]

Thursday, 29 July 1999

        **************
        * COMMENTARY *
        **************

                'Narco-guerrillas': alibi for intervention
                ------------------------------------------

        By Stan Goff

RALEIGH --  Earlier this year, the Departments of State and Defense shed
crocodile tears over human rights in Kosovo.  Now, self-righteous
sanctimony about drugs is serving the same purpose in Latin America.
"Democracy" will be the raison d'etre for a proposed Latin American
version of NATO.

Pure cover.  American military capacity is maintained, as always, for
the most cynical economics.  I know.  For over two decades, I was a
member of that military, and I served in an advisory and assistance
role in seven Latin American countries.

Note the latest developments in Colombia.  White House antidrug chief
Gen. Barry McCaffrey (no coincidence that he is the former commander
of Southcom, the Theater Command for the U.S. armed forces in Latin
America) and Defense Secretary William Cohen are arguing for a massive
expansion of aid to Colombia.  The State Department claims widened
assistance is needed to fight "an explosion of coca plantations."  The
solution, according State, is a 950-man "counter-narcotics" battalion.
But the request is strangely coincident with the recent military advances
of Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionario Colombiano (FARC), the leftist guerrillas
who already control 40 percent of the countryside.

When I was training Colombian Special Forces in Tolemaida in 1992, my team
was there allegedly to aid the counter-narcotics effort.  Narcotics were
the cover story for a similar trip to Peru in 1991.  In both cases we were
giving military forces training in infantry counter-insurgency doctrine.

We and the host-nation commanders knew perfectly well that narcotics was a
flimsy alibi.  They needed help.  They had lost the confidence of the
population through years of abuse.  And they were suffering setbacks in
the field against guerrillas.

We are being prepared.  McCaffrey is "admitting" that the lines between
counter-narcotics and counter-insurgency are beginning to blur in Colombia.
The reason?  The guerrillas are involved in drug trafficking. "Narco-
guerrillas" is McCaffrey's new word.  This has become such a ubiquitous
claim that it is repeated uncritically in the press.  When this construct
first began to gain wide currency, the former U.S. ambassador to Colombia,
Miles Frechette, pointed out that there was no concrete evidence to
support the claims. His statement was soon forgotten.

In Colombia, it is well known that those who profit the most by the drug
trade are members of the armed forces, the police, government officials
and the big businessmen of the urban centers.

But drugs alone won't do to justify the scope of the desired military
buildup.

The Defense Department needs to protect the billions upon billions of
dollars in markets for U.S. products in Colombia and other Latin American
nations.  And it has to secure the peace enough to ensure the continued
bleeding of those nations' economies through external debts owed to
American-dominated financial institutions.  For the size of buildup
ostensibly "needed," we need to defend an ostensible "democracy." In June
this year, at a meeting of the Organization of American States in
Guatemala, Clinton administration representatives proposed an American-led
multi-national Latin American force "to intervene in threatened  environments"
-- a new, Latino NATO.  This force would "protect democracy."

Colombia will be the foothold for this force, because it is under the
most immediate threat.  The guerrillas are the foes of democracy, of
course. And the government of Colombia is the nominal democracy.  They
have elections.  Only a tiny fraction of the population has the means
to recruit and promote candidates, and terror is part of the political
machinery.  But they have elections.

Behind the democratic facade are the most egregious and systematic human
rights violations currently taking place in this hemisphere. Right-wing
paramilitaries, supported and coordinated by the official security forces,
are involved in a process that would have made El Salvador's Roberto
D'Abuisson proud: torture, public decapitations, massacres, destruction of
land and livestock, forced dislocations. This month, Jorge Enrique Mora
Rangel, commander of the Colombian Army, intervened in the Colombian
judicial process to protect the most powerful paramilitary chief in
Colombia, Carlos Castano, from prosecution for a series of massacres that
targeted community and union leaders, political opponents and their
families. Castano's organization was networked for intelligence and
operations directly with the security forces in 1991, under the tutelage
of the U.S. Department of Defense and the Central Intelligence Agency.

I was in Guatemala in 1983 for the last coup.  In 1985, I was in El
Salvador.  As an insider on active duty in the armed forces, I saw the
deep dissonance between the official explanations for our policies and our
actual practice of training and supporting criminal regimes. The billions
in profit to be made in Colombia and neighboring nations has far more to
do with the itch for NATO-like stability than any concern about democracy
-- or cocaine.

There is a chilling deja vu in this.

        Stan Goff retired from the U. S. Army in 1996.  He served in
        Vietnam, Guatemala, El Salvador, Grenada, Panama, Colombia, Peru,
        Venezuela, Honduras, Somalia and Haiti.  His last assignment was
        with 3rd Special Forces.

        http://www.news-observer.com/daily/1999/07/29/edit02.html

        Copyright 1999 The News & Observer
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