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April 7, 2003
Informers for a Day
by Garry Leech
In war-torn Saravena, a town of 30,000 in Arauca department in
eastern Colombia, soldiers dressed as clowns befriend local children
by offering them candy, rides on armored personnel carriers, and
the use of the army's swimming pool in return for the opportunity
to pummel them with pro-army and anti-rebel propaganda. Children
have become the focal point of Psychological Warfare Operations
(PsyOps) being conducted by the Colombian army in this embattled
town that is currently home to 40 U.S. Army Special Forces soldiers
who arrived in January as part of the Bush administration's global
war on terror. Like the PsyOps used by the U.S. army as part of
the Phoenix Program during the Vietnam War, these programs are not
only geared to winning over the "hearts and minds" of
locals, they are also being used to elicit information from the
civilian population, especially children, about rebel activities
in Saravena.
While
right-wing paramilitaries are prominent in the vicinity of Arauca
Citywhere another 30 U.S. Army Special Forces soldiers are
stationedthey have yet to gain a foothold in Saravena. Consequently,
it is the Colombian army that is challenging the rebels' decades-long
rule of Saravena's barrios. The 18th Brigade regularly deploys its
psychological operations unit into the marginalized neighborhoods,
ostensibly to wage a battle to win over the "hearts and minds"
of local residents.
In one such operation in February, soldiers from the 18th Brigade's
psychological warfare unit secured several blocks in the barrio
of San Luis, which is controlled by a National Liberation Army (ELN)
militia. The soldiers alertly stood guard for the next few hours
while Sergeant John Fernando Arenas spewed pro-army and anti-guerrilla
propaganda interspersed with popular music over a loudspeaker system
mounted on top of an army truck:
| "The general community does
not have to be indifferent to the terrorist actions that have
been generated in this jurisdiction. Every one of the inhabitants
has to be conscious of the situation and denounce the terrorists.
The militias are trying to recruit our young people; they are
only trying to make bad citizens. Make it to those telephones:
8892031. These telephone numbers are not tapped. The militias
only scare people. We have to denounce them through the cooperation
network. It is time to finish with the militias in Saravena:
call 8892031. You people in Saravena don't have to be afraid
because the telephones are not tapped. It is time to denounce
the militias, they are the ones who have caused the most damage
to Arauca and also, logically, to the inhabitants of Saravena.
Do you think that the people who call themselves the army of
the people are really that?" |
Some locals eyed the soldiers warily, a few people went about their
business as usual, but many residents remained hidden behind closed
doors. However, there was no escaping the propaganda blitzkrieg.
In a bizarre scene that could have been lifted straight out of a
Fellini movie, two soldiers dressed in colorful red and yellow clown
outfits accompanied by uniformed troops went door to door handing
out leaflets offering rewards to residents willing to provide information
on rebel activities. Armed with a large bag of candy, the clowns
befriended any children they encountered, while nervous parents
looked on.
At the same time this military circus was taking place, several
soldiers busied themselves painting a colorful mural of a sunset
over ELN graffiti on a nearby wall. In the end, this military presence
only proved to be a temporary hindrance to the guerrillas who simply
melted into the fabric of the community for the few hours the army
remained in the area.
While
the PsyOp in San Luis targeted the general population, another program
currently being implemented by the Colombian army in Saravena specifically
targets children. In a program titled Soldier for a Day, children
between three and 12 years of age are brought to the army base every
Thursday to play soldier. The activities include Colombian troops
and uniformed army psychologists placing camouflage headbands on
the heads of the children and painting their faces with camouflage
make-up. At the same time, two soldiers dressed in clown suits entertain
the children; some of who seem to enjoy the charade while others
simply appear bewildered. Throughout the ordeal, the "little
soldiers" are continuously bombarded with the requisite pro-army
and anti-rebel propaganda. Finally, after a dip in the camp pool,
the children are trucked around the base on top of an armored personnel
carrier fully-equipped with a 50-caliber machine gun for their entertainment.
One army psychologist dressed in camouflage combat fatigues, Paola
Alzate Acosta, claims the program is supposed to help the children
cope with traumas caused by the violence they frequently experience
in Saravena. According to Alzate, the children "dream about
learning how to handle a gun to kill the bad guy in the neighborhood.
They dream about learning how to drive a tank to be able to destroy
the cylinder bombs." But the program has another, more immediate,
benefit: counseling children from marginalized barrios controlled
by the rebels provides the army with valuable intelligence on activities
not only within the barrios, but also within the children's own
homes and families.
When asked if some of these kids are children of guerrillas, Alzate
responded, "In many cases these are children whose parents
are in the militias and those children become conflicted about what
is right and what is wrong." She then stated, "In some
cases when we put camouflage headbands on them, they say that they
can't take them home because their fathers will yell at them. When
those kinds of things happen we try to talk to them to find out
what is happening at home."
Questions have been raised regarding the strategies used by the
army to entice children to attend these programs. According to one
local woman who requested anonymity for security reasons, she was
watching her friend's children at their house one afternoon when
soldiers arrived and said they were taking the kids to see the clowns.
The soldiers gave money and candy to the children and accused the
woman of being a guerrilla when she refused to let the children
go. She said the soldiers "were asking the children about their
mother and father," and then "they came in and checked
the house, looking at everything."
While such psychological warfare and intelligence gathering tactics
seem to contravene the Geneva Convention with regard to the involvement
of civilians, especially children, in the armed conflict, they appear
to have the support of U.S. military advisers in Colombia. One U.S.
Army Special Forces soldier stationed in Saravena emphasized the
importance of PsyOps when he stated, "This war is not going
to be won with bullets. It's going to be won by winning the people
over to the side of the Colombian army. You are not going to defeat
the guerrillas by humping through the jungle like in Vietnam."
While the Colombian army may not be having much success against
the guerrillas "humping through the jungle," it is evident
in Saravena that Vietnam-era PsyOps are playing an important role
in the ongoing counterinsurgency campaign.
This article originally appeared
in Colombia Report, an online journal
that was published by the Information Network of the Americas (INOTA).
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