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August 30 2004
Washington Has Lost Its Way in Colombia
by Eric Fichtl
Flying into Puerto Asis, in southern Colombia’s Putumayo
department, the vastness and denseness of the jungle was striking.
As the plane descended, here and there were scattered clearings,
ranches and farms cut into the thick green landscape. Around them
lay more and more jungle stretching off into the horizon. Moments
before landing, the town itself came into view, a concrete and brick
oasis amongst the trees, teeming with activity and crass commercialism,
much of it the result of fast cash from Puerto Asis’s status
as a cocaine trading center. It was February 2004 and my colleague
and I were investigating the effects of the U.S.-funded aerial fumigation
campaign that has crisscrossed the skies of Putumayo in recent years,
spraying an untested cocktail of herbicides and chemical additives
over peasant fields amongst the virgin jungle, killing legal and
illegal crops alike while reportedly harming the health of animals
and humans.
The
fumigation campaigns are a much-touted part of the U.S. government’s
anti-drug pact with Colombia, dubbed Plan Colombia, which has so
far funneled $3.3 billion to the Andean country in just under four
years and made it the third largest recipient of U.S. military aid
in the world (fourth if counting Iraq). Aerial fumigation, conducted
by crop dusters with helicopter gunship support, was supposed to
be the silver bullet in the U.S. and Colombian governments’
supply-side fight against illicit coca cultivation. But the evidence
on the ground in Putumayo, as well as on the streets of U.S. cities,
make clear that the fumigation campaign is a monumental failure.
My colleague and I had no trouble finding coca plots in Putumayo.
Just outside the town of Santana, which hosts a Colombian Army base,
we crossed an army-guarded bridge over the Putumayo River and boarded
canoes with a local campesino. A short way downstream, we scampered
up the muddy banks of the river and walked into a field where coca
bushes basked in the sunlight allowed in by the clear-cutting of
the rainforest canopy. Walking through jungle paths, we came out
on another coca patch, and later, yet another. We saw five fields
in all, all brimming with coca bushes.
What of the fumigation, we asked the campesino. “They fumigated
us six months ago, but the coca grows back quickly. We just harvested
again last week. You missed it by a few days.” The campesino
went on to explain how planting several varieties of coca bushes—Peruana,
Boliviana, Tingo, Punta Roja, and Boliviana Blanca—insured
healthy harvests in spite of eradication efforts. He pointed out
that the Boliviana Blanca strain, standing up to nine feet tall,
was twice as high as other coca bushes. Also, it is particularly
resistant to herbicides, and sprouts new light green leaves within
days of being harvested.
Writing in the August 27 edition of The Scotsman, BBC
correspondent Jeremy McDermott reported similar developments in
Colombia’s far northern departments (See New
Super Strain…). The article describes a new crossbred,
genetically-engineered, herbicide-resistant “super strain”
of coca that is yielding four times as many leaves from the same
acreage. As Colombian Anti-Narcotics Police Colonel Diego Caicedo,
who was in on the discovery, put it, “What we found were not
bushes but trees.” McDermott also interviewed a coca grower
in Putumayo, who explained that improved coca strains have allowed
campesinos to plant ever more compact fields while getting higher
yields: “We know the spray planes need a target area of three
hectares. Now we just have smaller fields with more intensive farming
of the coca bushes.” While it has not been confirmed whether
the new “super strain” is actually planted in Putumayo,
the bushes my colleague and I saw several months earlier may have
been that variety. They were definitely a high-yield variety of
coca.
In another sign of the campaign’s ineffectiveness, Colombia’s
counternarcotics police estimate that 85 percent of the coca crops
they fumigate are immediately replanted. Failing that option, many
campesinos move to areas where the fumigation planes are not allowed
to spray, like national parks, or to better hiding spots deep in
Colombia’s Amazon, beyond the conventional reach of the crop
dusters.
In early August, White House Office of Drug Control Policy head
John Walters visited Colombia to inspect progress in the “war
on drugs.” After flying over fumigated coca fields, the drug
czar admitted, “We have not yet seen in all these efforts
what we’re hoping for on the supply side, which is a reduction
in availability.” A week later, after presumably being set
straight by his boss in the White House, Walters sought to clarify
his statement when he announced, “In the next 12 months we
will see changes in availability of the drug—probably first
lower purity, followed by higher prices.”
“We have a history in the United States of not following
through on programs like this,” Walters said. He recommended
staying the course in Colombia, suggesting that eradication is having
the desired reduction effect but that drug traffickers have stockpiled
huge cocaine reserves that they are still using to maintain supply.
Walters claimed there was a 30 percent reduction in Colombian coca
production in the last two years and dismissed evidence of the “squeezed
balloon effect” despite rising rates of coca production in
Bolivia and Peru, countries long touted as drug war successes by
U.S. officials. Left unmentioned by Walters was Ecuador, which has
seen coca cultivation take root since Plan Colombia commenced.
But as the Cato Institute’s Ted Galen Carpenter pointed out
in response
to Walters’ apparent flip-flop, after the Clinton administration
initiated Plan Colombia in 2000, “within months U.S. officials
boasted about the amount of coca plants… that the aerial spraying
campaign was eradicating. Similar claims of success continued until
recently” (See State Department
Report Delivers a False Positive). This stay-the-course-despite-no-reduction-in-availability
mentality is a cornerstone of U.S. drug war policy no matter which
party controls the White House. Indeed, given decades of Washington’s
failed interdiction efforts, Walters’ claim that just one
more year should really put a dent in the drug trade has an even
more hollow ring than U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s
pre-invasion prediction that Iraqis would embrace U.S. troops with
smiles and flowers.
But drug czar Walters is far from the only politician lost on the
inside-the-beltway Möbius strip. In a Washington Times
commentary
on August 25, the State Department’s Assistant Secretary for
the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs,
Robert Charles, chastised the National Geographic editors
and Chilean photojournalist Carlos Villalon for an investigative
article entitled “Cocaine
Country” that appeared in the magazine’s July 2004
issue. Based on three years of research, Villalon’s photo
essay and brief report gave a rare and valuable glimpse into the
lives of many thousands of Colombians who live in a remote part
of the approximately 40 percent of the Colombian territory controlled
by the country’s largest guerrilla group, the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). The article fit clearly within
the magazine’s longstanding tradition of balanced ethnographic
journalism.
But for Assistant Secretary Charles, National Geographic’s
editors “should have known that they could be seen as lending
credibility to those who supply drugs that kill more than 21,000
Americans each year and fund terrorism in our hemisphere.”
In condemning the magazine’s coverage of FARC-run areas, Charles
alluded to the State Department’s list of Foreign Terrorist
Organizations (FTOs), of which the FARC is one member. In his editorial,
Charles complained bitterly that Villalon’s article portrayed
the FARC as “benevolent,” rather than as an “incalculable
evil,” and that Villalon was guilty of “disturbing”
omissions concerning the FARC’s role in bombings, kidnappings,
drug trafficking, and other crimes. While few observers deny the
FARC’s role in the aforementioned activities, these were clearly
not the focus of Villalon’s work.
Nonetheless, by running through a litany of FARC crimes and opining,
“inexplicably, there was little mention of this” in
the National Geographic article, Charles brought the argument
to a national level and committed his own egregious omission in
the process. Noticeably absent from Charles’ one-sided tirade
was any mention of another group on the State Department’s
FTO list: the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC). This
right-wing paramilitary group has repeatedly committed crimes every
bit as heinous as those of the FARC, if not more so. Charles’
own State Department estimates the AUC are responsible for 70 percent
of the country’s human rights abuses, and the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Agency’s Karen Tandy recently told Congress that the AUC are
“inextricably linked to the drug trade.” The mysteriously
vanished former AUC leader Carlos Castaño once admitted that
70 percent of the group’s funding came from the drug trade,
and the United States has outstanding drug-related indictments and
extradition requests on several of the group’s current leaders.
Since Assistant Secretary Charles felt it acceptable to take a
respected magazine to task for its editorial decision by claiming
it lent credibility to the FARC, spare a moment to consider how
the following act, condoned by Washington’s anti-drug allies
in Bogotá, could possibly be viewed as anything but granting
unwarranted legitimacy to the AUC. On July 28, AUC commanders Salvatore
Mancuso, Ramon Isaza, and Ivan Roberto Duque were flown by a Colombian
Air Force plane to Bogotá, where government vehicles whisked
them to the Colombian Congress so that they could speak, at length,
about the “heroic” deeds they had performed for Colombia.
The event was sanctioned by President Alvaro Uribe, who granted
the trio a two-day safe conduct pass so that they could avoid being
arrested on the multiple outstanding warrants and extradition requests
against them.
Considering the numbers of innocent civilians killed by the group
these three command, this event was akin to President Bush inviting
Osama bin Laden and his cadre to address the U.S. Congress, then
returning them to their safe haven abroad. Instead of crying foul
over Bogotá’s pandering to wanted criminals, the Bush
administration is now contemplating using some $150 million in U.S.
taxpayers’ money to pay for the amnesty and demobilization
of thousands of AUC combatants as part of Uribe’s half-baked
peace negotiations (which, by virtue of not including the country’s
main insurgency, the FARC, will not achieve peace). Given that,
on paper, Washington considers the AUC a terrorist organization
on par with the FARC or al Qaeda, where would such a move leave
the president who once suggested that “Either you are with
us or you are with the terrorists”?
As the Colombian case makes clear, fighting drugs at their source
is proving to be an exercise in futility. But if history is any
indicator, we shouldn’t expect the facts to get in the way
of Washington’s zealotry. Meanwhile, the Bush administration
has contradicted its own anti-terror rhetoric by selectively supporting
negotiations with a group on the State Department’s foreign
terrorist list. Without doubt, inconsistencies in the war on drugs
and terror are becoming increasingly apparent.
Eric Fichtl is the Associate Editor of Colombia
Journal.
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