|
May 30, 2005
Washington’s Colombian Habit
by Eric Fichtl
As U.S. involvement in Colombia’s civil war reaches dangerous
new levels, there are new allegations about just what U.S. taxpayers
are getting for the billions of dollars. In the last two months,
five U.S. soldiers have been arrested on cocaine smuggling charges,
two other U.S. troops were arrested for allegedly arranging an arms
deal with Colombia’s rightwing paramilitaries, and—despite
running the largest current account deficit in U.S. history—the
Bush Administration is now seeking an additional $734 million to
continue its counternarcotics folly in Colombia, despite no evidence
of a reduction in supply.
In the most recent
scandal to plague the embattled U.S. military, Warrant Officer Allan
N. Tanquary and Sergeant Jesus Hernandez of the 7th Special Forces
Group based at Fort Bragg were arrested by Colombian police on May
3. Serving in Colombia as part of the U.S. contingent of 800 military
advisors to the Colombian military, the pair were caught with three
Colombian civilians and over 40,000 rounds of ammunition that Colombian
officials say were destined to be sold to members of Colombia’s
right-wing paramilitaries, a group with which the Colombian military
is theoretically at war, and which the U.S. government considers
a terrorist organization.
The U.S. Embassy in Bogotá took immediate steps to have
the two arrestees turned over to U.S. custody so that they could
be shuttled to the United States under a 1974 treaty that ensures
U.S. officials and soldiers “diplomatic immunity” in
Colombia. On May 5, with aggravation mounting in Bogotá,
Colombia’s Inspector General requested a one-day delay in
the planned handover so that he could investigate the legality of
the 1974 treaty under Colombia’s 1991 constitution, but the
Colombian Attorney General’s office had already passed the
pair to U.S. embassy officials. Then, the Attorney General’s
office had an overnight change of heart and on the morning of May
6 requested permission to question Tanquary and Hernandez. The U.S.
Embassy initially agreed to the request, but then quickly whisked
the two soldiers back to the United States.
The incident has proven quite an embarrassment to the U.S. military
and diplomatic corps, since Colombia’s paramilitaries are
included on the U.S. State Department’s list of Foreign Terrorist
Organizations. State Department Spokesman Richard Boucher jumped
in on damage control: “There is absolutely no U.S. policy
and U.S. support or U.S. inclination or U.S. military operations
involved in arming paramilitaries… We have declared these
groups to be terrorist groups.”
The diplomatic flurry continued, with several big guns called out
to help diffuse the tension. On May 11, General Bantz Craddock,
the head of the U.S. military’s Southern Command, appeared
at a school opening in Colombia and stated, “I can assure
you that within the U.S. military investigations will be thorough
and complete… The required persons will be held accountable.”
Addressing the House International Relations Committee in Washington
that same day, Assistant Secretary of State for the Western Hemisphere
Roger Noriega stated, “We continue to monitor the investigation
by Colombian and U.S. authorities into developments last week in
which U.S. military trainers on temporary duty in Colombia were
alleged to be involved in trafficking in ammunition. All affected
agencies take these allegations very seriously; we recognized what
is at stake. We and the Colombian government intend to get to the
bottom of it.”
Also on May 11, the Washington Times ran a commentary
by the recently retired Assistant Secretary of State for International
Narcotics and Law Enforcement, Robert Charles, in which he advocated
for the renewal of Plan Colombia, touting such benefits to Colombia
as the Plan’s training program in the “culture of lawfulness”
and underscoring its importance as a bulwark against “divisive
radical socialism” emanating from Venezuela. While giving
a hard sell for additional Plan Colombia funding that is all but
guaranteed in Washington, Charles neglected to mention the recent
arrests of seven U.S. soldiers on arms- and drug-smuggling charges
tied to their participation in Plan Colombia.
The May arrests of Tanquary and Hernandez come in the wake of another
smuggling scandal involving U.S. troops in Colombia. In March this
year, five U.S. soldiers were arrested for allegedly smuggling 16
kilos of cocaine with a street value estimated to be between $300,000
and $500,000 to the United States aboard a U.S. military aircraft.
Despite calls from Colombian lawmakers for the soldiers to stand
trial in Colombia—especially because Colombia has honored
hundreds of U.S. extradition requests in narcotrafficking cases—the
United States would not consider the extradition requests, insisting
the five soldiers had diplomatic immunity under the 1974 arrangement.
In 1999, another problematic episode brought considerable embarrassment
to U.S. operations in Colombia. That year, Laurie Hiett—the
wife of U.S. Colonel James Hiett, then-coordinator of U.S. anti-drug
activities in Colombia—pleaded guilty to smuggling some $700,000
worth of cocaine and heroin to the United States using diplomatic
postal services. Laurie Hiett received a five-year sentence, while
her husband, who pleaded guilty to money laundering charges related
to the smuggled drugs, only received a five-month prison sentence,
outraging many Colombians.
It should come as no surprise that U.S. personnel stationed in
Colombia are succumbing to the corruptive influence of the illegal
trades that help fuel the country’s conflict. With the U.S.
street value of cocaine, according to White House ONDCP figures,
at between $10,000 and $36,000 per kilo, the incentive of the profits
to be made from even a single successful smuggling deal cannot be
underestimated. Given that a few kilos of smuggled cocaine has a
value in the range of the yearly salaries of many U.S. personnel
in Colombia, and considering the ready accessibility of cocaine
there, the temptation is considerable. The Colombian arms trade
offers similar opportunities for illicit rewards.
U.S. taxpayers should expect much more of this behavior in the
future, as Washington is sucked deeper into the vortex of Colombia’s
endless war. The Bush Administration recently increased the number
of U.S. military personnel in Colombia from 400 to 800, in addition
to the 600 private military contractors performing various roles
there. Plan Colombia has already cost taxpayers $3.5 billion, and
has signally failed to accomplish its original objective: the eradication
of coca and poppy plants, which are planted anew or more effectively
hidden after each fumigation flight. According to satellite data
touted by the White House in March this year, the area of Colombian
land under coca cultivation remained stable during 2004, unchanged
from the 2003 level of 114,000 hectares.
On the other hand, with each dollar spent on Plan Colombia, the
United States is drawn more inextricably into the Colombian state’s
counterinsurgency war. As President Bush seeks Congressional support
for his $734 million one-year renewal of Plan Colombia, it is time
to once again reflect on Washington’s Colombian habit.
Eric Fichtl is the Associate Editor of Colombia
Journal.
Back to Top .
Comments
The
views expressed in this article are that of the author
and may not reflect the views of Colombia Journal.
Copyright © 2000-2008 Colombia Journal. All rights
reserved.
|
|