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February 20, 2006
Who Are the Real Terrorists in Colombia?
by Garry Leech
Following 9/11, the justification for U.S. military intervention
in Colombia quickly evolved from combating illicit drugs to fighting
a war on terror. Despite the fact that all three of Colombia’s
irregular armed groups were on the U.S. State Department’s
list of international terrorist organizations, it soon became apparent
that the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) would
be the Bush administration’s principal target. Washington’s
focus on the FARC in its war on terror is curious given that pro-government
forces have committed significantly more acts of terrorism against
the civilian population than have leftist guerrillas.
While
the number of homicides in Colombia has dropped significantly in
recent years, it is a decrease in criminal killings that accounts
for the huge majority of this reduction. There has been little change
in the number of civilian deaths related to the country’s
civil conflict. Furthermore, according to the Bogotá-based
Resource Center for Analysis of the Conflict (CERAC), the Colombian
military and its right-wing paramilitary allies have been responsible
for 58 percent of Colombia’s conflict-related civilian deaths
over the past 16 years. And yet, Washington set its anti-terror
sights firmly on the leftist FARC following 9/11.
Less than three weeks after the terrorist attacks on New York and
Washington, Democratic Senator Bob Graham of Florida initiated a
campaign to portray the FARC as a major international terrorist
threat: “The FARC are doing the same thing as global level
terrorists, that is organizing in small cells that don’t have
contact with each other and depend on a central command to organize
attacks, in terms of logistics and finance. It is the same style
of operation as Bin Laden.”
In October 2001, the State Department’s top counterterrorism
official, Francis X. Taylor, followed Senator Graham’s lead
when he declared that Washington’s strategy for fighting terrorism
in the Western Hemisphere would include, “where appropriate,
as we are doing in Afghanistan, the use of military power.”
Taylor left little doubt about the “appropriate” target
when he stated that the FARC “is the most dangerous international
terrorist group based in this hemisphere.”
Meanwhile, Taylor’s boss, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell,
told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that the FARC belong
in the same category as al-Qaeda: “There is no difficulty
in identifying [Osama bin Laden] as a terrorist and getting everybody
to rally against him. Now, there are other organizations that probably
meet a similar standard. The FARC in Colombia comes to mind.”
In the last week of October, Senator Graham ramped up his accusations,
declaring that Colombia should be the principal battlefield in the
global war on terror. According to the Florida senator, there were
almost 500 incidents of terrorism committed worldwide against U.S.
citizens and interests in 2000, and “of those almost 500 incidents,
44 per cent were in one country. Was that country Egypt? No. Israel?
No. Afghanistan? Hardly a tick. Forty-four per cent were in Colombia.
That’s where the terrorist war has been raging.”
What Graham failed to mention was that the huge majority of “terrorist”
attacks against the United States by Colombian guerrillas consisted
of bombing oil pipelines used by U.S. companies. In other words,
the attacks were designed to hurt U.S. corporate profit margins,
not U.S. civilians. In fact, the Florida senator neglected to point
out that these attacks did not kill a single U.S. citizen in 2000,
the year to which Graham was referring.
The campaign to vilify the FARC proved successful when the U.S.
Congress approved a $28 billion counterterrorism bill in July 2002
that included $35 million in supplemental aid for Colombia. The
bill also lifted conditions restricting drug war aid to counternarcotics
operations, instead allowing it to be used for counterinsurgency
operations. The following year, the Bush administration provided
Colombia with a further $93 million in counterterrorism aid and
deployed U.S. Army Special Forces troops to the South American country.
Clearly, the Bush administration had singled out the FARC as the
principal international terrorist threat in Colombia. However, two
problems were immediately apparent with regards to the U.S. stance.
The first being that the FARC’s military operations are confined
to Colombia and, therefore, it is difficult to conceive of the group
as an international terrorist organization given that it only poses
a threat to U.S. political and economic interests in Colombia and
not to the United States itself. The second problem rests in the
fact that the Bush administration has virtually ignored the violence
perpetrated by the Colombian state and its right-wing paramilitary
allies, who are also far more deeply involved in drug trafficking
than the FARC.
Generally speaking, the armed actors in Colombia’s conflict
can be lumped into two groupings: One grouping is intent on defending
the government and the country’s political and economic status
quo, while the other is seeking to overthrow the government. The
first grouping consists of the Colombian military and the right-wing
paramilitary United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC), which
are responsible for perpetrating state and state-supported terrorism
respectively.
The second grouping contains the FARC and another smaller leftist
rebel force, the National Liberation Army (ELN), whose targeting
of the civilian population could be considered group terrorism.
Based on this simplification of the armed groups involved in Colombia’s
conflict, acts of terrorism perpetrated against the civilian population
can be broken down into two categories: pro-government and anti-government.
Following the widely used definition that terrorism consists of
the use or threat of violence against civilians in order to achieve
a political objective, the degree of terrorism perpetrated against
the civilian population by each armed actor can be determined. This
analysis will focus primarily on the killings, kidnappings, arbitrary
detentions and forced “disappearances” that have occurred
since 2002; the year that the Bush administration began providing
counterterrorism aid to Colombia and President Alvaro Uribe assumed
office. It will not take into account attacks against infrastructure
and other economic targets that did not result in civilian casualties.
By definition, these attacks fall under the category of arson, not
terrorism.
In recent years, according to CERAC, approximately half of guerrilla
attacks appeared to be aimed at disrupting the Colombian economy,
which “suggests that the guerrillas are not, as is often suggested,
just interested in getting rich off drugs. They really do seem to
aim for political power; local power in the short run and national
power in the long run.” Similarly, UN special envoy to Colombia
James LeMoyne warned in May 2003 that, in a country where the inequitable
wealth distribution has left 64 per cent of the population living
in poverty, it would be “a mistake to think that the FARC
members are only drug traffickers and terrorists.”
While the guerrillas have perpetrated attacks against non-combatants,
Colombia’s right-wing paramilitaries have historically killed
more civilians than have the guerrillas. Furthermore, the difference
in the number of paramilitary killings of civilians compared to
the number committed by the guerrillas has increased since 1998,
according to CERAC. The Colombian Commission of Jurists (CCJ) has
also highlighted the fact that more civilians are killed by paramilitaries
than by guerrillas. For example, 6,978 people were killed as a result
of the conflict during Uribe’s first year in office, which
amounted to 19 people a day. The CCJ determined that paramilitaries
were responsible for at least 62 per cent of the killings, more
than double the amount committed by the guerrillas.
Meanwhile, a February 2006 United Nations report noted that the
number of civilians killed by government forces increased in 2005.
Many of these killings were extra-judicial executions by soldiers
and police who would often dress the corpses as guerrillas to present
them as combat deaths. The UN report stated, “Cases were recorded
in which commanders themselves had allegedly supported the act of
dressing the victims in guerrilla garments to cover up facts and
simulate combat.”
Paramilitary attacks also increased dramatically in 2005 to more
than double the number that occurred in each of the previous two
years despite a supposed cease-fire and demobilization of some 15,000
paramilitaries. CERAC points out that the increased paramilitary
attacks “cannot be attributed to the few paramilitary groups
that are not negotiating disarmament and demobilization with the
government. On the contrary, this corresponds mostly with those
areas where the negotiating groups are located.”
CERAC’s
findings that paramilitary violence is continuing despite the “demobilization”
process echo those of Amnesty International and other human rights
organizations. In September 2005, Amnesty International noted that
many “demobilized” paramilitaries have simply restructured
their operations and are continuing with their violent activities.
This is particularly troubling given Uribe’s recent announcement
that 15,000 to 20,000 demobilized paramilitaries will work as “civilian
axillaries” to the police and that their responsibilities
would include patrolling highways and carrying out other public
order tasks.
The aforementioned statistics clearly illustrate that the paramilitaries
are the principal perpetrators of lethal attacks against the civilian
population—a pattern that is likely to continue given the
increase in paramilitary killings last year. And when the increasing
number of civilians being killed by government forces is taken into
account, state and state-supported terrorism are responsible for
approximately two-thirds of civilian deaths in Colombia’s
conflict.
Pro-government forces are also responsible for an overwhelming
percentage of forced “disappearances.” According to
the Association of Family Members of the Detained and Disappeared
(ASFADDES), 3,593 people were forcibly “disappeared”
during 2002 and 2003. Even the U.S. State Department has admitted,
“Paramilitaries were responsible for most forced disappearances.”
In contrast, the guerrillas have been responsible for a greater
percentage of kidnappings than the paramilitaries. According to
the Colombian NGO País Libre, 1,441 people were kidnapped
in 2004. País Libre has determined that armed groups engaged
in the conflict carried out 41 percent of the kidnappings, while
common criminals and undetermined actors were responsible for the
remainder. The FARC was responsible for 22 percent of the kidnappings,
or approximately 320 cases. The ELN, meanwhile, accounted for nine
percent and the paramilitaries for ten percent.
One of the more troubling trends in state terrorism under the Uribe
administration has been the dramatic increase in arbitrary detentions
reminiscent of those perpetrated by the Southern Cone dictatorships
in the 1970s. According to the Colombian non-governmental coalition
Coordination Colombia-Europe-USA (CCEEU) and the Colombian Observatory
for the Administration of Justice (OCA), state security forces committed
6,332 arbitrary detentions between August 2002 and August 2004.
They note that many of these detentions and the ensuing interrogations
were conducted based on information provided by paid informants
and that the Attorney General’s office did not investigate
the validity of this information prior to the detentions. Even more
troubling is the fact that, because the state had accused them of
being “subversives,” detainees were at risk of being
killed or “disappeared” by paramilitaries following
their release.
In 2005, the director of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
office in Colombia, Michael Frühling, announced that his office
“has noted with concern that illegal or arbitrary detentions
constitute, both in number and frequency, one of the most worrying
violations of human rights reported in the country.” Frühling
further noted that the UN “is also concerned that mass-scale
detentions and individual seizures with no juridical basis frequently
affect members of vulnerable groups such as human rights advocates,
community leaders, trade union activists and people living in areas
where illegal armed groups are active.”
The statistics presented in this article clearly illustrate that
state and state-supported terrorism is responsible for the majority
of attacks against the civilian population. The government and paramilitaries
are responsible for two-thirds of civilian deaths in Colombia’s
conflict. And, as even the U.S. State Department concedes, the paramilitaries
are also the principal perpetrators of the thousands of forced “disappearances”
that occur annually. Meanwhile, the government is responsible for
100 percent of the thousands of arbitrary detentions that have occurred
since Uribe assumed office. Kidnapping is the only category in which
the guerrillas, primarily the FARC, are the principal perpetrators.
Both the U.S. and Colombian governments have successfully focused
the public’s attention on the activities of the FARC, making
the guerrilla group the principal target in the war on terror in
Colombia. The mainstream media in both the United States and Colombia,
primarily due to its over-reliance on official sources, has contributed
significantly to the public perception that the FARC poses the greatest
terrorist threat.
In reality, however, the United States is providing hundreds of
millions of dollars in military aid annually to the principal perpetrators
of terrorism in Colombia. Consequently, given the aforementioned
statistics, it is difficult to conclude that the true objective
of Washington’s war on terror is to seriously combat terrorism.
A more plausible explanation is that the Bush administration is
militarily protecting U.S. political and economic interests in Colombia
under the guise of the war on terror.
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