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July 14, 2008
Wall Street Journal a “Front” for
State Terrorists
by Garry Leech
The title of this article might startle many readers, but it is
no more shocking than the contents of a recent Wall Street Journal
column written by Mary Anastasia O’Grady that brazenly supports
Colombian President Alvaro Uribe’s accusations that human
rights organizations in Colombia are “fronts” for terrorists.
O’Grady goes so far as to claim that the tactics used by the
Colombian military in its recent rescue of 15 hostages prove President
Uribe’s accusations. Clearly, the title of this article spoofs
O’Grady’s absurd claims by suggesting that her public
endorsement of Uribe’s accusations make the Wall Street
Journal a front for state terrorism, particularly in light
of the fact that the Colombian military is responsible for the majority
of the country’s human rights violations. In all seriousness
though, O’Grady’s claims are not only irresponsible
because they endanger the lives of human rights workers in Colombia,
they also illustrate just how ignorant the author is of how the
FARC operates in that country’s rural conflict zones.
In her July 7 Wall Street Journal column titled “FARC’s
‘Human Rights’ Friends,” O’Grady ludicrously
suggests that the Colombian military’s recent rescue operation
proved successful because the FARC and progressive NGOs are allies.
She claims that it is this alleged alliance that made it possible
for Colombian soldiers disguised as NGO workers and journalists
to simply waltz into FARC territory and convince the guerrillas
to handover the hostages. “How else to explain the fact that
the FARC swallowed the line without batting an eye?” she writes.
She later declared that, given the relationship between NGOs and
the guerrillas, “It’s not surprising that the FARC thought
a helicopter from an NGO was perfectly natural.” However,
O’Grady’s unoriginal hypothesis is nice from a propagandistic
perspective, but holds little water when the reality on the ground
is taken into account.
For more than eight years I have worked as an independent journalist
primarily focusing on US foreign policy in Colombia. Consequently,
I have spent a significant amount of time working in that country’s
remote rural conflict zones during which I have met and interviewed
numerous rank-and-file guerrillas and several high-ranking FARC
commanders—Raúl Reyes, Simón Trinidad, Ivan
Ríos and Alfonso Cano. And yet, despite the familiarity that
these FARC commanders have with both my name and my work as a lefty
journalist, I still had to endure terrifying experiences whenever
I encountered the rebel group.
For example, in 2001, FARC guerrillas in the city of Barrancabermeja
in northern Colombia detained me in a poor barrio and accused me
of being an informer for the military—it was no easy task
to convince them otherwise. In 2004, I was detained overnight by
the guerrillas in rural Caquetá while investigating displacement
caused by the Colombian military’s Plan Patriota counter-insurgency
operation. And, in August 2006, I was detained by the FARC in eastern
Colombia, interrogated and held at gunpoint in a remote farmhouse
for eleven hours as they sought to ensure that I was who I claimed
to be. In each instance, I was detained by a local commander who
was unwilling to make any decision regarding my fate without first
conferring with higher-ranking FARC commanders.
The point I am trying to make here is that journalists and NGO
workers who have encountered the FARC in rural Colombia know full
well that the guerrillas do not take anybody’s claims about
who they are at face value. Nor do they automatically assume that
if you are a journalist or an NGO worker that you are in any way
sympathetic to their cause. In fact, it is just the opposite. The
FARC is paranoid about anyone who enters its territories—particularly
with regard to journalists and NGO workers—and automatically
assumes that such people are threats. And, to the same degree that
the Wall Street Journal’s O’Grady and Colombia’s
President Uribe accuse progressive NGOs of being fronts for the
guerrillas, the FARC believes that the very same NGOs are fronts
for capitalist imperialism—as difficult as that might be for
O’Grady to accept.
If she had any understanding of how the FARC operates in rural
Colombia, O’Grady would have known that César, the
rebel commander in charge of the hostages, would had to have been
convinced in advance—perhaps by undercover military operatives,
as the government claims—that it was a legitimate mission
that had been authorized by his superiors before he would hand over
the hostages. No local FARC commander would simply assume that an
NGO was working with the guerrillas just because they showed up
in the region, which is precisely what O’Grady suggests occurred
so she could claim it as proof that progressive NGOs work hand-in-hand
with the guerrillas.
Consequently, the key aspect in the rescue operation—if it
did unfold as the Colombian government claims—was not the
fact that the undercover soldiers were impersonating NGO workers
and journalists, but the convincing of César that higher-ranking
rebel commanders had indeed authorized the hostage pick-up. Without
receiving any such advance authorization, it would not have mattered
who the undercover soldiers carrying out the operation were impersonating,
the local FARC commander would have detained and investigated them.
Therefore, while the rescue mission might illustrate the effectiveness
of the Colombian military’s intelligence operations, it does
not support O’Grady’s and President Uribe’s assertions
that NGOs are fronts for the guerrillas.
Because I have had access to the FARC, I am regularly approached
by NGOs—both Colombian and international—asking if I
could help put them in contact with the guerrillas because they
would like to discuss a variety of topics (i.e. child soldiers,
kidnapping, landmines, hostage release and other human rights issues)
with the rebels. If, as O’Grady and President Uribe claim,
NGOs—particularly human rights groups—are fronts for
the FARC, why would so many of them lack contact with the rebel
group and need help from people like me? Most NGOs I have dealt
with over the years, and there are many, do not like the guerrillas,
which the FARC is fully aware of and why it is so distrusting of
them and often refuses to engage with them. This distrust is illustrated
by the fact that, while NGOs are active in rural regions being contested
by all the armed actors—the guerrillas, the military and the
paramilitaries—they have virtually no presence in the remote
rural areas of eastern and southern Colombia that constitute the
FARC’s traditional strongholds.
Ultimately, right-wingers like O’Grady and President Uribe
want to have their cake and to eat it too. On the one hand, they
claim that the FARC has no significant support among the Colombian
population. And yet, on the other hand, they claim that all these
NGOs support the guerrillas; that the thousands of peasants living
in FARC-controlled regions that are victimized by the military’s
counter-insurgency operations are sympathetic to the rebels; that
the thousands of leftist politicians, NGO workers and community
leaders who have been arbitrarily arrested by the Uribe government
in recent years are all guerrillas; that many of the leaders and
members of the country’s unions are rebels; and that the Colombia’s
universities are full of guerrilla sympathizers. These claims represent
a contradiction repeatedly voiced by the right that has gone unchallenged
for far too long.
The right cannot have it both ways. If the FARC has no significant
support, as they claim, then all of those sectors of civil society
that are routinely repressed by the government cannot be guerrilla
sympathizers. In which case, there must be an alternative reason
for the State repressing those sectors of the population; and that
reason is simply that they dare to non-violently and democratically
challenge the government’s security and economic policies.
The government conveniently labels these sectors as guerrillas or
“terrorists” in order to justify repressing them.
Finally, when people like O’Grady and President Uribe publicly
label NGO workers as terrorists, they are endangering the lives
of these people by increasing the possibility that the Colombian
state security forces and their right-wing paramilitary allies will
target them—which, on second thoughts, perhaps does make the
Wall Street Journal a front for state terrorists. Ultimately,
such accusations by O’Grady and Uribe are not only irresponsible,
they also illustrate an unwillingness to tolerate the democratic
and non-violent expression of political views that differ from their
own.
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