Pubdate: Sat, 02 Sep 2000
Source: Economist, The (UK)
Copyright: 2000 The Economist Newspaper Limited
Contact:  111 West 57th Street, New York NY 10019 (US office)
Fax: (212) 541 9378
Website: http://www.economist.com/

THE GRINGOS LAND IN COLOMBIA

Colombian officials claim that American military aid will change the course
of their war with the FARC guerrillas, and persuade them to take peace talks
seriously. But much fighting still lies ahead

The visit was brief, amounting to not much more than an extended
photo-opportunity and a pat on the back for Colombia's President Andres
Pastrana. Yet the symbolic meaning of Bill Clinton's few hours in the walled
colonial city of Cartagena on August 30th was great. It set the seal on a
new strategic venture by the United States, the largest such commitment in
its backyard since the Central American wars of the 1980s. This time the aim
is to prop up the Colombian state in the face of the steady advance of
left-wing guerrillas, the drug trade and general disorder.

Amid heavy security precautions, which included defusing a small bomb not
far from the presidential route, Mr Clinton and senior congressmen toured
drug-fighting facilities and consoled police widows. His visit came days
after he had signed a law approving $1.3 billion in mostly military aid for
Colombia. Its purpose is to help Mr Pastrana's government fight drugs:
Colombia is the source of 90% of the cocaine reaching the United States, and
some of the heroin.

But the war on drugs has become inextricably linked with Colombia's other,
older, wars, involving the security forces, left-wing guerrillas and
right-wing paramilitary groups. And it is this intertwined threat which has
scared American officials. "Profits from the drug trade fund civil conflict.
Powerful forces make their own law, and you face danger every day," said Mr
Clinton. The Colombians know it all too well.

Some of the aid is to provide alternatives to coca cultivation; $122m is to
strengthen the justice system, including the human-rights division of the
attorney-general's office. But most is to train and equip with 60
helicopters a new military brigade whose job is to secure the coca-growing
regions of southern Colombia now under the control of the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the largest guerrilla group. An American
general will move to Colombia, as head of several hundred military
instructors.

The aim is not just to dent the drug trade, but to cut the flow of drug
money to the FARC. In all, officials reckon that the FARC collects some
$600m a year, from drugs, kidnapping and extortion. With this income, the
guerrilla commanders have been able to expand their army to 17,000 troops,
and acquire a steady supply of arms. For example, Peru last month claimed to
have broken up a gang that had already air-dropped some 7,500 rifles to the
FARC.

Attacking the FARC's finances has now become the centrepiece of the
government's military strategy, according to General Fernando Tapias, the
commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Officials hope this will reverse a
decade of steady growth for the FARC, and force its leadership to take
seriously the peace talks launched two years ago by Mr Pastrana, which have
got nowhere.

Yet the obstacles, both military and political, remain formidable. The
FARC's strategy has changed, too. In the past few years it had begun to
stage attacks on large army units. But better intelligence and co-ordination
by the armed forces allowed them to inflict serious losses on the guerrillas
last year.

Since then, the FARC has shifted back to isolated attacks on rural police
stations, often firing gas cylinders packed with explosives, which
indiscriminately kill civilians as well as policemen. It has staged 57 such
attacks so far this year. In four cases, they destroyed the police stations,
killing or capturing all the policemen.

General Tapias sees this shift as proof that the FARC has been weakened. His
beefed-up anti-kidnap teams have had successes too, freeing six hostages
from guerrilla hands last month. Yet so far little suggests that the FARC's
return to the well-tried techniques of guerrilla warfare amounts to a
strategic reverse. Its forces are still growing. It is using a
"demilitarised" zone, which Mr Pastrana approved to get the peace talks
going, to train and equip recruits. It has expanded its urban "militias":
several recent kidnaps have occurred in or near Bogota, the capital.

The FARC has also expanded its enclave, by attacking police stations in
towns around the edge of the "demilitarised" zone. Having eliminated the
democratic state, it has introduced its own government. That change may be
made official by the municipal elections due in October: in the areas that
it influences, the FARC, through death threats, is ensuring that the only
candidates standing for mayor will be its friends.

Some analysts believe the FARC's powers of endurance are greater than those
of the government: kidnapping and disorder have helped to weaken Colombia's
economy, and to prompt an exodus abroad of the middle class. Mr Pastrana,
like his predecessor, Ernesto Samper, is now deeply unpopular.

During Mr Clinton's visit, a score of Colombians died in rebel attacks, and
several thousand protestors demonstrated. But other Colombians greeted him
warmly. Polls suggest that most welcome American aid. Yet turning the
Colombian armed forces into the kind of effective modern force required to
defeat the FARC would require support on a much greater scale. Mr Clinton
seemed to recognise that: "We have no military objective. We support the
peace process," he said.

FEAR IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD

Even so, the aid is controversial. Several of Colombia's neighbours fear
that the aid will prompt an escalation in the war, and that fighting,
refugees and the drug trade will spill across the country's borders. Brazil
has moved 6,000 troops to its Amazon frontier with Colombia; it plans to
send 6,000 more and six new helicopters.

Many Americans fear that they are getting dragged into a civil war.
Human-rights groups are outraged that Mr Clinton last week signed a waiver
allowing the aid to be disbursed, even though the State Department had
reported that Colombia's armed forces failed to satisfy most of the
human-rights conditions contained in the aid bill. "How can you reasonably
expect the armed forces to improve their record if they understand that the
conditions will be waived?" asks Jose Miguel Vivanco, of Human Rights Watch,
a New York-based group.

Those conditions are aimed at breaking links between the armed forces and
the right-wing paramilitaries, and at ensuring that those accused of
atrocities are tried in civilian, rather than military, courts. Mr Pastrana
has taken some steps in that direction: last month, a new military penal
code came into force that requires cases of torture and forced
disappearance, but not murder, to be tried in civilian courts. And he has
sacked, but not punished, half-a-dozen senior officers accused of
paramilitary links.

Loosely co-ordinated in the United Self-Defence Forces of Colombia (AUC),
the paramilitaries too derive income from the drug trade, and now number
some 7,000. Their attacks, and their massacres of civilians alleged to be
guerrilla sympthasiers, have all-but defeated the ELN, a smaller guerrilla
group which hopes to start peace talks. The AUC has now moved forces to the
main cities, and to Putumayo in the south.

Many Colombians see the paramilitaries as the tool with which to defeat the
FARC. "Their ties with the military brigades are stronger and closer than
ever," says Mr Vivanco. They are another, menacing, symptom of the
diminishing authority of the democratic state. Into this complex, vicious
and many-sided conflict the United States is now boldly treading.
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