|
WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
ARTICLE:
Volume XVII, No 3, FALL 2000
Two Wars
or One? Drugs, Guerrillas, and Colombia's New Violencia
William
M. LeoGrande and Kenneth E. Sharpe
[Go
to interactive
discussion forum]
The recently
approved $1.3 billion aid package for the war on drugs in Colombia
and the Andean region marks a major shift in U.S. policy, reminiscent
of the shift in 1980-81 that deepened US involvement in El Salvador's
civil war. By focusing on military aid and options in the name of
fighting the traffic in illegal drugs, the United States is preparing
to join the Colombian armed forces in a counterinsurgency war against
Marxist guerrillas - a war that has been raging inconclusively for
more than 40 years. Until recently, Washington has been wise enough
to minimize its role in this protracted conflict, both because of
the Colombian military's abysmal human rights record and because
the war can only end through negotiations.
The rationale
for abandoning this restraint is what US drug czar Gen. Barry McCaffrey
has called a "drug emergency" in Colombia - a dramatic
increase in coca leaf cultivation in the southern provinces of Putumayo
and Caquetá, strongholds of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC), the largest of three leftist guerrilla movements. McCaffrey
and other Clinton administration officials argue that Colombia is
losing the drug war because it cannot eradicate coca in the areas
under guerrilla control, and it is losing the guerrilla war because
the Colombian armed forces are outgunned by insurgents flush with
the "taxes" they collect from coca growers.
By outfitting
the Colombian army to wage a counterinsurgency war, Washington hopes
to enable elite "eradication battalions" to "push
into southern Colombia" where small peasants grow coca under
the FARC's protection. Thus, in the vain hope that joining two losing
ventures will somehow produce success, Colombia's two wars - against
drugs and guerrillas - will become one war. In fact, whether pursued
separately or together, neither of these wars is winnable. The military
escalation contemplated by the United States will only intensify
the violence in Colombia, make a negotiated settlement of the insurgency
more difficult, and have no impact whatsoever on the supply of drugs
entering the United States.
The Drug
War
For
Washington, the drug war in Colombia is just one front in a global
struggle. In response to drug abuse and addiction at home, the government
tries to restrict the supply available from abroad, thereby raising
street prices enough to reduce domestic demand. Since the late 1970s,
the United States has attacked marijuana, heroin, and cocaine production
and trafficking in such "source" countries as Colombia,
Peru, and Bolivia by eradicating crops, attacking refining labs,
seizing shipments, and arresting traffickers.
Despite tactical
successes in each of these areas, source country operations have
consistently been a strategic failure, never significantly raising
the price of cocaine or heroin in the United States for more than
a few months. In fact, while spending on eradication and interdiction
programs has grown from a few million dollars in the early 1970s
to billions annually today, the street price of a pure gram of cocaine
has dropped from $1,400 to under $200 during that time, and the
price of heroin has dropped from about $4,000 to a few hundred dollars.
This strategic failure is not due to a lack of will or resources,
but rather to the structure of the market for illegal drugs, which
invariably thwarts Washington's best efforts to suppress supply.
Drugs are so
cheap to produce, the barriers to entry in the market are so low,
and the potential profits are so enormous that market forces invariably
attract willing growers, producers, and traffickers. Official measures
of success - tons of cocaine seized, numbers of traffickers arrested,
acres of coca leaf eradicated - are as misleading as the "body
counts" during the Vietnam War because high profits generate
a limitless supply of new growers and traffickers even as the war
on drugs drives some out of business. Analysts of the drug market
refer to this as the balloon effect: squeeze the trade in one place
and it pops up somewhere else.
Even if the
United States could significantly cut coca acreage, the market structure
for cocaine would undermine the drug war in another way. Most of
the markup on drugs occurs after they enter the United States; the
actual costs of growing and processing illegal drugs abroad are
a tiny fraction of their street price. In 1997, the price of the
coca leaf needed to make a pure kilo of cocaine was $300. Refined
and ready for export from Colombia, it was worth $1,050. The cost
of smuggling that kilo into the United States raised its price in
Miami to $20,000, and black market distribution costs raised its
retail price in Chicago to $188,000. This means that even an incredibly
successful crop eradication program that tripled the price of coca
leaf to $900 would raise retail prices in the United States imperceptibly.
Nevertheless,
the United States has expended billions of dollars trying to reduce
source country drug supplies. The main thrust of US strategy in
Colombia in the 1980s and early 1990s was to target major drug trafficking
organizations, which imported most of their coca leaf from Peru
and Bolivia. Breaking the big cartels, it was thought, would disrupt
distribution networks in the United States and raise prices. Under
US pressure, the Colombian government went after the drug lords,
either to prosecute them or extradite them to the United States.
By the mid-1990s, the principal leaders of the Medellín and Cali
cartels had been killed or captured. But smashing the cartels did
not reduce the flow of drugs. It simply changed the structure of
the industry, creating space in the market for many new small and
intermediate producers whose business plan, as described by a Colombian
weekly, was to "export a little, earn a lot, and make little
noise." Some of the business was displaced to Mexico, whose
growing criminal enterprises replaced the Cali cartel as the major
distributor of cocaine to the western United States.
For Colombia,
the cost of attacking the cartels was severe. The drug lords, who
had been living in relative peace with the government, retaliated
by killing hundreds of government officials, judges, police officers,
and journalists, including Justice Minister Rodrigo Lara Bonilla,
Attorney General Mauro Hoyos Jiménez, and Liberal Party presidential
candidate Luís Carlos Galán. Corruption infected every institution
of government involved with the drug war, including the executive
branch, the judiciary, and the security forces.
As Colombian
coca leaf production expanded in the mid-1990s, the emphasis of
US policy shifted from a war against traffickers to a war against
growers. Coca leaf acreage increased from 37,500 hectares (about
94,000 acres) in 1991 to 122,500 hectares (306,00 acres) in 1999,
despite an aggressive aerial fumigation program that began in 1994.
The increase followed US eradication and interdiction efforts in
Bolivia and Peru, which reduced coca production in those countries
but led the Colombian traffickers to seek new sources of coca leaf
closer to home. Since no legal crop in Colombia's coca growing regions
is nearly as profitable as coca, the traffickers found no shortage
of growers, especially in areas outside the government's control.
This pattern
of displacement is typical. During the past decade, despite Washington's
best efforts, there has been little changein the total amount of
land planted in coca in the Andean region - about 200,000 hectares.
Faced with eradication campaigns, peasants simply plant elsewhere.
Reliance on aerial fumigation in Colombia over the past several
years has led peasants to retreat deeper into the Amazonian rain
forest and has recently called forth a revival of production in
Bolivia and Peru.
In short, the
new eradication campaign that Washington envisions in southern Colombia
will have little effect on regional cocaine production and supply,
and no impact on the retail price of drugs in the United States.
Moreover, it will entail significant collateral damage. Reinvolving
the Colombian military in counternarcotics operations risks further
corruption - a common pattern whenever Latin American militaries
have touched the tar baby of the drug war. Before his death in 1989,
Colombian trafficker José Gonzalo Rodríguez Gacha provided multimillion-dollar
payoffs to entire brigades of the Colombian army, according to bank
records. Throughout the 1990s, traffickers have paid the police
and military to overlook processing labs and smuggling. The low
salaries paid to soldiers and police make such corruption inescapable.
Militarization of the drug war will inevitably deepen the narco-military
connection.
More serious,
however, is the violence that this policy will inflict on the civilian
population. The coca growers who will be displaced from their lands
by crop spraying and the deployment of elite army battalions are
mostly poor peasants who fled to this frontier region in the 1960s
and 1970s because they were previously displaced by violence, often
at the hands of large landowners. They are civilians, not organized
criminals or guerrilla combatants. They grow coca because it is
one of the only crops that can provide them a livelihood. The "push
into southern Colombia" will add tens of thousands of these
farmers and their families to the 1.5 million Colombians already
displaced by the war, and it will surely produce more recruits for
the guerrillas. In this way, Washington's escalation of the drug
war will inevitably escalate the guerrilla war as well.
The Guerrilla
War
Colombia's
two major guerrilla movements, the aforementioned FARC and the National
Liberation Army (ELN), were founded in the 1960s, but their roots
lie further back, in la Violencia. From 1948 to 1958, partisans
of the Liberal and Conservative parties fought a civil war that
cost the lives of some 200,000 people. The ghastly violence of the
period was only nominally about party politics. Primarily rural,
la Violencia was an explosive expression of peasant grievances
and local conflicts. Weak governmental authority in many areas gave
rise to armed self-defense groups of various ideological stripes.
These same factors, along with the added fuel provided by revenue
from the drug trade, remain central to understanding Colombia's
contemporary violence.
La Violencia
ended with the creation of the National Front in 1958, a pact between
Liberal and Conservative leaders to form a consociational system
in which the two parties alternated in power and shared control
of the government. The corollary to this elite arrangement was that
other political parties and movements were effectively excluded
from politics, an exclusion enforced by repression when necessary.
The armed forces remained formally subordinate to civilian rule
but exercised near autonomy on issues of national security and enjoyed
impunity despite persistent and serious human rights violations.
The National Front formally ended in 1974, but the two traditional
parties continued to divide government offices between them into
the mid-1980s.
Colombia's
guerrilla movements arose in resistance to the National Front. Founded
in 1966, the FARC grew out of rural self-defense groups organized
by the Colombian Communist Party during la Violencia. Its
leader, Manuel "Tirofijo" ("Sureshot") Marulanda,
took up arms in 1949 at the age of 19. The ELN was organized by
students inspired by the example of the Cuban Revolution, and has
focused its attention on the oil industry, blowing up pipelines
and kidnapping oil executives for ransom. In the 1970s, several
new guerrilla groups developed, the most important of which was
the Movimiento 19 de Abril (April 19th Movement, M-19), founded
in reaction to alleged fraud in the 1970 presidential election.
Throughout
the 1960s and 1970s, Colombia's guerrilla wars were low-intensity
affairs. None of the half-dozen guerrilla groups(which operated
independently) could seriously challenge the armed forces for control
of the state, but neither could the armed forces defeat the guerrillas,
especially those with a well-established rural base. For three decades,
a stalemate prevailed.
Every Colombian
president since Belisario Betancur (1982-86) has recognized the
need to find a political solution to the insurgency. In 1984, Betancur
signed a cease-fire with the FARC and M-19, which lasted for about
a year, despite efforts by the armed forces to subvert it. The cease-fire
with the M-19 ended when guerrilla commandos seized the Palace of
Justice and the military assaulted the building without presidential
authorization, leading to the death of 11 Supreme Court justices.
The FARC used
the cease-fire to test the openness of Colombian politics. In 1985,it
organized the Unión Patriótica (Patriotic Union, UP), which achieved
some modest electoral success in 1986, winning about a dozen seats
in the national legislature and several dozen municipal posts. A
wave of repression ensued, in which some 3,000 UP activists, candidates,
and elected officials were murdered by rightist paramilitary groups,
thereby eliminating the Patriotic Union as a viable party. The FARC
had no incentive to lay down its arms, and the war went on.
Presidents
Virgilio Barco, César Gaviria, and Ernesto Samper all conducted
negotiations with various guerrilla groups, leading to the demobilization
of the M-19 and several smaller organizations in 1991. But talks
with the FARC and the ELN made no headway, as these larger groups
refused to settle for amnesty alone, demanding negotiations on a
fuller agenda of social and economic reforms.
During the
1980s and 1990s, Colombia's violence became more intense and more
complex. Intensification of the war was fueled by revenue from the
drug trade. Estimates of how much money the FARC raises from taxing
drug production and commerce in its zones of control vary enormously,
from a low of about $100 million a year to a high of $500 million.
Regardless of the amount, there is no doubt drug revenue has enabled
the FARC to significantly expand its ranks, increase its firepower,
and extend its area of operations. In 1986, the FARC had about 9,000
combatants operating on 27 "fronts" (local self-supporting
and semi-autonomous units). By 1999, it had 15,000 combatants on
some 60 fronts, and was active in 40 percent of Colombia's municipalities.
In the past few years, the FARC has taken the initiative, inflicting
a series of embarrassing defeats on the army, and the conflict has
begun to spill over into neighboring countries.
The war became
more complex with the rise of the paramilitary right, or "self-defense"
groups, many of which made their appearance in the 1980s. The paramilitaries
sprang from multiple roots. Some were organized and financed directly
by drug traffickers in retaliation for guerrilla kidnappings of
their relatives. Others were organized by local landowners and mid-level
military officers intent on eliminating grassroots activists and
leftist politicians. Still others were organized by the armed forces
as part of a national counterinsurgency strategy (that US military
advisers helped design) in which local self-defense militias would
confront the guerrillas in areas where the military's presence was
weak.
The paramilitaries
have flourished as a result of two enabling conditions: financing
from the drug trade and tolerance (and sometimes active assistance)
on the part of the Colombian armed forces. Most paramilitary groups
are financed by drug money;they are either paid directly by traffickers,
engage in trafficking themselves, or tax drug commerce in areas
they control. The paramilitaries, with about 6,000 members in all,
have coalesced around the leadership of Carlos Castaño and his United
Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC), an alliance formed to give
the paramilitaries a national political voice.
Civilian governments
in Colombia have regarded the paramilitaries as criminal but have
never been able to bring them under control because of the close
ties these groups have enjoyed with the armed forces. The military
has a long, well-documented history of condoning and cooperating
with paramilitary operations. In recent years, as the military has
come under pressure from national and international human rights
groups, abuses by the armed forces have fallen dramatically, but
abuses by the paramilitaries have risen, leading some analysts to
conclude that state-sponsored violence is being privatized.
By the late
1990s, Colombia's agony appeared to be reaching a point of crisis.
The guerrilla war was expanding and intensifying. Paramilitary violence
against suspected leftist sympathizers and other "social delinquents"
was growing apace. Kidnappings by guerrillas and paramilitaries
alike had become epidemic. From 1987 to 1997, a rising tide of criminal
as well as political violence took the lives of more people than
were killed in la Violencia. The government seemed unable
to provide even a modicum of personal safety for its citizens.
Pastrana's
Quest for Peace
The United
States welcomed the election of Andrés Pastrana to Colombia's presidency
in June 1998. Having disengaged from Colombia politically and diplomatically
(though not militarily) during the Samper administration because
of its ties to drug traffickers, Washington was eager to resume
active cooperation with the new government to fight the drug war.
On balance, the Clinton administration also supported Pastrana's
pledge to negotiate peace with Colombia's guerrilla movements, although
some US officials were skeptical about whether the guerrillas were
really interested. During an October 1998 state visit to Washington,
however, Pastrana convinced the administration to back his strategy
of "peace first." By negotiating an end to the guerrilla
war, he argued, the government would regain control over Colombia's
territory, thus facilitating drug eradication and interdiction programs
in areas controlled by the FARC.
Pastrana had
run for president on a peace platform, harnessing a deep popular
desire for an end to Colombia's decades of violence - a desire that
gave rise to a powerful civic peace movement in 1997. Before his
inauguration, Pastrana met with the FARC's legendary commander,
Manuel Marulanda, to initiate new peace talks. Immediately after
his inauguration, he replaced the entire high command of the armed
forces, signaling his intention to crack down on the military's
human rights abuses and its silent partnership with rightist paramilitary
groups.
But the decision
that sowed the seeds of Pastrana's subsequent political problems
both at home and abroad was his agreement to temporarily withdraw
Colombian troops from a 16,200-square-mile zone in southern Colombia
to create a safe venue for peace talks with the FARC. This concession
was bitterly opposed by the armed forces (which had subverted a
similar plan during the Samper administration) and by conservative
Republicans in the US Congress. Within the Clinton administration,
the creation of the demilitarized zone fed the suspicions of some
officials - especially in the Pentagon and the office of the drug
czar - that Pastrana was naive and soft on the guerrillas. The zone
also impeded the drug war, since antidrug operations there had to
be suspended.
The peace talks
got off to an inauspicious start when Marulanda failed to appear
for the opening ceremony with Pastrana on January 7, 1999. Later
that month, the talks faltered over a FARC demand that the government
take decisive action against the paramilitary right before negotiations
could begin. Pastrana's subsequent firing of two generals with links
to the paramilitaries was seen in the armed forces as craven surrender
to the FARC's demands.
Tensions between
Colombia's president and the military precipitated a crisis in May
when Pastrana's minister of defense, Rodrigo Lloreda, and two dozen
generals resigned, publicly condemning Pastrana's conduct of the
peace process. By some accounts, only quick endorsement of the president
by armed forces chief Gen. Fernando Tapias prevented a coup d'état.
Pastrana accepted Lloreda's resignation but refused to accept the
others. In a four-hour meeting with the high command, the president
reaffirmed his commitment to the peace process but agreed to take
greater heed of the military's views about how to conduct it. In
practice, that meant putting more military pressure on the guerrillas.
Washington's
"Drug Emergency"
The
May crisis, followed by a major FARC offensive in early July 1999,
set off alarm bells in Washington, prompting a major policy review.
General McCaffrey stole a march on other administration officials
by announcing his own proposal for $1 billion in new counterdrug
assistance - a move that annoyed his colleagues but put them on
the spot politically. For months, House Republicans had been blasting
the Clinton administration for not doing enough to stem the tide
of drugs and guerrillas in Colombia; McCaffrey's plea confirmed
their critique. In the administration's internal debate, the need
to appear tough on drugs trumped concerns about human rights and
the fragility of the peace process.
In August,
Undersecretary of State Thomas Pickering traveled to Colombia to
warn Pastrana that he risked losing US support if he made any further
concessions to the guerrillas. On the other hand, if Colombia would
craft a comprehensive national plan to take the offensive against
both the guerrillas and the drug traffickers, Pickering promised
a significant increase in US aid. Pressure from Washington, combined
with pressure from his own armed forces, pushed Pastrana toward
a strategy of escalating the counterinsurgency war.
Over the next
several months, US and Colombian officials cooperated closely on
the design of "Plan Colombia" - a $7.5 billion program
for fighting Colombia's two wars and restoring its economy. The
strategic thrust of the plan is a "push into southern Colombia"
by the armed forces in order to destroy coca cultivation in areas
controlled by the FARC. To help fund the plan, the Clinton administration
requested a total of $1.6 billion in aid for Colombia for FY 2000
and FY 2001, and Congress approved $1.3 billion, of which about
$862 million is destined for Colombia (the rest will go to antidrug
efforts elsewhere in Andean region).Seventy-five percent of the
total is earmarked for military or security assistance.
Though couched
within a counterdrug framework, the elements of Washington's military
aid program for Colombia are taken straight from the Pentagon's
counterinsurgency handbook for El Salvador. The Colombian army,
like its Salvadoran counterpart in the 1980s, is mainly a static
defense force; rank-and-file soldiers are poorly trained, weakly
motivated, and ineffective at searching out and destroying guerrillas.
To remedy such deficiencies, the United States will send hundreds
of military advisers to train several rapid-deployment battalions,
provide helicopters to make these elite forces more mobile, and
intensify intelligence gathering so they know where to deploy. Once
trained, the new battalions will push into FARC territory to secure
the area for coca eradication. Some US officials insist with a straight
face that the purpose of this program is solely to combat drug trafficking,
not counterinsurgency. No one in Colombia believes that, and no
one in Washington ought to either.
Other US officials
acknowledge that this new policy targets the guerrillas, arguing
its aim is to force them to the bargaining table. By strengthening
the Colombian army and cutting into the FARC's coca revenues, they
say, Plan Colombia will create a military stalemate. Realizing it
has no chance of victory, the FARC will then settle for negotiated
peace. This argument has several flaws. First, the war in Colombia
has been a stalemate for over 30 years. The problem has not been
getting the guerrillas to the bargaining table - they have been
negotiating on and off with the government for almost two decades.
Historically, the problem has been the Colombian armed forces, which
have resisted and subverted the peace process at every turn - ignoring
Betancur's 1984 cease-fire, cooperating with the paramilitary right
to murder activists of the Patriotic Union party, and opposing both
Samper's and Pastrana's proposed demilitarized zones.
The military
in El Salvador represented an analogous obstacle to peace. A billion
dollars of US aid turned that army into a large, well-equipped,
politically powerful force that murdered noncombatant civilians
with impunity for over a decade - more than 60,000 of them in all.
The war in El Salvador did not end because of a change in the guerrillas'
attitude toward the government (the 1992 peace accord they signed
was very similar to one they proposed in 1980). The war ended when
the army finally recognized that it was unwinnable - a conclusion
it reached when the United States cut military assistance by 50
percent, threatened to end it entirely, and threw its full diplomatic
weight behind the peace process.
Thus, the message
that nearly a billion dollars in US military aid sends to the Colombian
armed forces is precisely the wrong one. Some Colombian officers
will conclude (probably mistakenly) that Washington is prepared
to invest whatever resources are necessary to secure their victory
over the guerrillas. None will take it as a signal that Washington
has faith in the peace process or that the army should stop opposing
it.
Nor is this
aid package likely to have any material effect on the military balance.
If the new U.S.-trained battalions do in fact target coca fields
rather than guerrilla columns, the guerrillas will be able to avoid
them, just as the Salvadoran guerrillas avoided U.S.-trained battalions.
Late in that war, the Salvadoran guerrillas countered the military's
helicopters with shoulder-launched surface-to-air missiles, which
had such devastating effect that helicopter pilots refused to fly
in daylight. The FARC has threatened to buy such weapons on the
international arms market. Finally, if crop eradication operations
succeed, they will deprive tens of thousands of peasants of their
livelihood, creating a whole new pool of potential guerrilla recruits.
The most disturbing
aspect of the US aid package is its silence on the problem of the
paramilitary right. The paramilitaries are mentioned only in passing,
although they are at least as deeply implicated in drug trafficking
as the guerrillas. Up to now, both the Clinton and Pastrana administrations
have worked hard to control the paramilitaries and sever their links
to the armed forces. But with the United States on the verge of
joining the Colombian military's war against the guerrillas, will
Washington now turn a blind eye to depredations by the army's other
partner in this dirty war? In the early 1980s, the Reagan administration
tolerated the death squads in El Salvador because they were inextricably
linked to the military, on which Washington's counterinsurgency
strategy depended.
The paramilitary
right is a critical obstacle to a negotiated settlement of the Colombian
conflict. Pastrana cannot guarantee the personal security of the
guerrillas if they lay down their arms - just as the Christian Democrats
could not guarantee the security of the Salvadoran guerrillas in
the early 1980s. As long as the Colombian government is unwilling
or unable to control the violent right, the guerrillas dare not
agree to peace. In El Salvador, the army had no interest in reining
in the death squads because they were an essential weapon in its
war against the left. The Colombian situation is similar; by leaving
the dirtiest work in this dirty war to the paramilitaries, the regular
army can claim a clean human rights record as it seeks more military
aid from Washington. The story of the paramilitary massacre of dozens
of peasants labeled as guerrillas or guerrilla supporters in the
village of El Salado this past summer reads like a page from Salvadoran
history. Hundreds of heavily armed men occupied the village and,
over the course of two days, held a kangaroo court and executed
whomever they pleased, while the Colombian armed forces not only
refused to intervene but blocked access to the village by outsiders.
Disentangling
the Two Wars
Despite
fits and starts, the peace process in Colombia is not nearly as
moribund as some US officials imply. Talks are under way, and there
are new factors, both domestic and international, that give them
impetus. Within Colombia, the rise of a powerful peace movement
rooted in civil society is proof of the public's war weariness.
In 1997, 10 million Colombians, half of the country's registered
voters, voted for a peace referendum, and in October 1999, several
million took to the streets to demonstrate their desire for an end
to the violence. Running on a peace platform, Pastrana won the presidency
with more votes than any Colombian candidate before him. Neither
the guerrillas nor the traditional political parties can afford
to ignore this popular demand for peace. The peace process, once
in gear, will likely develop its own momentum, as neither side will
want to shoulder the blame for its collapse. A similar public yearning
for peace impelled the Salvadoran negotiations forward in the 1990s.
The international
community has begun actively to assist the Colombian process, a
development that Colombians resisted until recently. International
interlocutors can play a pivotal role in overcoming the decades
of distrust between the warring parties - as the United Nations
did in Central America in the 1990s. U.N. secretary general Kofi
Annan has appointed Norwegian diplomat Jan Egeland as his special
adviser on the Colombian conflict, and in February Egeland organized
a tour of Spain, Norway, Switzerland, and France for a joint delegation
of FARC commanders and Colombian government officials, a trip intended
to educate the insular guerrillas about post-Cold War realities.
In June, more than 20 diplomats from Europe, Canada, Japan, and
the United Nations met in Colombia with officials and guerrilla
leaders to talk about economic alternatives to drug production.
In July, representatives of Norway, Spain, France, Switzerland,
and Cuba agreed to assist in the peace process and attended talks
held in Switzerland between the government and ELN guerrilla commanders.
Do the guerrillas
want a peace agreement? Or are they content to remain in their zones
of control, making money from extortion and drug trafficking? The
FARC's initial response to Pastrana's peace initiative was a not
a good omen; it offered nothing in return for his concessions, instead
exploiting the peace process for tactical advantage. They stepped
up attacks on the army, thereby undercutting political support for
the peace process, both in Colombia and in Washington. Still, most
observers who have followed the FARC closely believe it remains
fundamentally a political movement committed to an agenda of political
and social reform. No doubt there are hard-line guerrilla commanders
who are skeptical of peace, just as there are hard-line military
officers. But negotiations have now moved farther ahead than at
any time in the past decade and a half. The FARC could regain considerable
credibility if it were quickly to agree to measures meant, in the
language of human rights groups and negotiators, to "humanize
the war," first and foremost by putting an end to kidnapping.
President Pastrana's
commitment to peace and human rights is not in question. As the
democratically elected president, he deserves the support of the
United States. The issue is not whether to help, but how. Some Clinton
administration officials argue that the United States should boost
military aid because Pastrana asked for it and should not be second-guessed.
These same officials had not the slightest reluctance to lambast
Pastrana publicly and privately when they thought his pursuit of
peace was too vigorous.
The parentage
of Plan Colombia is mixed at best. It focuses on military solutions
because US policymakers decided last summer that they had to expand
the war against the FARC if they were to have any hope of stemming
the growth of coca production in Colombia. That decision was clearly
communicated to the Colombians, and it shaped the aid package they
requested. Pastrana complains that the United States is unwilling
to make an adequate commitment to the social and economic reconstruction
of his country. He comes to Washington for military aid, but he
must go to Europe for economic assistance.
The United
States has the ability to improve the prospects for peace in Colombia,
but only if it disentangles its drug policy from the guerrilla war
and acknowledges that neither problem is amenable to military solution.
Washington should abandon plans to "push into southern Colombia"
and instead focus its counterdrug resources on intercepting drugs
in transit or on money laundering, actions that will not escalate
the guerrilla war or displace tens of thousands of small peasants.
Such programs may help Colombian drug enforcement, but we should
not fool ourselves into thinking this will significantly reduce
the supply of drugs entering the United States.
In approving
Clinton's aid package, Congress added a requirement that the secretary
of state must certify that the Colombian armed forces are acting
affirmatively to punish human rights violators in their ranks and
to sever their ties to the paramilitaries. Similar conditions were
imposed on military aid to El Salvador in 1981, but President Ronald
Reagan routinely ignored them,certifying human rights progress even
when there was none. This time around, Congress gave President Clinton
the option to waive the human rights conditions on "national
security" grounds, and on August 22, a week before his scheduled
trip to Colombia to show support for Pastrana, Clinton exercised
the waiver. Thus the president did not flout the letter of the law,
but in exercising the waiver he was forced to concede that Colombia's
military does not meet even the most basic human rights requirements
- requirements that must be met if there is to be a negotiated settlement
of the war.
If the United
States is truly interested in reducing human rights violations and
taming the paramilitaries, the human rights provisions in the law
provide a potent policy instrument. If, on the other hand, Washington
treats the conditions as merely an obstacle to be circumvented,
the Colombian military, like its Salvadoran brethren, will quickly
recognize that Washington's concern for human rights is nothing
but window dressing to sell the policy domestically. Now that a
waiver has been granted, it is all the more important for Washington
to demand that Colombia take effective steps to control military
and paramilitary violence.
In his speech
broadcast to the Colombian people on the eve of his August 30 visit,
President Clinton insisted that his commitment to human rights was
undiminished. "There is no such thing as democracy without
respect for human rights," he declared. In six months, the
secretary of state must report to Congress on what progress Colombia
has made toward meeting the human rights conditions in the aid legislation.
That will be a good opportunity for Congress and the American people
to assess whether or not the White House's professed commitment
to human rights is real. If Colombia's progress is no better than
it has been so far, the president should rescind the waiver and
halt the distribution of military aid.
Not only should
the United States hold the Colombian armed forces accountable for
human rights abuses, it should also put its full diplomatic weight
behind the peace process, as it did eventually in El Salvador. This
means encouraging the efforts of the United Nations and the European
Union, urging the Colombians to remain open to international involvement,
and using US influence with the Colombian military to prevent it
from obstructing peace.
The United
States should devote the lion's share of new aid to economic assistance
in order to help Colombia pull its faltering economy out of recession,
and it should offer a "peace bonus" - aid earmarked for
the conflict zones once a settlement has been reached. Postwar reconstruction
programs might include a crop substitution plan to help small farmers
kick the coca-growing habit.
For now, however,
Washington is going down a different road. In pursuit of the ephemeral
goal of coca eradication, the United States is about to put Colombia's
fragile democracy at greater risk by escalating the new Violencia.
The powerful talisman of "fighting drugs" has led sensible
policymakers to endorse a futile and bloody war they would otherwise
never countenance. Pouring military aid into Colombia will not reduce
the availability of drugs in the United States, and it will not
enable the army to win its war against the guerrillas. Instead,
it will expand the war, leading to more casualties and the displacement
of more civilians, harden animosities on all sides, and prolong
a conflict that must ultimately be settled at the bargaining table.
The way out
of Colombia's agony is a policy focused on encouraging negotiations,
which alone hold the promise of finally resolving this decades-long
social and political conflict. Despite being complicated by the
cocaine trade, the civil conflict in Colombia is amenable to a negotiated
peace. The war on drugs is not. If Washington makes these two wars
one war, it will condemn Colombia to a future of endless violence
and suffering. And it will do so in vain. America's war on drugs
cannot be won in the Colombian rain forest. Even if the United States
defoliates every acre given over to growing coca, burns every laboratory,
and destroys every last gram of Colombian cocaine, it will have
won a hollow victory. The drug business will simply move elsewhere,
as it always does. But it is the people of Colombia who will pay
the price for the inability of the United States to face the fact
that its "war" on drugs can only be won at home.
Note
This article
was made possible by a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation.
For Further
Reading -
Bruce
M. Bagley and William O. Walker III, eds., Drug Trafficking in the
Americas (Boulder, Col.: Lynne Rienner, 1996).
David
Bushnell, The Making of Modern Colombia (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1993).
Marc
Chernick, "Negotiating Peace Amid Multiple Forms of Violence:
The Protracted Search for a Settlement to the Armed Conflicts in
Colombia," in Comparative Peace Processes in Latin America,
Cynthia Arnson, ed. (Washington, D.C.: Woodrow Wilson Center Press,
1999).
Council
on Foreign Relations and Inter-American Dialogue Interim Task Force
on Colombia, First Steps Toward a Constructive US Policy in Colombia
(New York: Council on Foreign Relations, 2000).
Alma
Guillermoprieto, "Our New War in Colombia"; "Colombia:
Violence Without End?"; and "Colombia: The Children's
War," New York Review of Books, vol. 42, nos. 6, 7, and 8 (2000).
Human
Rights Watch, The Ties that Bind: Colombia and Military-Paramilitary
Links (New York: Human Rights Watch, 2000).
Rafael
Pardo, "Colombia's Two-Front War," Foreign Affairs, vol.
79 (July/August 2000).
Linda
Robinson, "Where Angels Fear to Tread: Colombia and Latin America's
Tier of Turmoil," World Policy Journal, vol. 16 (winter 1999/2000).
www.ciponline.org
(an excellent source for documents, newsclips, and updated reports
on Colombia).
[Go
to interactive
discussion forum]
 back
|