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Latin American Crisis “Made In The USA”
By Bill Van Auken
07/03/08 "WSW" --- - Nearly
a week after Colombia’s cross-border raid against an encampment
of the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) guerrilla
movement in neighboring Ecuador, Latin America continues to
confront its worst regional diplomatic and military crisis in
decades. The US government and mass media have weighed in with
unsolicited judgments and advice, attributing the tense standoff
between Colombia, Ecuador and Venezuela to the threat of
terrorism to Colombia, the complicity in terrorism on the part
of Venezuela and overheated animosities between the respective
heads of state of these three countries.
State Department spokesman Tom
Casey declared that “it’s important to recognize that the events
that took place were, in fact, a response to the presence of
terrorists.” Similarly, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino
affirmed that Colombia “was defending itself against terrorism.”
This official reaction extends
to Colombia—Washington’s principal client state in South America
and the recipient of some $600 million annually in American
military aid—the mantle of the Bush Doctrine, which holds that
in the “global war on terrorism” such niceties as respect for
sovereign borders and international law no longer apply.
The Washington Post went
a step further, calling the March 1 raid a “remarkable success”
and accusing Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Ecuadoran
President Rafael Correa of “backing an armed movement with an
established record of terrorism.” It compared the strike on the
FARC camp to US air strikes against Al Qaeda in Pakistan.
And the New York Times,
the voice of America’s erstwhile liberal establishment, found it
“hard to believe that in the 21st century the democratically
elected governments of Colombia, Ecuador and Venezuela would be
talking about war.” While acknowledging that Colombia’s raid
constituted “an infringement of Ecuador’s territory—a sensitive
issue anywhere,” it urged the presumably hot-headed Latin
leaders of Ecuador and Colombia to “cool their rhetoric and
begin a serious discussion of how they can jointly secure their
borders against the FARC.”
One would never guess that
Washington had any role in the bloody events on the
Colombian-Ecuadoran border. The Bush administration portrays
itself—and is largely portrayed by a compliant media—as a
selfless champion of democratic values and faithful ally of the
people’s of the southern hemisphere.
The facts, however, tell
another, far uglier story. The three Andean nations have been
brought to the brink of war by a brutal and cold-blooded
political assassination carried out to further the interests of
US imperialism at the expense of the Colombian people and the
population of the entire region.
The March 1 raid was carried out
not to defend Colombia from terrorism, but to murder one man,
Raul Reyes, considered the second-in-command of the FARC and the
guerrilla movement’s principal international spokesman and
diplomatic representative. He was well known in both Latin
America and Europe, having served as the principal FARC
negotiator in the abortive attempt under the government of
President Andres Pastrana (1998-2002) to broker a peaceful
settlement of the civil conflict that has wracked Colombia for
more than four decades. During that same period, he met with
officials of the Clinton State Department.
To carry out this political
murder, air strikes were called in against the camp inside
Ecuador as Reyes and some 20 of his comrades slept. Commandos
were then sent into the camp to finish off most of the survivors
and haul Reyes’s bloody corpse back to Colombia as a political
trophy for the right-wing US-backed government of President
Alvaro Uribe.
This ruthless attack was staged
not to ward off some pending terrorist attack. On the contrary,
it was designed as a “preemptive strike” against a negotiated
release of hostages held by the FARC, among them a former
presidential candidate, Ingrid Betancourt, who holds joint
Colombian-French citizenship and has been held prisoner by the
FARC for six years.
Just two days before the border
massacre, French President Nicolas Sarkozy publicly called for
the release of the ailing Betancourt and announced that he was
prepared to fly to the Colombian border to personally receiver
her.
The FARC itself issued a
statement that Reyes had been working through Venezuelan
President Chavez to concretize plans for a meeting with Sarkozy
to arrange for the hand-over of Betancourt.
The French government has not
denied this account. Indeed, on Monday, French Foreign Minister
Bernard Kouchner told the media, “It’s bad news that the man we
were talking to, with whom we had contacts has been killed. Do
you see how ugly the world is?”
Meanwhile, a French deputy
foreign minister confirmed the role played by Chavez in
mediating the Sarkozy-FARC hostage negotiations. “President
Chavez has taken the initiative, he had taken the initiative
earlier on that had allowed for the release of several hostages
even though the situation had been blocked for some time, so we
are aware of his involvement and the important role he has
played,” the minister, Rama Yade, told a news conference in
Geneva.
After the news of Reyes’s
assassination, the French foreign ministry issued a pointed
statement to the effect that the Colombian government was well
informed that France was conducting negotiations with him.
This statement was fleshed out
this week by the Argentine press. Citing sources in the
Argentine foreign ministry, it reported that Sarkozy had sent a
delegation of three personal envoys to Colombia and that they
were in the border region to meet with Reyes.
“On Saturday [the day of the
cross-border raid], the three negotiators were 200 kilometers
from the attack zone and were headed for a meeting with Reyes
when they received a call,” the daily Pagina 12 reported.
It was Luis Carlos Restrepo, head of the Colombian government’s
Peace Commission, who warned them not to go to the meeting
place.
US role in Reyes’s
assassination
Colombian officials have openly
acknowledged the role of US intelligence agencies in instigating
and coordinating the March 1 targeted assassination. General
Oscar Naranjo, commander of the national police told reporters
it was no secret that the Colombian military-police apparatus
maintained “a very strong alliance with federal agencies of the
US.”
The Colombian radio network,
Radio Cadena Nacional (RCN), reported Wednesday that Reyes’s
location was pinpointed by US intelligence as a result of
monitoring a satellite phone call between the FARC leader and
Venezuelan President Chavez. The February 27 call—three days
before the raid—came after the FARC released to Venezuelan
authorities four former Colombian legislators—Gloria Polanco,
Luis Eladio Perez, Orlando Beltran and Jorge Eduardo Gechem—who
had been held hostage for nearly seven years.
“Chavez was thrilled by the
release of the hostages, and called Reyes to tell him that
everything went well,” RCN reported. Presumably, the CIA or
other US intelligence agencies were also tapping phone calls
between Reyes and French officials over the proposed release of
Betancourt.
Another Colombian station,
Noticias Uno, cited intelligence sources as saying that they had
received photographs from “foreign spy planes” pinpointing the
location of Reyes’s camp in Ecuador.
The Colombian police commander
insisted that, while relying on US intelligence, the March 1
attack was an “autonomous operation.”
This claim is improbable to say
the least. US military “trainers” are attached to the elite
counterinsurgency units that would have been employed in the
ground attack that finished off the survivors of the aerial
bombardment.
As for the air raid itself,
Ecuador’s Defense Minister Wellington Sandoval reported the
attack included the use of five “smart bombs” of the type
utilized by the US military. “It is a bomb that hits within a
meter of where it is programmed, from high velocity airplanes,”
he said. He added that to target Reyes with such weapons, “they
needed equipment that Latin American armed forces do not have.”
Both Washington and the
right-wing regime in Colombia were determined to stop any
further hostage releases in order to further efforts to
politically isolate the Chavez regime and to enforce the Bush
administration’s proscription against negotiations with
“terrorists.”
At the same time, the bombs
dropped on the FARC encampment were undoubtedly also meant as a
message to Sarkozy not to meddle in Yankee imperialism’s
“backyard.” It should be recalled that the French president,
shortly after his election, sent his then-wife to Libya to
consummate the release of six medical workers who had been held
for eight years on false charges. This political coup managed to
bypass the European Union, which had been negotiating the
release, and paved the way for lucrative Libyan contracts for
French corporations. Washington had no intention of seeing Paris
pursue a similar path in relation to Venezuela, which
constitutes the fourth largest source of US oil imports.
In the final analysis, this
episode in the “global war on terrorism,” which has brought
three South American nations to the brink of armed conflict, is
the product of a filthy political murder carried out to defend
the strategic and profit interests of US capitalism.
It is a reminder that “Murder,
Inc.”—as the CIA became known during the 1960s and 1970s, when
it organized numerous assassinations and assassination attempts,
along with right-wing coups and dirty wars—is still very much in
business in Latin America.
See Also:
US-backed border massacre brings South America to brink of war
[5 March 2008]
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