Hostage Nation (14 page)

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Authors: Victoria Bruce

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Since there were no hostilities allowed between government and FARC troops in the zone, delegates arrived from a dozen countries, including Canada, France, Switzerland, and Spain, to participate in the talks. Trinidad, wearing a uniform of camouflage fatigues with a bright green scarf around his neck, sporting stylish aviator sunglasses, and carrying a semiautomatic rifle, received many of those visitors and moved easily among delegates sent by U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, ambassadors from many countries, and even with the then president of the New York Stock Exchange, Richard Grasso, who had come to discuss investment opportunities for the guerrillas.

In June 1999, the Washington, D.C.–based Center for International Policy sent a delegation from the U.S. Congress, led by Massachusetts Democrat William Delahunt. Trinidad attended the talks with the Americans and the FARC lead negotiator and commander of the Southern Bloc, Raúl Reyes. The topics discussed included illegal drugs,
kidnapping, and the recent assassination of three Americans who had been working with Colombian indigenous tribes. But the talks failed to produce any concrete proposals to deal with the ongoing violence. In one of the most surreal photo ops of the talks, America Online founder Jim Kinsey arrived for a meeting with Marulanda, hugged the guerrilla, and swapped his baseball cap for Marulanda's rumpled
cachucha
. After the meeting, Kinsey said that he felt that Marulanda was “very much interested in achieving peace. He understands, I think, that foreign investment is critical to the prosperity of this country, and I think is willing to negotiate and to discuss possible solutions that will move this country into the 21st century.”

The meetings were a tremendous slap in the face for Pastrana and a great embarrassment to many Colombians, who felt that the outside world was legitimizing the violent insurgents while ignoring the elected Colombian government. The great pomp that surrounded the dialogues created an enormous economic boon for San Vicente del Caguán; journalists and diplomats came with plentiful dollars. Hotels, restaurants, and local prostitutes were the first beneficiaries of the “peace” dialogues. For the FARC, it was an oasis. After years of living separately, confined by the wild Colombian geography and hounded by the Colombian army, the Secretariat members were all together. The sanctuary allowed them to refine their plans and chart new strategies. Nearly ten thousand guerrillas moved about freely in the DMZ. The guerrillas felt empowered, invincible—the revolutionary esprit de corps was at its greatest point in the history of the rebel army.

As weeks turned into months, Pastrana continued to push for discussions on disarmament. FARC negotiators danced around the topic, preferring instead to talk about economic and social issues and land reform. In due time, they said, they would speak about peace—when those other topics were solved. Day and night, Colombian news broadcasts reported on the dialogues. Over time, as it became apparent that the FARC was not interested in a cease-fire, Pastrana's team began to look more and more impotent. While the government returned again and again to negotiate, the FARC continued to commit terrorist attacks outside the DMZ. Canisters packed with gunpowder and shrapnel were tossed into areas with civilian populations. Planes were hijacked, roads
blocked off. Police and soldiers who surrendered in gun battles were taken prisoner or executed. The guerrillas remained unrepentant, even when civilians appeared to be targets or were caught in the cross fire. In a Human Rights Watch interview, Simón Trinidad referred to international humanitarian law as a “bourgeois concept.” In July 1999, four thousand fighters emerged from El Caguán to attack bases and towns in five regions. In December 2000, FARC guerrillas ambushed and killed Diego Turbay, the head of the Congressional Peace Commission. Five others were also murdered, including Turbay's mother.

Amid the escalating violence, the government continued to cede the DMZ to the guerrillas, and dialogues carried on without progress toward a peace accord. It had become painfully obvious to most that the FARC had no intention of ending the war. Many would say the Colombian government was also uninterested in achieving peace. While the FARC attacked military targets, paramilitary units linked to the legitimate military committed horrible atrocities as well. In January 1999, paramilitaries killed 136 civilians in four days. The victims were accused of supporting the FARC, then shot in the head. In the town of El Tigre in central Colombia, four truckloads of militia forces began breaking down residents' doors. Twenty-six bodies were found, some beheaded. Twenty-five more disappeared. Witnesses later reported that the paramilitaries arrived in trucks belonging to the army's Twenty-fourth Brigade. Such events had been going on for decades; the Colombian Peace Commission reported that from 1988 to 1997, of the more than twenty thousand murders committed by illegal armed groups, paramilitaries and drug cartels were responsible for more than 80 percent of the killings, while guerrilla groups accounted for 20 percent.

Even as Pastrana waxed poetic about peace, he cozied up to Bill Clinton and $1.3 billion in military aid to fight the FARC in order to win the war on drugs. Critics claimed that the money allocated to Plan Colombia was being spent to fight a Colombian civil war tantamount to U.S. involvement in Vietnam. Rand Beers, assistant secretary of state for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, denied the charges in 2001: “Plan Colombia is a plan for peace, and the United States supports President Pastrana's peace efforts,” he wrote. “From the beginning, we have stated that there is no military solution to Colombia's
problems. Colombia's ills go well beyond drug production and trafficking. That is why Plan Colombia is aimed at bolstering democracy, improving the economy, and respecting human rights while at the same time attacking narcotics. As a democratic neighbor in need, Colombia deserves our help. And we are providing it through a comprehensive, balanced assistance package in support of Plan Colombia.” The balance, however, was heavily skewed on the side of military spending. In 2000, 78 percent ($765 million) and in 2001, 97 percent ($242 million) of Plan Colombia aid went to bolster Colombia's military forces, with the remainder earmarked for “economic and social assistance programs.”

The money did not go to waste. With burgeoning war coffers, Pastrana formed a command team of generals and completely restructured and invigorated his flailing army. Terms for recruits were extended and conscripts were turned into professional soldiers. Troops were retrained and battalions modernized into swiftly deployable war-fighting outfits. The Colombian army purchased Black Hawks and Russian transport helicopters and modernized their aircraft, riverine, and combat equipment. According to a Stratfor intelligence report, with the new money and innovation, “the military was able, in but a few years, to field a revitalized force able to be employed in a manner more appropriate in the new phase the conflict had entered, that of mobile warfare.” But perhaps the most important factor that would later be brought to bear against the FARC was the streamlining and bolstering of the army's intelligence operations (which were put under the direct command of a brigadier general) and its psychological operations division (which was responsible for inundating the guerrillas with messages and propaganda to encourage them to defect). The bulk of Pastrana's new and improved military came compliments of American taxpayers, with the Clinton and then Bush administrations arguing Plan Colombia's essential role in stopping cocaine from making its way to the United States. And although many illegal armed groups were involved in the drug trade at a level perhaps equal to the guerrillas, Plan Colombia funds were not used to aggressively fight drug production and smuggling by paramilitaries or to help prevent atrocities by the AUC or the military-paramilitary alliances. In 2000, Carlos Castaño, the head
of the largest paramilitary coalition, admitted that the AUC received 70 percent of its financing from drug trafficking. And a leaked Colombian government report in 2003 put the paramilitary groups' share in the entire Colombian drug trade at 40 percent.

Publicly, the FARC blamed the failure of the negotiations on the government, claiming Pastrana wanted peace for free—without reforms and without social, economic, and political changes for the country. However, internally, Secretariat members congratulated themselves on the charade of the dialogues, which covered up a twofold plan to move the FARC toward its ultimate goal: overtaking the country. The first step was an unprecedented weapons buildup—the result of a creative arms deal for tens of thousands of Russian weapons. The guns came from Siberia and were brokered by both the Russian mafia and the Russian military. Aboard Russian cargo planes, the arms passed through the Canary Islands, Jordan, and finally into Colombia by way of Peru's remote jungle. Thousands of automatic rifles were smuggled by land; a reported twenty to thirty thousand more floated into El Caguán by parachute from Russian planes. In April 2000,
MSNBC.com
broke the story and reported that the FARC paid for the guns with huge shipments (about forty thousand kilograms) of cocaine—ferried back to Russia in the same planes that had delivered the weapons. (While it first appeared that Vladimiro Montesinos, head of Peru's intelligence service, had broken the smuggling ring, the spy chief was later implicated in the dealings.)

With the FARC flush with weapons, what Marulanda needed was more troops. So behind the smoke screen of the peace negotiations, the FARC Secretariat began a tremendous and wholesale recruitment effort that spanned the entire country, with the idea of doubling the FARC ranks to forty thousand troops. With the greatly inflated ranks, Marulanda believed he could actually overthrow the Colombian government. The new recruitment strategy was an extraordinary paradigmatic shift, one that would prove to be a catastrophic failure. In its thirty-five-year history, the FARC had always had standards for recruits: New troops came from families with Communist sympathies, or they came from areas where the FARC had been the only presence for decades. But in the frenzy to recruit enough bodies to match the
number of arms, standards slackened. The majority of new recruits came from the massive glut of humanity that had arrived in the jungle to eek out a living in a lawless land—the
raspachines
, the coca pickers. The FARC also recruited destitute city dwellers. With no former background or tie to the guerrillas in any way, the new recruits lacked significant passion or commitment to revolutionary ideology.

Many political analysts in Washington, D.C., and around the world would credit the FARC's involvement in the drug trade as the reason for its eventual unraveling a decade later. But it was here, on this open playing field of a demilitarized zone, that Marulanda and his six top commanders would agree that they made their ultimate mistake: During the incredibly sloppy and careless recruitment campaign that flourished during the three years of the DMZ, not only did the FARC end up with recruits who were incompetent and undisciplined soldiers but the guerrillas were deeply infiltrated as well. The requirements to join the FARC had been set so low that the Colombian military took the opportunity to place many subversives within the FARC ranks. The number of infiltrators who entered the guerrilla army with the approximately ten thousand new recruits is impossible to know, but it could have reached into the hundreds. The true effect would not be realized for several years, when, blow by blow, with brilliant incremental plans carried out with great stealth by Colombian intelligence forces, Marulanda's forty-five-year-old army would begin to crumble.

9
The Exchangeables

A
t the beginning of 2002, a furious and demoralized President Pastrana finally seemed to realize that the endless posturing by the FARC was going nowhere. On January 12, he gave an ultimatum, demanding that the FARC evacuate the demilitarized zone or face military action. The FARC Secretariat responded with a long communiqué, in which they agreed to leave, telling the Colombian people:

The 48-hour ultimatum, which will expire on the 14th at 9:30 p.m., established by Mr. President, unilaterally changes everything that has been agreed upon in the past three years.… Once again the selfish interests of a privileged and rich minority are being placed above the interests of 40 million Colombians. For the time being, the warmongers have won out to obstruct the possibilities of achieving peace with social justice.… To the country and the world we reaffirm our willingness to continue using all forms of struggle to achieve the changes that Colombia needs to in order to achieve reconciliation and reconstruction of the homeland.…

Presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt hands out campaign material to FARC commanders during a meeting between the FARC and presidential candidates in Los Pozos, Colombia (a town within the demilitarized zone), on February 14, 2002. She was kidnapped by FARC guerrillas nine days later. Photo: AP Images/Ariana Cubillos
.

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