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Colombia's Gringo Invasion
by Frank Smyth and Winifred Tate
http://www.fransmyth.com/
Covert Action Quarterly, Spring, 1997; Pages 46-49.
The US military boasts that its Army Special Forces or "Green Berets"
are "the most versatile special operations soldiers in the world." 1 While
serving under the Department of Defense (DoD), members of these units,
trained in unconventional warfare, psychological operations and other skills,
sometimes work on temporary "attachment" to the CIAs Directorate of Operations.
2 Under ClA auspices, Green Beret advisers have been involved in both covert
actions (never to be attributed to the US) such as Operation Phoenix, which
set up death squads in Vietnam in the 1960s, and clandestine operations
(secret only during their execution) such as the training of El Salvador's
Long Range Reconnaissance Patrols in the 1980s. 3
In the 1990s, Green Berets and other US advisers have been deeply involved
in Colombia, even though it has the worst ongoing human rights record in
Latin America.4 Last year, at least 231 US military and intelligence advisers
were sent there, according to the DoD's official deployment schedules.
5 These include two teams with 52 US Green Beret advisers each to train
the Colombian Army in "junior leadership" combat skills. That official
count is only three fewer than the congressionally-imposed limit (often
violated 6 ) on the number of in-country US advisers deployed in El Salvador
during the peak of its war. Even more Green Beret advisers have trained
Colombian Army Special Forces units outside Colombia at US bases in Panama.
7 According to US officials involved, this particular training has taken
place under the auspices of the CIA as part of a "Top Secret" counter-
drug program. 8
Since 1989, all US military training, advice, arms and services to Colombia
have been officially earmarked for the drug war. While most coca leaf is
grown in surrounding Andean countries, Colombia refines and exports about
80 percent of the world's processed cocaine. 9 US anti-drug policy, by
prioritizing law enforcement over prevention and treatment measures, puts
considerable pressure on countries such as Colombia. All of Washington's
$169 million annual aid to that country is ear- marked to counter drugs.
Some has actually been used for this purpose.
A Bogota-based CIA team, for example, was instrumental in the 1995 arrests
of the top leaders of the Cali cartel. But most US aid has been diverted
to Bogota's counterinsurgency war against leftist guerrillas. Since the
1960s, the Colombian military, with US backing, has been fighting the formerly
pro-Moscow Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the pro-Cuba
National Liberation Army (ELN), as well as other groups. In recent years,
the conflict has heated up, with Amnesty International reporting more than
20,000 dead since 1986. 10
While all sides have committed abuses, the military and allied (though
illegal) rightist paramilitary groups are guilty of the vast majority.
11
Spooks Bearing Gifts
Human rights monitors have long accused Washington of complicity in these
crimes. Now they have proof. Last October, Amnesty International released
internal US military documents showing that the US had provided arms to
13 of 14 Colombian army units that Amnesty had cited for abuses.12 In November,
Human Rights Watch released US and Colombian military docu- ments, along
with oral testimony, showing that in 1991, both the CIA and DoD advised
Colombia before its Defense Ministry established 41 clandestine intelligence
networks. According to a classified (reservado) ministry order creating
the program, the networks' only function was to target "the armed sub-
version," i.e., leftist guerrillas and their suspected supporters. Four
former members of one network, based in the riverport town of Barrancabermeja,
testified that it incor- porated illegal paramilitary groups and was responsible
for killing hundreds of civilians. 13
The ClA was directly involved in helping design and fund the intelligence
networks, according to retired US Army Col. James S. Roach, Jr., then military
attache and Defense (Department) Intelligence Agency liaison in Bogota.
"The CIA set up the clandestine nets on their own," Roach says. "They had
a lot of money. It was kind of like Santa Claus had arrived." CIA spokesman
Mark Mansfield declined to comment. 14
These CIA-promoted intelligence networks enabled the Colombian military
and illegal paramilitaries to expand the pattern of secret collaboration
which began in the early 1980s. According to Javier Giraldo, a jesuit priest
and founder of Colombia's Inter-Congregational Commission for Justice and
Peace:
A vast network of armed civilians began to replace, at least in part,
soldiers and policemen who could be easily identified. They also started
to employ methods that had been carefully designed to ensure secrecy and
generate confusion. Because of this, witnesses and victims of crimes are
unsure of the exact identity of the individual(s) responsible for committing
them. This problem with identifying the perpetrators is often insur- mountable.
At the same time, members of the army and police began to conceal their
identities, frequently wearing civilian clothes and hoods, to drive unmarked
cars and to take their victims to clandestine torture centers, all in order
to forego legal formalities in arrest. What has frequently followed these
abductions is intimidation or torture, enforced disappear- ances and murder.
15
SOA's Traditional Values
While DoD officials continue to deny complicity in human rights violations,
the close ties between US intelligence and defense agencies and their Colombian
counterparts are well documented. Last year, for example, the US Navy deployed
97 operations and intelligence advisers in-country. There they helped plan
strategy with the Colombian Navy command and provided tactical advice to
units based out of ports including Barrancabermeja. 16 Meanwhile, US Green
Berets train the Colombian army in Cimitarra, a town that even Colombian
police reports identify as a center of illegal paramilitary operations.
17 Other US officials work closely with Colombia top commanders. The US
Military Advisory Group's office is inside the Colombian Armed Forces command
compound, conveniently down the hall from the offices of the Colombian
army commander.
As is the case throughout much of Latin America, many key human rights
violators have received US training. Commander Gen. Manuel Jose Bonett
Locarno is one of hundreds of Colombian officers who have graduated from
the US School of the Americas (SOA).18 He was later implicated in torturing
and murdering trade unionists, community leaders, and human rights monitors.
Bonett, who denies responsibility for these or any other crimes, reports
to Gen. Harold Bedoya Pizarro, Colombia's Armed Forces commander, who studied
military intelligence at the SOA in 1965 and was invited back to teach
it as a guest professor in 1978 and 1979. A coalition of European human
rights groups and others, have accused him of running death squads comprised
of joint military and paramilitary forces. More recently, Bedoya has mapped
out "intelligence planning regarding the country's internal political situation"
through El Diario de Bedoya, a class- ified analysis with general orders
from Bedoya himself, regularly sent to all division and brigade commanders.
19
While Bedoya acknowledges that he has identified suspects for army surveillance,
both he and Bonett deny that these targets include such legal entities
as community leaders, non-governmental organizations, or political parties
and their elected officials. But a July 1995 "reservado" division-wide
order signed by Bonett instructs army intelligence networks to conduct
"permanent surveillance of the municipal governments and the ways in which
they are managing their funds." 20 Another classified Colombian army document
from March 1995 claims that the guerrillas have infiltrated an estimated
800 locally- elected municipal governments nationwide and an unknown number
of non-governmental organizations, "especially leftist ones ... in Colombia,
the United States, Canada, Europe." This activity has led the groups, the
document goes on, to adopt positions favoring "the overcoming of impunity,"
"the vigilant and effective monitoring of human rights," and "the construction
of a peace process." 21
Within Colombia's tense climate, simply identifying an organization
or individual as "leftist" is tantamount to authorizing anything from surveillance
to murder, and indeed, many Colombians so labeled have disappeared or been
killed. Take the rural town of Aguachica in the northern Magdalena Valley,
where the army's ability to process intelligence is made more efficient
with computers. One classified printout, "Latest Information on the Enemy,"
was prepared by army Task Force No. 27 Pantera (Panther). It names dozens
of alleged subversives, including leaders of the local Community Action
Movement (CAM), a legal group which this printout identifies as a "political
branch" of the guerrillas. Their crime? Community leaders "led a meeting
of peasants where they espoused their political objectives and how they
plan to achieve them as a movement." 22
Among CAM's popular leaders were "Libardo Galvis, a.k.a. Lalo" and his
brothers, Jesus Emilio and Luis Tiberio. On September 24, 1995, two months
after the army printout, Jesus and Luis were abducted by armed men, "some
wearing civilian clothes and others wearing army uniforms with the insignias
of the Counter-guerrilla Unit Task Force No. 27." Witnesses quoted by the
human rights group, MINGA, later said: "The brothers were brutally tortured.
They burned the fingers of their hands, and then decap- itated them." The
same armed men then walked to a nearby village and killed a local police
inspector, Emelda Ruiz, who had been investigating death squad crimes.
According to witnesses: "The perpetrators announced that they would be
back for other people whose names they had on their lists." 23
There is also good documentation of abuses by the Colombian Navy, which
has also been armed, trained, and advised by the United States. The US
helped design its Riverine units to patrol rivers in search of trafficking
boats. One of the ports the Riverines are based in is Barrancabermeja,
also the site of one of the 41 intelli- gence networks promoted by the
CIA. Four ex-agents of this network have testified about it. In a pattern
used around the country, naval intelligence wanted to keep the network
covert, so it incorporated retired military officers and other civilians
to both gather intelligence and execute operations. One such clandestine
operative was ex-naval Sgt. Saulo Segura. He reported to Capt. Juan Carlos
Alvarez, the network chief who served under Lt. Col. Rodrigo Quinonez,
then the Navy's top intelli- gence commander. 24 Together these men identified
targets for surveillance and decided which ones to hit.
One ex-agent testified:
[Lt.] Col. Rodrigo Quinonez was told everything about the [surveillance]
operations. And according to what was discovered, he would speak with Capt.
Juan Carlos Alvarez, alias El Ingeniero ["The Engineer"], giving the green
light if the operation was OK or not, in other words, to kill people or
not. After that, Capt. Juan Carlos Alvarez would communicate directly with
[our team leaders], who told us what to do. If it was by phone, they used
the following codes: "There are some broken motors. I need you to repair
them. They are in such and such a place." And they would give the address.
"Take good mechanics and good tools." Mechanics meant sicarios [hired assassins],
good tools meant good arms, and the motors meant the victims. 25
According to the testimony of four ex-agents, early victims included
the president, vice-president, and treasurer of the local transportation
workers union; two leaders of the local oil workers union (another one
of its leaders was killed last October); one leader of a local peasant
workers' union; and two human rights monitors. 26
These murders and others drew the interest of Ismael Jaimes, editor
of La Opinion, Barrancabermeja's leading independent newspaper. After investigating
for several months, he began writing columns alleging that the military
was behind these crimes.
Finally Jaimes was targeted too. One witness said: "After following
him for several months, they established that he went every morning to
drop off his son at school in the Torcoroma neighborhood, where he was
killed one moming." 27
Soon the network attracted even more attention as many of its sicarios
were also accused of robberies and other common crimes. To protect itself
from exposure, the Navy began killing off operatives. On June 1, 1992,
after four network sicarios were apprehended by a regular army unit over
an authorized murder, military intelligence officers disappeared all four,
according to a document signed by the regular unit's commanders. 28 Later,
several more network personnel were killed. Unidentified gunmen eventually
tried to kill Segura, wounding him twice. 29
This turned Segura against the Navy, and he joined three of his former
colleagues who testified against their superiors. But instead of prosecuting
the officers named by these ex-agents, the Colombian government charged
and imprisoned Segura. Last year inside La Modelo, Bogota's maximum security
jail, he glanced about nervously before saying, "I hope they don't kill
me." Two months later, on Christmas Eve, Segura was murdered inside his
cellblock with a handgun left next to his corpse. His murder remains unsolved;
the whereabouts of the other three witnesses remain unknown. Nonetheless,
they provided solid and overlapping details about the murders of 57 specific
political opponents and activists. Yet not one case has gone to Court.
30
American Hand
The US bears complicity in Colombia's human rights record, having armed,
trained and advised most of the military units and commands directly implicated
in the killing. Still, the Clinton administration is now increasing aid
to the Colombian military. This year [1997], the US is sending a record
$169 million in arms. They include 12 Blackhawk helicopter gunships, even
though Amnesty International has already shown how US weapons have been
diverted to the Colombian military's dirty counterinsurgency war. Nonetheless,
US officials insist that this time, the weapons will be used to fight drugs.
"[W]e are very clear that the military assistance that we provide to Colombia
must be used for the purposes intended, counter-narcotics," said Nicholas
Burns, The State Department spokesman. 31
But human rights groups no longer believe it. Recent revelations by
both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch "confirm what we expected,"
says Charles Roberts of the Washington, DC-based Colombia Human Rights
Committee. "While trying to avoid the appearance of complicity in human
rights violations, the United States has continued to provide training
and materiel to the Colombian military irrespective of its horrendous abuses."
32
Notes:
-
US Special Operations Forces
Posture Statement, (Washington, D.C.: US Defense Department, 1994), p.
10
-
Interviews with senior Department
of Defense (DoD) officials, Dec. 1995.
-
Douglas Valentine, Phoenix Program
(New York: William Morrow, 1990); and Frank Smyth, "Secret Warriors: U.S.
Advisors Have Taken Up Arms in El Salvador," The Village Voice, Aug. 11,
1987. The US role in training these patrols first came out in testimony
by Lt. Col. Oliver North during the Iran- Contra hearings. One of the CIA
operatives involved, Felix Rodriguez, a.k.a. Max Gomez, also participated
in the 1967 Bolivian operation which resulted in the capture and summary
execution of Che Guevara.
-
See, among others, Amnesty lnternational,
Political Violence in Colombia: Myth and Reality (London: Al Publications,
1994); Javier Giraldo, S.J, Colombia: The Genocidal Democracy (Monroe,
Maine: Common Courage Press, 1996).
-
"List of FY96 Deployments for
USMILGP [US Military Advisory Group] Colombia. This document first appeared
in Appendix 3 of Human Rights Watch, Colombia's Killer Networks: The Military/Paramilitary
Partnership and the United States, Washington, D.C., 1996)
-
Interview with Anne Manuel,
deputy director, Human Rights Watch/Americas, Feb. 1997.
-
Human Rights Watch. op. cit.,
p. 91.
-
Interviews with senior DoD officials,
Dec. 1995.
-
See "The Cali Cartel: New Kings
of Cocaine," US Drug Enforcement Administration Drug Intelligence Report,
Nov. 1994; and "The National Narcotics Intelligence Consumers Committee
Report 1993: The Supply of Illicit Drugs to the United States," Aug. 1994,
pp. 2-6.
-
Amnesty International, op. cit.,
p. 1.
-
Ibid., pp. 67-74.
-
See, among others, Reuters,
"Amnesty calls for halt in U.S. aid to Colombia," Oct. 29, 1996.
-
Human Rights Watch, op. cit.,
pp. 27-41.
-
Telephone interview, March 1996.
-
Giraldo, op. cit., p. 22.
-
List of FY96 Deployments, op.
cit.
-
"Human Rights Watch," op, cit.,
p. 91.
-
Out of the one list of 247 Colombian
military officers implicated in specific human rights cases, 124 of them
have received training at the US School of the Americas. Another seven
Colombians, including Bedoya, have been invited to teach there. This Alumni
list was prepared by Fred Gaona and is on file at the Washington Office
on Latin America. Profiles of both the known abusers and the evidence against
them was compiled by a coalition of Euopean human rights groups in El Terrorismo
de Estado en Colombia (Brussels), Ediciones NCOS, 1992, pp. 71-72.
-
Authors' notes on document,
Oct. 1996.
-
"Asunto: Examinacion de la Estrategia
Divisionaria, Reservado," signed by Maj. Gen. Manuel Jose Bonett Locarno,
when he was the Colombian Army Second Division commander, July 24, 1995.
-
"Asunto Apreciacion Coyuntural
Situacion Nacional," signed by Lt. Col. Jose Domingo Garcia Garcia, second
commander and chief of staff of the Colombian Army Fifth Brigade, March
2, 1995.
-
Fuerza de Tarea No. 27 "Pantera,
Ultimas Infor- maciones del Enemigo," April 8-July 11, 1995.
-
MINGA Urgent Action, "Political
Genocide Continues in Aguachica, Cesar," Sept. 25, 1995.
-
Interview with Saulo Segura
Palacios, La Modelo prison, Bogota, Colombia, Sept. 18, 1995.
-
Testimony of Carlos Alberto
Vergara Amaya to the Colombian attorney general, Feb. 11, 1994.
-
Letter from Carlos David Lopez
to the Colombian attorney general, Dec. 7, 1993; Letter from Saulol Segura
Palacios to the Colombian attorney general, Dec. 7, 1993; Testimony of
Carlos Alberto Vergara Amaya to the Colombian attorney general, Feb. 11,
1994; and Letter from Felipe Gomez to the Colombian attorney general, Nov.
29, 1994.
-
Letter from Carlos David Lopez,
Dec. 7, 1993
-
"Asunto: Informe desaparicion
personas," signed by Colombian Army Gen. Marino Gutierrez Isaza, June 2,
1992, as quoted in Human Rights Watch, op. cit.
-
Interview with Segura, op. cit.
-
See Human Rights Watch, op.
cit.; and Charles Roberts, "Rule of Law and Development: U.S. AID and the
Public Courts of Colombia," Georgetown University Law Center manuscript,
Spring 1995.
-
Transcript of State Department
briefing, Washington, D.C., Oct. 29, 1996.
-
Interview, Washington, D.C.,
Jan. 21, 1997.
© Copyright 1997 Frank Smyth and Winifred Tate
Updated: 10/11/99
© Copyright 1999 Frank Smyth Copyright © 1998 - 1999 WHAT'S
UP America, Inc. For more information, please click here: www.whatsupamerica.com
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