>>>Another one for the modern day 'Crusaders'.  I guess the real question
becomes, "Is escalation possible only unilaterally?"  This was also a question
in VietNam, the answer to which has become all too clear.  Time, again, will
tell.  A<>E<>R <<<

From
http://www.independent.co.uk/argument/Regular_columnists/Joan_Smith/smith030900.
shtml

}}}>Begin

The President of hypocrites
Clinton's intervention in Colombia's drugs war is high risk. It won't help the
chaotic country and it could backfire on the US
By Joan Smith
3 September 2000

I suppose there are bigger hypocrites than Bill Clinton, but their names escape
me for the moment. The US President made a flying visit to Colombia last week,
after assuring the population in a video broadcast that the US has no military
objective in their country. I'm sorry? Wasn't he about to hand over $1.3bn –
some £900m – in mostly military aid to Colombia's President Andres Pastrana?
Well, yes, but you would barely know it from Mr Clinton's trademark blend of
personal anecdote and stomach-churning sentimentality. He insisted he was
merely providing assist- ance in a campaign against drugs led by the Colombian
government, before going on to salute ordinary people who are marching for
peace, for justice, for the quiet miracle of a normal life.

The compliment was not whole-heartedly returned. Bomb-making equipment was
found in Cartagena, the Caribbean port where Mr Clinton spent precisely eight
hours, well away from the capital, Bogota, and the southern provinces which the
government has ceded to drug traffickers and left-wing guerrillas. Even so, Mr
Clinton's brief presence required protection from no fewer than 5,000 soldiers
and police, 350 US Secret Service agents, helicopter gunships and several navy
patrol boats. Six people, including three children, died in guerrilla attacks
apparently prompted by the visit, and eight soldiers were injured. Protesters
marched in Bogota, signalling that Mr Clinton's assurance that he wanted to
make life better for people had not been universally believed. With very good
reason. The Colombian military, whose involvement with paramilitary death
squads is admitted even by its own government, is about to receive 60
helicopters and training for two special army battalions. At present, they do
not have enough helicopter pilots or hangars, but their job will be to protect
police as they attempt to destroy coca plantations. This is not a task for
which Colombians have shown much aptitude; in the decade since fumigation of
coca crops began, according to one recent calculation, annual production has
risen by more than 750 per cent.

Since there is no meaningful distinction between members of drugs cartels and
the two main guerrilla groups, the US military is taking sides in a long-
running civil war which is set to become, Mr Clinton's harshest critics say,
another Vietnam. The comparison is fuelled by the fact that the chief architect
of Plan Colombia, as it is called, is the US's drugs tsar Barry McCaffrey, a
decorated Vietnam veteran whose own record in the immediate aftermath of the
Gulf War has come under hostile scrutiny. (In March 1991, General McCaffrey
ordered an attack on retreating Iraqi soldiers which turned, in his words, into
"one of the most astounding scenes of destruction I have ever participated in".
Eye-witnesses have questioned whether the Iraqis began shooting first, as
McCaffrey claimed.)

* Another close parallel is the Reagan administration's military aid to the
government of El Salvador and the opposition Contras in Nicaragua. Mr Clinton
may be a Democrat but, like Mr Reagan, he has invoked national security in
waiving human-rights conditions attached to military aid by Congress – an
admission that the war on drugs is more important than anything else, including
murder. According to Human Rights Watch, there is "detailed, compelling and
abundant evidence" of the Colombian army's connections with paramilitary death
squads; half of its 18 brigades have been linked to these groups, including
those operating in areas which are about to get US assistance.

Mr Clinton visited a law centre in Cartagena last week and posed in a silly hat
for photographers before scuttling back to Washington. The US intervention
leaves ordinary Colombians, who face a human-rights crisis of "alarming
proportions" according to Amnesty International, acutely vulnerable in a civil
war which is almost certainly about to intensify. The Colombian military is as
incompetent as it is brutal; two weeks ago, an army patrol mistook a party of
schoolchildren for rebels, opened fire and killed six. Mr Clinton has not said
what the US government will do if its military advisers are attacked in rebel-
controlled areas. But the spectre of US involvement in a protracted jungle war
in South America is belatedly setting off alarm bells in Washington.

Why should Mr Clinton take any notice? This most shameless of US presidents
will be out of office in four months, leaving someone else to sort out the
mess. Opinion polls have suggested that the electorate is worried about drugs,
and that the Democrats are seen as soft on the issue. Mr Clinton is doing Al
Gore a favour, at no political cost to himself, while also delighting US arms
manufacturers with substantial orders, not least the companies whose
helicopters will be part of the aid package. You do not have to be a cynic to
guess, correctly, that they also happen to be important donors of funds to the
Democratic Party.

* In effect, Colombia has become the setting for an exercise which is really
about US domestic politics, in which the anxieties of voters and the interests
of arms manufacturers happen neatly to coincide. The war on drugs is unwinnable
– as President Pastrana remarked in a candid interview last week – as long as
there is a continuing demand in wealthy nations such as the US. Mr Clinton
mouthed a few platitudes about this in his broadcast, but the truth is that the
victims at home are largely expendable: young black men who kill each other in
drug-related shootings or end up serving long sentences. One in 20 black men
over 18 is in jail in the US, the vast majority for crimes involving drugs.

The question of why the US is so determined to prosecute a drugs "war" it has
demonstrably failed to win, at such cost in human suffering, is something I do
not have space to address here. But it is clear that Mr Clinton is stepping up
US military involvement in another country's civil war, one which has lasted
for 36 years without either side nearing victory. Can this be the same
President who flew to Guatemala only last year to apologise for US interference
in that country's very similar conflict, thereby contributing to the deaths of
200,000 people? Politicians are notorious for memory lapses, but this one is
spectacular even by Mr Clinton's Olympic standards.

Yet the British Government supports this insane adventure, as do its EU
partners. It remains to be seen whether they will feel so happy about Plan
Colombia now that Mr Clinton has released the Colombian military from its
obligation to clean up human-rights abuses. This weekend, Lotte Leicht,
Brussels director of Human Rights Watch, is writing to EU foreign ministers
asking them to suspend European aid in the light of Mr Clinton's decision. I
know Robin Cook is touchy about ethical dimensions and all that, but this is
one occasion when he really does have a case to answer.


End<{{{
A<>E<>R

Integrity has no need of rules. -Albert Camus (1913-1960)
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
tasks is to spread the demystification and desanctification of the
State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
repeatedly and in depth that not only the emperor but even the
"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
by exploitive rule over the public; and that such rule is the reverse
of objective necessity.  He strives to show that the existence of
taxation and the State necessarily sets up a class division between
the exploiting rulers and the exploited ruled.  He seeks to show that
the task of the court intellectuals who have always supported the State
has ever been to weave mystification in order to induce the public to
accept State rule and that these intellectuals obtain, in return, a
share in the power and pelf extracted by the rulers from their deluded
subjects.
[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
Fox & Wilkes, 1973, 1978, p. 25]]

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