-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Oct. 31, 2002
issue of Workers World newspaper
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COLOMBIA: PENTAGON SENDS COMBAT TROOPS

By Andy McInerney

Before the Clinton administration launched "Plan Colombia," 
a $1.3 billion military aid package to Colombia, the U.S. 
government admitted to having around 200 troops--Special 
Forces "advisers"--in that South American country. Today, 
according to an Oct. 12 in the British newspaper The Daily 
Telegraph, that number has doubled.

Now, with the Bush administration dropping any pretense of 
fighting a "drug war," these troops are on the battlefield. 
The Telegraph reported that Special Forces began operations 
in Arauca, an oil-rich state on the Venezuelan border, in 
early October. Their mission is "training local soldiers in 
helicopter-born operations, night fighting and intelligence 
operations."

Congress approved this overt military intervention in July 
as part of the $29 billion "Anti-Terrorism" package. The 
appropriation included $35 million in new military aid to 
Colombia. Of that, $6 million is specifically aimed at 
protecting oil pipelines for U.S.-owned oil conglomerates 
like Occidental Petroleum.

According to an report in the New York Times headlined 
"America's For-Profit Secret Army," an unspecified number of 
U.S. mercenaries hired by the Pentagon and by oil companies 
are also operating in Colombia.

The oil pipelines are frequent targets for attack by 
Colombia's two largest revolutionary armed insurgencies, the 
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia-People's Army (FARC-
EP) and the National Liberation Army (ELN). Arauca, where 
the Special Forces are beginning their training, is a 
traditional stronghold of the ELN.

The right-wing president of Colombia, Alvaro Uribe, declared 
Arauca a "Zone of Rehabilitation and Consolidation." This 
elaborate title means that the Colombian military has 
declared martial law: Peasant and union leaders can be 
arrested without warrant or formal charges, and curfews can 
be declared at will.

The military head of the zone is Brig. Gen. Carlos Lemus 
Pedraza. Human-rights groups charge he has close ties to the 
right-wing death squads working with the army in the region.

Since Uribe's election, fighting between the U.S.-backed 
Colombian military and paramilitary death squads, on the one 
hand, and the Marxist insurgencies on the other has 
intensified. Street battles have taken place repeatedly in 
poor and working-class neighborhoods in Medellin, Colombia's 
third-biggest city.

In September, just six weeks after Uribe's inauguration, 
millions of workers, peasants and students marched in a 
nationwide mobilization against the government's economic 
policies.

So the open U.S. military intervention is taking place at 
the same time that the class struggle--in both its armed and 
its mass forms--is intensifying in Colombia. This raises the 
prospect of the confrontation spilling over the narrow 
bounds that the Pentagon is trying to delineate.

Will the U.S. government be able to fight a growing popular 
insurgency in Colombia at the same time as a massive 
military adventure in the Middle East?

- END -

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