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September 25, 2002
The U.S. War of Terror in Colombia
Paramilitarism is Legal Again Under U.S. Military Doctrine
By Doug Stokes

Special to The Narco News Bulletin

Under the new presidency of Colombia's Alvaro Uribe Velez paramilitarism is
once again legal.

His new network of a million paid informants essentially makes overt what
has long been a joint covert US-Colombian strategy of brutal
counter-insurgent paramilitary warfare. Counter-insurgency has long formed
the primary means through which the US has exerted its power via its proxies
throughout Latin America. To fully grasp the relationship between US
military training and aid, paramilitarism, and human rights abuses in
Colombia today it is necessary to examine the evolution of US
counter-insurgency doctrine.

Counter-insurgency was firmly wedded to US foreign security policy goals
with former US president Kennedy's authorisation of the 1961 Foreign
Assistance Act. This act sent US aid to developing nations to increase
bilateral ties and encourage capitalist orientated economic development. It
also encompassed a wide ranging security dimension which aimed at:

improving the ability of friendly countries and international organizations
to deter or, if necessary, defeat Communist or Communist-supported
aggression, facilitating arrangements for individual and collective
security, assisting friendly countries to maintain internal security and
stability in the developing friendly countries essential to their more rapid
social, economic, and political progress.

Latin America was to become the primary area of US Cold War interventionism
throughout the Cold War. It was viewed as both the US's primary sphere of
influence and as fundamentally related to US security through its
territorially close proximity to US borders. The primary means for US
assistance in maintaining "internal security and stability" in "developing
friendly countries" became US led counter-insurgency assistance. Recipient
militaries were organised to police their own populations and prevent
internal social forces from challenging a status-quo geared towards what
were perceived to be core US interests: the prevention of independence and
the preservation of countries open to US capital penetration.

In the last decade of the Cold War, then US President Ronald Reagan
continued to argue that "the security of our own borders depends upon which
type of society prevails [in Central America], the imperfect democracy
seeking to improve, or the Communist dictatorship seeking to expand." In
preventing expansive "communist dictatorships" US policy frequently led to
the mass violation of human rights and large-scale civilian death. The US
was linked to these practices not only through the installation and support
of abusive governments, but also through the very doctrines and practises
passed on through US training.

Counter-insurgency campaigns often relied upon mass civilian displacement to
deny guerrilla forces a civilian base within which to work and the
terrorisation of civil society. A 1962 US Army Psychological Operations
manual outlined that:
Civilians in the operational area may be supporting their own government or
collaborating with an enemy occupation force. An isolation program designed
to instil doubt and fear may be carried out, and a positive political action
program designed to elicit active support of the guerrillas also may be
effected. If these programs fail, it may become necessary to take more
aggressive action in the form of harsh treatment or even abductions. The
abduction and harsh treatment of key enemy civilians can weaken the
collaborators' belief in the strength and power of their military forces.

Counter-insurgency also frequently relied upon clandestine paramilitary
forces to carry out political assassinations, disappearances and the
terrorisation of those considered inimical to state interests. This form of
warfare was typically characterised as a reactive form of counter-terror
within US counter-insurgency doctrine, and considered necessary to both
create a plausible deniability for state terror, and to install fear into
target populations. A 1962 special warfare manual outlined the training
program for the US's allied security forces. Training included "guerrilla
warfare, propaganda, subversion, intelligence and counter-intelligence,
terrorist activities, civic action, and conventional combat operations".

Colombia was one of the largest recipients of US counter-insurgency aid
during the Cold War. General William Yarborough headed the original US
Special Forces team sent to Colombia in 1962 to organise the Colombian
military for counter-insurgency. He argued that a "concerted country team
effort should now be made to select civilian and military personnel for
clandestine training in resistance operations in case they are needed".
These paramilitary teams were to be used to perform "counter-agent and
counter-propaganda functions and as necessary execute paramilitary, sabotage
and/or terrorist activities against known communist proponents" and were to
be "backed by the United States".
Torture was also routinely practiced by US-backed counter-insurgency states
and was taught by US counter-insurgency experts. The School of the Americas,
the US's pre-eminent Latin American military academy, used training
materials which the US's Intelligence Oversight Board (IOB) argued "used
instructional materials to train Latin American officers, [between]
1982-1991, that appeared to condone practices such as executions of
guerrillas, extortion, physical abuse, coercion, and false imprisonment".
During the US backed Contra insurgency in Nicaragua in the 1980s, the CIA
distributed an updated version of its 1963 KUBARK Counterintelligence
Interrogation manual. The manual was renamed the Human Resource Exploitation
Training Manual and included extensive guidelines on the most effective
means of torture including the use of drugs, sleep deprivation, physical
violence, and solitary confinement. The manual was also used to train a
number of other Latin American militaries.

The targeting of civil society also formed a cornerstone of US
counter-insurgency training and doctrine. Civil society required extensive
policing to prevent any form of unrest or subversion against the prevailing
order. A 1985 Tactical Intelligence manual from US Southern Command (the
US's Unified Command for Latin America) explained that "'battlefield
preparation' means collecting information on civil society: who stands for
what, which groups or individuals can be mobilized for counterinsurgency and
which must be neutralized". Counter-insurgents must watch for any "refusal
of peasants to pay rent, taxes, or loan payments or unusual difficulty in
their collection," an increase "in the number of entertainers with a
political message," or the intensification of "religious unrest". In a
similar manual produced by the School of the Americas, intelligence required
identifying "the nature of the labour organizations" the potential
establishment of "legal political organizations that serve as fronts" for
insurgents. Counter-insurgents must monitor the "system of public
education," and the influence of "politics on teachers, texts, and students"
and "the relations between religious leaders (domestic or missionaries), the
established government and the insurgents."

In sum, the use of paramilitaries, mass civilian displacement,
counter-terror, physical coercion and the targeting of civil society are all
considered a necessary component of US sponsored counter-insurgency. Civil
society organisations, especially those that seek to challenge prevailing
socio-economic conditions are viewed as subversive to the social and
political order, and in the context of counter-insurgency, become legitimate
targets. This security orientation has had devastating consequences for
Latin America with hundreds of thousands of civilians murdered by US backed
counter-insurgency states. With the ending of the Cold War a rhetorical
shift has occurred in US policy from anti-communism to a war on drugs and
now a war on terror. Whilst this rhetorical shift continues to provide a PR
framework for US policy, US objectives have essentially remained the same;
the prevention of a workable hemispheric alternative that may challenge US
hegemony, and the continued suppression of civil society so as to raise the
associated physical and spiritual costs associated with open dissent.

The primary means for repression has been the use of paramilitaries. In the
last fifteen years in Colombia an entire democratic leftist political party
was eliminated by right-wing paramilitaries; 4000 activists were murdered in
the 1980s; 151 journalists have been shot; 300,000 Colombian civilians have
been killed; three out of four trade union activists murdered worldwide are
killed by the Colombian paramilitaries. According to the UN, university
lecturers and teachers are "among the workers most often affected by
killings, threats and violence-related displacement." Paramilitary groups
also regularly target human rights activists, indigenous leaders, and
community activists. This repression serves to criminalize any form of civil
society resistance to US-led neo-liberal restructuring of Colombia's economy
and stifle political and economic challenges to the Colombian status quo.
Uribe's new legal death-squads both legitimises the paramilitary option
within his counter-insurgency war, and will serve to further increase the
repression in Colombia.

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