----- Original Message -----
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, October 01, 2000 10:00 PM
Subject: [STOPNATO.ORG.UK] One Step Closer To Vietnam, Part Two


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[Look at how the globalist conquistadores 'spin' this one: U.S. troops
are threatenED, not threatenING. As though they were under siege in Ft.
Benning, Georgia, for instance, and not commanding a war in another
country....But remember, THEY are always wrong, regardless of who THEY
are at any given moment.]


U.S. Troops in Colombia Threatened
by ANDREW SELSKY
Associated Press Writer
LARANDIA ARMY BASE, Colombia (AP) -- U.S. special forces stationed in
this sprawling army base near large concentrations of leftist guerrillas
on Sunday faced renewed threats from the insurgents.
But a general in Colombia said he has sufficient forces to repel any
threat to the U.S. forces who are training troops in a U.S.-aided drug
war.
Concerns about the safety of the approximately 85 elite American
soldiers at Larandia were highlighted after Andres Paris, a commander of
the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, was quoted as
saying that ''all Colombian or foreign military personnel who are in the
combat zones will be military targets.''
A general commanding a brigade of 4,800 Colombian troops in this
mountainous region of jungle and pasture land where troops and rebels
frequently clash said his force was sufficient to protect the Americans
from the FARC. The rebels have infiltrated combatants toward the
exterior of the base to look for weak points, said Col. Julian Villate,
the base commander.
An Associated Press team, the first journalists to visit Larandia since
the American soldiers arrived two months ago, saw the special forces
compound on the base but was denied permission by the U.S. Embassy to
interview or photograph the troops.
The U.S. Army Green Berets and members of the 720th Special Tactics
Group from Pope Air Force Base, N.C., are training two counter-narcotics
army battalions under a $1.3 billion U.S. aid package to this South
American nation.
Paris' comments, posted Thursday in New Colombia News Agency, a web site
run by FARC supporters and considered a reliable source, echoed previous
statements by FARC commanders. They did not come as a surprise, said
Raul Duany, spokesman for the Southern Command, which is in charge of
U.S. military operations in Latin America.
''It's nothing we didn't expect or didn't know. It's a very difficult
situation down there,'' Duany said over the phone Sunday from the
Southern Command's headquarters in Miami.
Duany said under the U.S. troops' rules of engagement, they are
authorized to fire back if attacked or caught in a cross fire.
He refused to give specifics on how the military is reacting to Paris'
statement, but said U.S. forces' security is being constantly evaluated
and that ''drastic protection methods'' would be taken if necessary.
Gen. Javier Arias, commander of the Colombian army's 12th Brigade that
includes Larandia, insisted that the FARC's 3,000 combatants in the
region pose no direct threat to the base.
''We're not worried about security in Larandia,'' Arias said in an
interview Friday. ''We have troops constantly on the move between the
base and where the rebels are.''
Larandia is a two-hour drive west of a Switzerland-sized zone ceded by
the government to the rebels last year in an attempt to push moribund
peace talks forward. The rebels also have units to the north, west and
south of the base -- the closest 9 miles away, according to Arias.
The U.S. troops toted loaded weapons whenever they left their compound:
either an assault rifle or even a pistol tucked into their shorts. They
did not leave the base itself.
The special forces, many of them Hispanics, train the Colombian soldiers
in advanced combat techniques. Except for their insignia, many of the
Americans are barely distinguishable from their Colombian counterparts.
When they returned to their compound -- a cement building and a cluster
of large tents dotted with satellite dishes -- through an opening in a
roll of concertina wire, the U.S. troops ejected the loaded clips from
their rifles.
Under President Clinton's aid initiative, the Americans can only train
the Colombians and are barred from accompanying Colombian troops into
combat.
There have been no reports of fighting in the immediate vicinity since
the Americans arrived at the base, located below mist-shrouded mountains
a 40-minute drive from the provincial capital of Florencia.
But in July last year, there was a two-day battle between FARC rebels
and Colombian soldiers just 3 miles away in which 20 rebels were
reportedly killed and one government soldier wounded, Villate said.
There have been other firefights since then, 12 or more miles away, the
base commander said.


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