_
From: Bob Everton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


For more information keep checking:
www.colombia.indymedia.org
http://pages.hotbot.com/edu/stop.wto/PLan_Colombia.html


Plan Colombia.   Military intervention at the hands of the
FTAA                   (by Genny Santos. Feb, 2001)

"I hope the ends don't justify the means" says a US military
authority in Colombia, but what he will not admit is that the FTAA is
neither
 justifiable as an end nor as a means.  The expansion of NAFTA, named the
Free Trade Area of the Americas, is expected to be ratified by 2005. However
this is not just another treaty that is in its negotiation stage and should
be
stopped before its final implementation. It is a process that is already
working in full gear towards the FTAA as an end result.  An end which is the
creation of a secure playing field for capitalism. Thus, in the expectation
of
creating a capitalist heaven, the 34 participant "democracies" have a
mission
that consists not only in passing neoliberal pieces of legislation that will
undermine labour, environmental standards, and all sorts of human rights,
but also consists in wiping out all domestic and international
obstacles/opposition to the "free" market economy.

    With that end in mind, the FTAA supporters achieved the approval of an
aid package called Plan Colombia. Initially proposed by the Colombian
government the plan was then ratified by the Clinton administration after
prolonged lobbying by interested parties.  It consists of more than a $2
billion package for the Colombian state and military with the principal goal
of recovering the state's control over the country, while creating a safe
playing field for investors.  $ 1.3 billion is from the US, and an equitable
amount from the European Community, showing that although the FTAA is an
affair of the American continent, Europe's as well as Japan's economic
interests have the same objectives in mind.  Despite the western media
portrayal of Plan Colombia as an aid to a country torn by what they frame as
a drug war, it is a plan designed to facilitate the Free Trade Area of the
Americas.
     In order to fully understand how Plan Colombia falls into the mandate
of the FTAA, it is important to have some basic background knowledge of
Colombia's socio-economic history.  In Colombia, political violence has been
a well known experience to many generations. Since the early 20th century,
there has been a two-party electoral system that has suppressed any
possibilities of opposition.  Within that system there have been ongoing
pockets of resistance. The early black communities whom managed to
organize a successful fight to slave work in plantations, moved into the
jungle
in northern Colombia where they formed today's free communities known
as 'Palenques.'  They were the first to achieve recognized autonomy from the
Spanish monarchy. Meanwhile, various indigenous communities have been
struggling by every means possible against the invasion of their lands by
TNCs wanting to drill into sacred territories or power plants that build
damns resulting in hundreds of deaths from disease and the displacement of
entire communities.  One internationally known community is that of the U'wa
people whom, faced with the threat of their land being drilled by Oxy
Petroleum, have expressed their intention to commit mass suicide if the
drilling plans go ahead. As their statement says, "death with dignity is
better than slow genocide."

    The largest standing guerrilla group, the FARC, with significant peasant
support have managed to gain control of the southern territories and have
strongly opposed the privatization of Colombian resources while waging a
constant war against US-backed military and paramilitary groups.  The
Colombian military, armed and trained by the United States, has not crushed
domestic resistance but has contributed to the annual death toll of about
3,000, as well as the now habitual massacres (mostly committed by
paramilitary groups) and to the 300,000 new refugees that are driven from
their homes every year.  Furthermore, Colombia has been a receiver of
IMF/World Bank austerity policies since the 1970's, and has been described
by the Wall Street Journal as the country with the best economic growth in
Latin America.  All this, while approximately 55 percent of Colombia's
population lives below the poverty level.

    Within this context, Colombia remains a country rich in natural
resources and is considered an excellent trade rout due to its geographical
situation with coasts on both the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Its main
natural resources are oil, coal, gold, emeralds, platinum and uranium.  And
its main exports are coffee, exotic flowers, sugar, bananas and cotton.
Colombia is also expanding its maquiladora industries.  However, the
numerous resistance movements and the long history of union organizing are
not welcoming to foreign investors whom choose to hire private
militaries/paramilitaries in order to secure their establishments.  British
Petroleum, for example, has intervened directly in the ongoing war by hiring
mercenaries to work with the military on counterinsurgency strategies in
order to protect the oil industry from guerrilla bomb attacks as well as
from
union organizing.  Sindicalist organizing is yet another strong threat to
profit maximization, which is why  no less than 79 union activists were
murdered in Colombia in one year (2000), in addition to the assassination of
4.000 opposition activists and 3.000 union leaders in 14 years of violence.
Nevertheless, the Colombian state continues to be praised as the longest
standing democracy in Latin America.

    This is the state that has received Plan Colombia as an aid package. It
was initially described as a plan to fight narcotics, but approved by the
US senate in April, 2000, after extensive lobbying on the part of several
corporations whose interests have nothing to do with drug policy.  Those
corporations include Occidental Petroleum Corp., BP Amoco, United
Technology Corp., (military helicopter producer), and Bell Helicopter
Textron
Inc. Therefore, it is no surprise that 85 percent of the US package to
Colombia is to be spent on military weapons.  Meanwhile, one of the FTAA's
principles states a clear commitment to "non-intervention and to the
peaceful
resolution of disputes."  So, does the funding of a war escalation, the
training
of a military known for its human rights atrocities, the fumigation of the
only
crops that can sustain the people's lives, and the purchase of advanced
weaponry qualify as non-intervention and peaceful resolution?  Perhaps, a
better question should be; what are the real intentions, behind Plan
Colombia. This is where the actual FTAA, rather than its nice-sounding
statement of principles, comes into play.

    The process by which the FTAA is negotiated is through nine working
groups, of which-just as an interesting side note- the one pertaining
to 'market access' is to be chaired by Colombia.  Every year, each of the 34
countries, represented by their trade ministers, make several commitments to
a plan of action within each of the working groups.  Some of the steps
within
the plan of action that Colombia has certainly taken a lead on are;
(a) "Combating the problem of illegal drugs and related crimes" and
(b) "Combating terrorism."  Thus, Plan Colombia falls perfectly into place
just at the right time with one of its main responsibilities being "the
reduction of cultivation, processing, and distribution of narcotics" and
"the
strengthening of police and armed forces."  However, the target is not
actually to put an end to coca production but to put an end to the
historically rooted opposition and resistance to the illegitimate bi-party
system and neoliberal agenda.  As a result, the intended victims are not the
big drug cartels who will profit by purchasing the fumigated lands that
peasants find themselves forced to sell off, nor the US banks and chemical
corporations that are well known to be engaged in the narcotrafficking
business. The intended victims are rather the peasants, the urban poor, the
guerrillas, the indigenous people struggling to protect their land and their
lives, the black communities seeking self-government and the protection of
the freedom they have fought for for so long, and basically any one who
opposes the ultimate free market economy that the FTAA is seeking to
impose.

    The are many benefits to waging war in Colombia.  To begin with,
Colombia now has the third largest displaced population in the world.
Internal refugees are mostly peasants, indigenous people, and
afrocolombians whom are forced to abandon their small lots of land,
escaping from the violence.  Between 1995 and 1999, the number of
displaced people surpassed one million (89,000 in 1995, 181,000 in 1996,
257,000 in 1997, 308,000 in 1998, and 225,000 between January and
September 1999).  Half of the people forcefully displaced are black
Colombians.  The issue is, as Hector Mondragon, a Colombian analyst living
underground states, "Not only that people have been displaced by war, but
also more importantly, that this war is being made specifically to displace
people." The reason is that this displacement allows for large land-owners,
known as 'latifundistas,' to  purchase more land for large-scale coca
production and export crops resulting in the further enrichment of the
elite at
the expense of the small 'campesino'.

     We are witnessing the new century's foreign policy. A policy of war,
where communism is no longer the excuse for western illegitimate
intervention, but rather narcotics are the excuse for an intervention that
is
made legitimate by the free market forces and for the free market.

    Already in the previous war known as 'La Violencia' between 1948 and
1958 about 2 million peasants were displaced and 200,000 murdered.  During
that time period, the large sugar cane plantations were extended together
with cotton production which grew by 500 percent.  This leaves coca
production as the only profitable crop for peasants to produce. However, as
they are displaced from their land and enter the jungle, the cost of
production is increased, which means that the peasant is forced to work
harder and plant more coca leaves in order to survive.  In 1999, although 16
thousand hectares of illegal plantations were destroyed another 38 thousand
new ones were planted.  Thus, it is well known that fumigations will not
eradicate coca production and that increased violence is no solution to
narcotraffic, but both are in fact a solution to the unwanted survival and
autonomy of the poor and to the spread of opposition to neoliberalism.

    It is obvious that the FTAA supporters are also taking into account
their experiences from the implementation of NAFTA.  In 1993, Mexico
eliminated, through a constitutional reform, the inalienable rights of
communal lands, resulting in the armed uprising of the zapatistas (Mayan
community of Chiapas).  Now that NAFTA is to be expanded, Colombia is the
next state that is expecting to implement a similar constitutional reform.
In fact, president Pastrana made a public declaration last February 2000, in
regards to a constitutional reform in favor of free trade. Such reform
consists of making available all land for foreign investment. A step that is
essential to the creation of a free trade area.  The inalienability of
indigenous land as well as the land belonging to the black communities of
Colombia was a right that they managed to secure in the 1991 Constitution.
Although in practice, this right has only given the indigenous people and
afrocolombians relative protection, it is vital that they maintain such
recognition.  The authorities know that such constitutional reform is likely
to result in a similar situation as the one faced by Mexican authorities and
their investors.  Thus, Plan Colombia will serve to forcefully free up more
land through the displacement of 'campesinos' while also strengthening the
military in view of increased opposition.

    The concentration of land ownership for large scale production is not
the
only reason why land is so valuable nor the only reason why the
displacement of people is so desirable in the capitalist eye.  The FTAA,
together with international financial institutions like the World Bank and
the IMF, have other projects in mind for Colombia.  They plan to use large
extensions of Colombian land to build new trade infrastructure.  This
includes the construction of a dry canal connecting the Atlantic-Pacific
with
connections to the railway system, as well as construction of new extended
highways between ports, rivers, and the Amazon.  In addition, as all other
members of the free trade area, Colombia is expected to open up its public
services, such as education, health care, water, etc., to private investors.
And given the success story of the Bolivians' resistance to the
privatization
of water it will come in handy for the Colombian state to have increased its
military capabilities and its reign of terror.

    Meanwhile, the black communities have made an active move towards
internationalizing their struggle since it has become obvious that without
the support of international solidarity they would be unable to resist the
increased militarized repression.  Their current situation is increasingly
worrisome given that their autonomous territories are in the way of the
large
infrastructure projects.  Blacks in Colombia have fought since their arrival
to the unknown continent to protect their own culture, to create their own
autonomous methods of survival and development, and to create their own
identity as black Colombians with a right to be different.  Today, blacks
constitute about 30 percent of Colombian population.  Some live in
the 'palenques' (black autonomous communities) while others are dispersed
throughout the country. Coca production on their land is there because they
have no alternative means of subsistence.

    Part of Plan Colombia is a plan to substitute coca with five export
crops
(i.e. bananas and peppers). This means that whatever land is not in the
way of the megaprojects will be turned into centrally managed plantations
stripping the people of their autonomy in order to be made into laborers.
The black communities recognize this as a violation of their freedom. Their
movements are based on an ancestral teaching that says, "I am because we
are" meaning that an individual can only be free if the people around are
also
free.  In this time of capitalist globalization they only see their struggle
as successful if other struggles for freedom also succeed.

     For the same reason that the FTAA is about all of the Americas, the
effects of Plan Colombia are not to remain within the Colombian borders.
Social movements are on the rise in all of Colombia's neighboring countries.
And Venezuela, with even larger oil fields than Colombia, is becoming a
place
of concern to western capitalists ever since president Chavez was known to
be negotiating with Cuba, Iraq and other non-western oil producers.  Thus it
is in the interest of the western oil producers that the US have a strong
military pesence in South America.  Thus, one of the tasks of Plan Colombia
is to build bases in surrounding countries.  In Panama, for example, near
the
Colombian border, live peacefully the indigenous Kuna people.  Now, they are
fighting against American intentions of creating a naval base on their land,
while they are intimidated with the increased presence of US soldiers.  The
American military claims that they have to be there for the Kuna's
protection
as they expect Colombian guerrillas to move closer to the northern border,
and coca production to expand outwards.

    The Kuna people do not want their territory militarized. Colombia's
black communities do not want to be part of a war that is not their war.
The
Colombian campesino does not want to abandon his plot of land. Colombian
women do not want to end up in a situation where the only option is to
become a maquiladora slave-worker or a wage worker at a large plantation.
The Embera Katio people have seen enough deaths and had enough of damn
projects and power plants and want the right to live peacefully on a healthy
diverse ecosystem as they had done for centuries.  The problem is that our
northern model of democracy is one that only listens to certain voices.  But
the American continent does not need a "free" trade area, nor a military aid
package.  What we need is to raise our voices through different means, not
just until they are heard, but until we are actively determining the future
of each of our communities in a network of participatory democracies.

    What Colombia needs in a time of war is a people-based peace process
with deep socio-economic reforms that allow for the various sectors of
Colombian society to put an end to the history of domination; immidiate
demilitarization and recognition of the worker's unions and peasant
federations as legitimate actors; as well as the recognition of the
capability of the indigenous and the black communities to self-govern.

As Alfonso from PCN (Proceso de Comunidades Negras) says, "Plan
Colombia is the cruelest expression of globalised capitalism."  It is the
expression of the FTAA in full gear, which is not only going to meet the
sustained resistance of the people of Colombia, but also a growing
globalized
resistance of diverse communities.  A resistance with a vision of real
participatory democracy that will radically replace the real terrorists
meaning the nation-state and its business partners.



---------------------------- ftaa-l ----------------------
resisting the FTAA and capitalist globalization
mobilizing for Quebec City, April 2001
creating alternatives

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