
Pacifying the Philippines, 1900
A shipload of legal marijuana would be worth a few million
dollars. A shipload of illegal marijuana is worth in
the neighborhood of one hundred million dollars, at master distributor
discount. Does less pot pass through Panama now that
"kingpin" Noriega is in jail? Has there been a crash in the
pot market?
During the post-Contra confrontation with Noriega, the Reagan
administration stressed the interception of his bulky, easy
to smell marijuana, contributing to an explosion in the popularity
of concentrated, profitable to smuggle cocaine, and the popularization
of crack and concentrated heroin.
President Bush's replacement for Noriega, Guillermo Endara,
was a director and secretary of Banco Interoceánico, targeted
by both the FBI and DEA as a major money laundry for both the
Cali and Medellín cocaine cartels. How is it possible that President
Bush, the former Director of the CIA, didn't know that? It was
George Bush who had authorized Noriega's substantial 1976 CIA
paychecks, and it was he who insisted on putting Noriega back
on the payroll in 1980, after Carter had the good sense to take
him off.
From Bush's perspective, this made sense. Noriega and his Mossad
advisor Mike Harrari, who worked closely with Bush aide Gregg,
proved invaluable in arming the Contras. "Since the beginning
of the supply of arms to the Contras, the same infrastructure
that was used for arms was used for drugs. The same pilots,
the same planes, the same airstrips, the same people," noted
José Blandon, Noriega's former chief of political intelligence.
Just before the December 1989 Panama invasion, in which Gen.
Barry McCaffrey was in charge of barrio incineration, Endara's
business partner, Carlos Eleta, was arrested in Georgia for
conspiring to import a half-ton of cocaine per month. The charges
were dropped as soon as Bush installed Endara as Panamanian
president and Eleta became an "asset." Bush then insisted that
"The answer to the problem of drugs lies more in solving the
demand side of the equation than it does the supply side, than
it does in interdiction or sealing the borders." That'll keep
the price up and justify turning the U.S. into a police
state.
Endara's attorney general, treasury minister and chief justice
of the supreme court were all former directors of First Interamericas
Bank, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Colombia's Cali cartel, one
of its major money laundries, according to Panama's National
Banking Commission. "Take my word for it," intoned a determined
George Bush at his inaugural, "this scourge will stop!"
New York Times:1/10/95: "In a daunting new turn in the
traffic of Colombian cocaine into the United States, smugglers
are buying old passenger jets, taking out the seats and using
the planes to fly huge amounts of the drug into Mexico, American
and Mexican officials say. Travelling at night with their lights
off, the Boeing 727's and French-made Caravelle jets are believed
to be carrying as much as six tons or more of cocaine in a single
flight. The cocaine is then transported overland into the United
States, where the wholesale value of such a load is about $120
million."
That's enough to buy a new plane for each load, as the innovative
Amado Carillo, and his partners in Colombian and Mexican military
intelligence, well understood. The legal value of such
a load would be 10% of the illegal value, or less.
Inevitably, the economics of Prohibition has caused the fascist
cancer to metastasize. "Leopards" are no longer just a Latin
phenomenon. And the U.S. Leopards are a much more professional
and well-financed lot. George Bush's Defense Authorization Act
of 1989 ordered the Pentagon to a) integrate the various US
command, control, communications and intelligence assets to
monitor illegal drugs; b) enhance the National Guard's role
in drug interdiction and enforcement operations; c) serve as
the lead agency in detecting and monitoring drug smuggling.
This saw the formation of drug intelligence centers in most
government enforcement bureaucracies. These included a CIA drug-intelligence
clearing house and the El Paso-based Joint Task Force 6, set
up in November 1989 at Biggs Army Airfield adjacent to Fort
Bliss. JTF-6 coordinates regional narcotics enforcement with
the DEA's El Paso Intelligence Center, also located at Biggs.
JTF-6 fills thousands of missions yearly in "total integration"
with border law enforcement, to quote its commander, Lt. Gen.
Stotser.
One wonders, then, how come they're so damned ineffective. Has
the strategic situation been misdefined to begin with? Is their
Mexican border effort just cosmetic, given that the entire Pacific
coast from Baja to Anchorage is equally porous? Are some of
the strategic goals unstated, covert? Are we just playing the
red-herring funding game?
In May of 97 four Marines on a JTF-6 border patrol shot 18 year-old
Ezekiel Hernandez Jr. to death while he was herding goats 400
yards from his Redford, Texas borderland home. Hernandez was
shot in the back by an M-16 at 230 yards, well outside the range
of the old .22 he carried for rattlers.
This murder was the inevitable result of the 1992 policy outlined
in Soldiers, the official magazine of the U.S. Army:
"The U.S. Military Police School at Fort McClellan, Alabama
is providing free training in advanced police techniques and
military aggression tactics to law enforcement personnel....
Subjects offered in this course include shotgun and submachine
gun usage, night drug raids, and land navigation."
"Joint Task Force Six is one of three task forces organized
to help fight the drug war....The Active Army operates the National
Interagency Counterdrug Institute at a camp at San Luis Obispo,
California. It is staffed by soldiers who train civilian anti-drug
law enforcement personnel in drug eradication and interdiction.
They also teach civilian agencies how to make use of military
assets in support of counterdrug operations. The Active Army
can get under the Posse Comitatus Act [the 1876 law forbidding
the U.S. Army to police Americans] in operating this school
by staffing it with California Guardsmen. Camp San Luis Obispo
is also owned by the California National Guard."
Do we really want to police Americans with "military aggression
tactics"? Wasn't the political danger inherent in that the whole
point of the Posse Comitatus Act? Although a federally paid
adjunct of the Army, it has been legal, since 1988, for the
National Guard to operate as state police. Both the National
Guard and the Department of Defense are lobbying for repeal
of the Posse Comitatus Act.
On 1/4/95, Rep. Barbara Kennelly (D-CT) proposed the creation
of a Rapid Deployment Force of 2500 troops within the FBI to
function as on-call Storm Troopers for local jurisdictions.
Once deployed the RDF would have the power of state police.
1996 Republican presidential hopeful Lamar Alexander, demonstrating
his canny originality, proposed simply creating a new unit of
the army with the specific mission of U.S. border drug and immigrant
interdiction.
Bill Bennett and his congressional mouthpiece, the incredible
Gerald Solomon (R-NY), Chairman of the House Rules Committee
no less, went Lamar one better. They proposed that the mission
of the U.S. military itself be changed to one of international
drug interdiction, with all federal law enforcement agencies
put under direct military command. That is, they proposed an
overt military police state. Senator Dole, running against Bill
Clinton, supported a version of this, including a Defense Authorization
amendment, wisely killed by the Pentagon itself, that would
have authorized the U.S. military to seal the Mexico-U.S. border,
that is, to repeat Nixon's economically disastrous 1969 Operation
Intercept.
During Congressional hearings on March 29, 1995, a Dole-Helms
ally, Rep. Dan Burton (R-IN), chairman of the House Western
Hemisphere Subcommittee, proposed that the United States place
an aircraft carrier off the coast of Peru and Bolivia and forcibly
spray coca fields with herbicides despite the opposition of
those governments. Needless to say, the reaction in Lima and
La Paz was apoplectic. If these fools ever try it, they'll have
the Peruvian Army joining Sendero Luminoso.
Unless the military knows a way to change the value of money,
the rightwing proposals would mean either partial or all-out
war with all those countries officially threatened by the State
Department with the cut-off of aid, or decertified, due to their
non-cooperation in the Drug War. Strategically successful drug-war
models, like Holland, simply collapse the smugglers' power with
controlled legalization. That is, they finance doctors, not
drug gangs. But Gingrich, Solomon, Bennett, Helms, Faircloth,
Gramm, Hatch, McCollum, Abraham, Inhofe and the rest of their
airhead army actually proposed militarily attacking the drug-dealing
infrastructures, that is, the military high command, of Peru,
Bolivia, Colombia, Burma, Mexico, Argentina, Laos, Afghanistan,
Turkey, Taiwan, Ghana, Nigeria, India, Iran, Lebanon, Paraguay,
Pakistan, Bahamas, Belize, Brazil, Cambodia, China, Dominican
Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, Haiti, Hong Kong, India, Jamaica,
Malaysia, Panama, Taiwan, Thailand, Venezuela, Vietnam, Iran,
and Syria.
But of course this is covert policy, it can’t
be taken literally. Those few real conservatives who do, find
themselves at odds with their own power structure. The Republican
defense contractors don’t mean to attack our dopers, the ones
buying our arms. This attack on “drugs” is defined by the Republican
strategic geniuses as arming and financing the fascist military
structures that are actually dealing the drugs: House leader
Dennis Hastert (R-IL), in the Western Hemisphere Drug Elimination
Act, passed as law by Congress 10/19/98: “The drug crisis facing
the United States is a top national security threat. The Department
of Defense has been called upon to support counter-drug efforts
of Federal law enforcement agencies that are carried out in
source countries.”
The Pentagon responded by upgrading the priority
of “drug eradication and interdiction” in its Global Military
Force Policy from the lowest, “4: non-hostile,” to “2:military
operations other than [declared] war.” This means a huge “military
operation” in Colombia, home of “narco-terrorists,” but none
at all in Brazil, Burma, Pakistan, Mexico or Bolivia, home of
“strategic assets.”
And thanks to the incremental repeal of the Posse Comitatus
Act, the Army is Actively supporting the value of Mexican pot
by eradicating American pot. Actually, it's supporting the value
of American pot also, vastly increasing the acreage these high-tech
Keystone Cops have to worry about - thereby guaranteeing themselves
employment and a steady expansion of their mission. Drug War
has been pursued with Draconian efficiency in the U.S. for years,
with no effect whatever on availability and demand. It has simply
escalated the price, further strengthening the most violent
of the dealers. This justifies the appropriations that enable
military intelligence to run those dealers.
Ex-DEA Agent Michael Levine: "The drug war under President Clinton
is bigger and healthier than ever. It seems like every department
in the federal government has a part in it - DEA, FBI, CIA,
NSA, IRS, DIA, ATF, State Department, Pentagon, Customs, Coast
Guard, Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines - and each one is fighting
for more turf and a bigger chunk of the drug war budget. When
I started out in 1965 there were two federal agencies enforcing
the drug laws, and the budget was less than $10 million. Today
[1993] there are 54 agencies involved and the budget is $13
billion. Orchestrating the whole mess is a Drug Czar who is
generally a political appointment with no special qualifications
for the job."
That is, McCaffrey is no psychiatrist or psychopharmacologist.
But, of course, he is an expert at expanding the police mission
of the military. A good short definition of a fascist police
state would be "a state in which publicly-funded military-police
agencies drive policy."
U.S. policy has been driven by the biggest publicly-funded police-agency
propaganda barrage in history. The overt 1997 federal Drug War
appropriation was $15.1 billion. The 1998 federal bill was $16
billion, the 1999 bill was $18 billion, with two-thirds of that
simply being pumped into domestic law enforcement, that is,
into filling the prisons with vulnerable kids. Most of the rest
goes into propaganda and "treatment," that is, "re-education,"
in the Stalinist sense.
These budgetary figures don't include the tens of billions expended
by the military, by the federal judicial and penal systems or
the state judicial and penal systems. In 1991, the RAND Corp.
estimated the total outlay of public funds at $30 billion. The
1999 figure must be twice that.
For fiscal 1998 Clinton and McCaffrey announced a billion-dollar
ONDCP/Ad Council ad blitz: "There is every reason to believe
that this absolutely will turn around drug abuse by youngsters,"
intoned Bombastic Barry. I doubt there is a serious expert in
the RAND Corp. or anywhere else anywhere who expects this blowhard
to have any strategic effect whatever. But Barry McCaffrey knows
that. McCaffrey's job is to keep the Drug War going, that's
all. The Drug War is designed to be endless. At the same
time he engineers artificial hysteria with the biggest propaganda
barrage in history, he finances the military structures - Peruvian,
Mexican, Burmese, Thai, Pakistani, etc. - that are actually
dealing the drugs. He finances, that is, the major customers
of America's defense contractors, the biggest drug money launderers
in the world.
If you want to understand why we are arming
the Colombian military, a major drug dealing power, understand
why we armed Burmese military intelligence - after the UN Drug
Control Program identified them as the largest heroin traders
in the world. An International Monetary Fund study pointed out
that Burma's foreign exchange reserves for 1991 through 1993
were only about $300 million, but that the Burma Army purchased
arms valued at $1.2 billion during the period.
Likewise, the Colombian narco-terrorists we
are financing must hold up their end of the deal, the bills
must be paid. McCaffrey and Clinton, in the name of all the
smarmy virtues, are orchestrating a genocidal quagmire that
will profit no one but the arms manufacturers who trade the
Prohibition-inflated price of drugs for their lethal wares.
Civil war, endless civil war, is a goldmine of endless contracts
that keep assembly lines humming.
In President Ernesto Samper's Colombia, 1994-98,
the MAS ("Death to Kidnappers") death squads were originally
formed by the Medellín cartel as a tactical answer to the military
pressure put on them by M-19 guerrillas. The death squads were
staffed by CIA-trained Colombian officers, who already had a
significant piece of the Medellín action. "The drug dealers'
core military power lies in the paramilitary groups they have
organized with the support of the largest landowners and military
officers," explained Alberto Galán, brother of assassinated
1994 presidential candidate Luis Carlos Galán.
The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC),
protect not only their campesino constituents, but some of the
most powerful dealers in Colombia. They are, in part, Fidel's
contribution to Colombian politics. Rather than target the hard-to-hit
guerrillas, who hit back, and who in any case have fighters
capable of protecting, or destroying, jungle labs, the death
squads hit journalists, drug legalization advocates, labor leaders,
human rights activists and other political threats to a drug-dealing
military police state.
After 50 years of guerrilla war, of course,
since military power is built on money, the Colombian left has
become as deeply dependent on the artificial Prohibition value
of drugs as the right. That is, the artificially inflated value
of drug crops has created powerful institutional support, on
all political sides, for continued, endless Drug War.
FARC is already the only government in at least
half of the Colombian countryside. That Colombian campesinos
support FARC is revealed not only by its military success, but
by the fact that the CIA crop-dusting in guerrilla areas is
aimed not only at their drug crops, but at their food crops.
The objective, as in Vietnam, is to turn them into docile sharecroppers.

FARC
demonstrates a small part of its logistical clout
On February 26, 1999, Colombian Gen. Fernando
Tapias Stahelin told the gathered eminences at the Bogotá artillery
school that the army would begin using heavy artillery against
the rebels. This was necessary because FARC was now fielding
units of 200-300 men.
The logistics of that escalation, of course,
will make FARC more dependent than ever on the underground drug
economy. McCaffrey is not lying when he says the guerrillas
are dealing. He is lying when he says that he is not. McCaffrey's
Big Lie is the Stalinist lie that policy can dictate economic
physics - that the economics of Prohibition can be managed by
police state tactics. The Stalinist police state, the essence
of which was Prohibition, collapsed - economically.
And if the campesino-guerrillas were the real
"narcoterrorists," they would hardly be demanding the controlled
legalization of all drugs, since that will collapse their value,
making them useless as a source of military funding. As with
the Zapatistas of Mexico and the Senderistas of Peru ("the Shining
Path," Sendero Luminoso), the original FARC intention had been
to empower the campesinos by eliminating the McCaffrey, that
is, by eliminating the excuse for Colombian participation in
the U.S. military-industrial complex.
But warfare often perverts good intentions.
A veteran member of the foreign press corps, who has lived in
Colombia for years, warns me not to lionize the left. "The FARC
are not freedom fighters or defenders of the peasants. They
might have been originally but they have degenerated into just
another power block within this complex, brutal and absurd civil
war we have now. So far as most intelligent observers can see,
they really only have the Stalinist aim of keeping themselves
in power, grabbing more territory and imposing their will by
force."
"All of this power-grabbing is with the aim
of eventually having the clout to get the government to make
fundamental reforms in the system here, which is completely
corrupt and unjust, but by now, after fifty years in the bush
as guerrilla fighters, they have lost sight of political realities,
are out of touch with the world as it is nowadays, don't really
have the ability to administer a country well, have lost the
support of intellectuals and technicians and in short, no longer
really know what they want."
"For example, they talk about nationalizing
oil, which is run by foreign companies. But at the same time
they are living off pay-offs from these companies and would
never in a million years be able to run the oil wells by themselves."
".... It was the guerrillas who killed the three US Indian rights
people, two of them Native Americans, who came to Colombia to
support a tribe in its fight against a multinational oil company
who wants to exploit their natural resources. So what does that
say to you!!!!"
"The peasants support them, in part, because
the army is a traditional enemy and behaves even worse. But
more and more it is because the FARC have the guns and anyone
who goes against them is bumped off. A lot of young guys and
girls go into the FARC because there is no other economic alternative
and because, for some half-literate, resentful 15 year-old kid,
who never will have a chance to be anyone important, it's great
to have a gun and be part of a group that pushes people about.
Besides, this is no longer a country with a peasant majority,
as it was before. It is more and more urban, which means that
it is a much more complex economy and raises much more complex
questions about who is guilty of exploitation. Is a middling
guy who owns a shop or a truck a capitalist or not?"
And if he is, will the structural economy benefit
by subsidizing his sweat? Is an Indian farmer, hoping to scratch
a living from his produce, a sweat-equity capitalist deserving
of state support? Jacobo Arbenz, the great Guatemalan reformist
of the 1950's, so famously overthrown by the Dulles brothers,
would have said so, but the IMF has a different idea. Juan Manuel
Ospina, president of the Colombian Farmers' Society, points
out that under IMF-US sponsored trade models, Indian grain,
corn, rice, potato and onion farmers are undersold by cheap
global imports - Archer Daniels Midland's great humanitarian
contribution to Colombia. Given the artificial Prohibition-value
of the drug crops, starving Indians are forced into the drug-crop
economy and into the civil war. Lowland Indians are growing
ipadú coca, highlanders grow opium.
The solution, as native Colombian politicians
are well aware, is to collapse the value of drug crops with
controlled legalization, thereby economically collapsing the
militarization of the countryside. The money not spent on warfare
could then be used to support sweat-equity production models.

The 1998 Colombian senatorial campaign poster of Benjamín Jacanamijoy,
son of a famous ayahuasquero shaman. His campaign slogan was
“Preserva tu cultura, revive la tradición.” He was narrowly
defeated, and expects to win next time.
As in the U.S., the herb legalization/alkaloid
decriminalization movement has created an alliance of the centrist
right and the centrist left. The Colombian right is keenly aware
that the flow of narcodollars into the Colombian economy artificially
inflates the value of the peso, badly hurting the viability
of Colombia's legal exports on the world market. That is not
an effect of pharmacology, it is an effect of Prohibition. Saloman
Kalmanovitz, a director of the Central Bank, and other Colombian
equivalents of Paul Volcker, Milton Friedman and George Soros
have joined Indian, campesino and urban centrists in calling
for an end to the self-inflicted disaster of Prohibition.
But the militaries have become dependent on
the economics of Prohibition. The civil war, that is, has degenerated,
on all sides, into a duplicitous street fight for the crop,
with both sides treating the hood dealers as kingpins, just
as in mafioso Johnny Rosselli's Guatemala. My journalist friend
writes to me, 10/99, ""A friend of mine, who works for national
parks, just came back from the zone which the government handed
over to the guerrilla to realize the peace negotiations. I have
been reading a lot of newspaper reports about their terrorist
rule there. What my friend tells me is that there is a kind
of tense calm. What people are really worried about is that
if the guerrillas withdraw, the place will be shot up by the
paramilitaries, which happens all the time, just these random
slaughters of civilians in zones controlled by the guerrilla
(and vice versa) on the theory that if you are not with us,
you are against us. But the interesting thing is this: just
outside this zone is another town, only about fifteen miles
away, where the paramilitaries are gathering and waiting to
strike. But the paramilitaries rarely have groups of more than
200 armed men, where the guerrillas have thousands in this demilitarized
zone. So what the hell is going on? Although the two are supposedly
bitter enemies, you rarely hear of a combat between the paras
and the guerrillas. This is just to give you some idea of how
weird the situation is."
In government-held areas the drug economy is
run by the large, paramilitary-connected landowners. On these
large drug-crop plantations the campesinos tend to be treated
as powerless sharecroppers. Since these plantations aren't in
rebel territory, they are never targeted by the CIA crop-dusters.
That's why all that "anti-drug effort" has had no strategic
effect on the flow of drugs. It is these growers who financed
Samper's 1994 election campaign, and who continue to finance
Colombia's generals.
The early summer 1996 aerial spraying of Ultra
Glyphosate (Monsanto's "Round-Up") on 45,000 acres of Guaviare
coca caused convulsive vomiting and hair loss among the children.
The enraged mothers organized the August 1996 march of more
than 150,000 campesinos in Guaviare, Putumayo and Caqueta provinces.
The Colombian federales diffused the protest with false compromises,
then stealthily assassinated the march leaders. Many of the
surviving campesinos turned, for the first time, to the guerrillas.
The U.S. then insisted that Colombia allow it to switch to the
far more poisonous tebuthiuron (Dow's "Spike"). Now, if the
US State Department has its way, the ongoing chemical spraying
will be followed by the massive, nearly indetectable high altitiude
dropping of Agent
Green (the mycoherbicide fusarium oxysporum formae specialis
[f.sp.] erythroxyli). Agent Green is an extension of the US-engineered
1997 UN Drug Control Program's SCOPE program (Strategy for Coca
and Opium Poppy Elimination).
But the "anti-drug" fungal spraying is proposed only for rebel-held
areas. During the investigation of former Colombian President
Samper's financing it was revealed that, while coordinating
drug shipments, Cali traffickers, Samper's financiers, racked
up a $200,000 phone bill on a number assigned to Brig. Gen.
Ismael Trujillo, then head of the Federal Judicial Police, the
guy in charge of the U.S. Drug War in Colombia. The Cali money
was funneled through Fernando Botero, Samper's 1994 campaign
manager and Defense Minister. That is, the Cali cartel was an
organic part of the establishment in charge of the Colombian
military. Their vast monocrop drug fincas were never sprayed
by glyphosate and tebuthiuron, because they weren't in rebel-held
areas.
The most powerful paramilitary leader, Carlos Castaño, leader
of the militia alliance known as the United Self Defense Forces
of Colombia, is a longtime CIA asset who can call on regular
army support any time. The Washington Post reports, 12/30/98,
that the DEA insists that Castaño is also a major Cali kingpin.
Reuters, September 6, 2000: "The head of Colombia's outlawed
right-wing paramilitary forces, who has conceded most of his
financing comes from the drug trade, said Wednesday that he
also gets support from the local and international business
community. Carlos Castano, leader of the ruthless United Self-Defense
Forces of Colombia (AUC), spoke of his ties to legitimate businessmen
in an open letter to Congress, a day after Defense Minister
Luis Fernando Ramirez urged lawmakers to launch a probe into
private sources of funding for the paramilitary militias that
target leftists and suspected rebel sympathizers across Colombia….
Local and international human rights groups say the AUC, which
is responsible for most of the peasant massacres and other rights
abuses committed in Colombia, operates with the support of state
security forces in an increasingly dirty war with Marxist rebels
that has taken more than 35,000 lives since 1990. In a rare
television interview in March, Castano said drug trafficking
and drug traffickers probably financed 70 percent of his organization's
operations."

A Colombian paramilitary
The Washington Post, 8/11/98: "Colombian
Army's Third in Command Allegedly Led Two Lives; General Reportedly
Served as Key CIA Informant While Maintaining Ties to Death
Squads Financed By Drug Traffickers: For years Colombian Gen.
Ivan Ramirez Quintero was a key intelligence source for the
United States. After training in Washington he was the first
head of a military intelligence organization designed by U.S.
experts to fight Marxist guerrillas and drug traffickers, and
served as a liaison and paid informant for the Central Intelligence
Agency, according to U.S. and Colombian intelligence sources."
That is, as the first head of the special counterinsurgency
unit, it was Ramirez' job to coordinate military operations
and weapons financing with Cali kingpin Carlos Castaño.
The Latin America Working Group, 7/23/98, reports
that of 247 Colombian military personnel linked to serious human
rights violations, 124 were graduates of the U.S. Army's School
of the Americas in Fort Benning, GA.
The Village Voice: 8/5/99: "The wife
of the Army commander leading the U.S. government's anti-drug
efforts in Colombia has been charged in connection with a cocaine
smuggling ring that shipped that drug from an American military
base in Bogotá to New York City, the Voice has learned."
"Laurie Hiett, the wife of Colonel James Hiett,
was named in a criminal complaint filed in late June in Brooklyn
federal court, according to records. She has been charged with
conspiracy to distribute cocaine."
Others named in the complaint reveal a vast,
decentralized distribution system involving the entire structure
around Col. Hiett, including many "embassy employees," direct
military subordinates, their wives, chauffeurs and stateside
contacts. The "embassy employees" were using the Army Postal
Service (APO), which in Bogotá is a de facto part of the embassy's
customs-free diplomatic pouch. And whose coke was the anti-drug
Colonel exporting? Carlos Castaño's Cali coke.
Today, the bogeyman, in the absence of "the
scourge of communism," is "the scourge of drugs," supporting
precisely the same fascist dynamics. I can't say it better than
former Green Beret General Barry McCaffrey, an original defender
of the CIA's Vietnam-era Hmong Laotian opium connection, with
which it financed Saigon. McCaffrey took over in March of 96
as Clinton's Drug Czar: "The new problems are obvious - they're
counter-terrorism, they're counter-drugs, they're illegal movements
of peoples, they're arms smuggling, they're transnational Marxist
movements that have now become international criminal conspiracies,
narco-guerrilla forces." That is, in this masterpiece of fascist
double-speak, the new problems are the old problems.
And to combat these horrible leftists, McCaffrey,
at the behest of Clinton and with the GOP's Congressional blessing,
is going to ship all the arms he can to the Colombian, Bolivian,
Argentinean, Mexican, Honduran, Guatemalan, Peruvian, Salvadoran,
Pakistani, Philippine, Taiwanese and Burmese military. With
McCaffrey in charge, the fascists have nothing to worry about.
Ray Cline, CIA station chief in Taiwan from
1958-1962, later Deputy Director, founded the World Anticommunist
League along with Chiang Ching-kuo, Chiang Kai-shek's son. Ching-kuo
headed the Kuomintang's (KMT's) secret police under Chiang and
rose to become President of Taiwan. He was overall military
commander of the KMT's Shan states opium armies. The WACL's
finishing school was the Political Warfare Cadres Academy in
Peitou, Taiwan. El Salvador's Roberto D'Aubuisson, "Major Blowtorch,"
graduated from both this school and the International Police
Academy in Washington, D.C., as did many of South America's
finest, including much of the current Colombian high command.
When appropriate, courses at Peitou, Taiwan, were taught in
Spanish.
"Political warfare" is a combination of sheer
terror and unrelenting propaganda aimed at the merciless domination
of the bulk of the population by the ruling industrial elite
- what the KMT calls "total war." The cadres are schooled in
the arts of interrogation, propaganda, militarily-based social
organization and terror. D'Aubuisson's party, ARENA, the Nationalist
Republican Alliance, is structured exactly like the Kuomintang.
It "has a politico-military organization which embraces not
only a civilian party structure but also a military arm obedient
to the party," to quote President Carter's ambassador to El
Salvador, Robert White.
White is a good example of the deep divisions
that exist, within the structural U.S. government, between many
of the democratically-minded professionals of the State Department
and the pro-fascist elements of military intelligence. By 1961,
the American military was providing 75% of Taiwan's budget.
Kuomintang heroin, from the American-armed Burmese fascists,
as well as cocaine from the American-armed Bolivian and Colombian
fascists, still finds its way into the U.S. through the American-armed,
Kuomintang-trained fascists of ARENA, who are still in control
of "democratic" El Salvador. That's why you won't see any reduction
in the flow of heroin any time soon.
Barry McCaffrey was the lead U.S. counterinsurgency
officer in Ambassador White's El Salvador. In May, 1980, at
the Sumpul River crossing, more than 600 unarmed men, women
and children were machine gunned to death by cooperating Salvadoran
and Honduran troops on either bank as they tried to flee Salvadoran
territory into Honduras. Little children, caught in the middle
of the river, were cut to ribbons.
In December of 1981, at the villages surrounding
El Mozote in El Salvador, more than 800 defenseless people were
massacred, according to the Salvadoran Catholic Church. In 1992,
Tutela Legal, the legal arm of the Salvadoran Church,
hired the distinguished international experts of the Argentine
Forensic Anthropology Team to conduct excavations at El Mozote.
In the ruins of a single-room building attached to the village
church, the team found 143 human skeletons, 131 of which were
children under the age of 12. They had all been machine-gunned
to death by standard U.S. Army issue M-16 ammunition manufactured
at the Lake City Plant in Independence, Missouri. That was the
ammo issued to the Atlacatl Batallion, which had been formed
by experts from the U.S. Army School of Special Forces in March
of 1981, Barry McCaffrey's outfit.
Aside from massacre by rifle fire, the Atlacatl
Batallion and its clones practiced rape, decapitation and disembowelment
on a massive scale. By 1982, 600,000 Salvadorans were left homeless
- and terrified enough to stop demanding any political rights
at all.
It was Ambassador Robert White's reaction to
these crimes against humanity that got him fired by the Reagan
administration. White is now president of the Center for International
Policy. He points out, in the Washington Post, 2/8/2000,
that we can expect a repeat scenario in Colombia:
"Our intervention in El Salvador's struggle
did not truly constitute intervention, President Reagan argued,
because the revolutionaries were not fighting in their own cause
but as hirelings of Moscow and Havana. The rationale for involving
the United States in Colombia's civil war rests on the equally
specious ground that the FARC--the Revolutionary Armed Forces
of Colombia--are not an authentic insurgency but an armed drug
cartel that fights to protect illicit profits--"narco-guerrillas"
to quote from the charged vocabulary of the White House drug
policy adviser, Gen. Barry McCaffrey."
".... But is it too much to hope that experienced
diplomats will grasp the elementary proposition that an insurgency
that has acquired the strength and cohesion necessary to dominate
40 percent of the national territory represents something authentic
in the history of Colombia, something not adequately explained
by references to illicit commerce?"
"Has it truly escaped senior administration
aides that the Colombian civil war is more about massacres of
civilians and selective assassinations than armed confrontation?
Does it really not matter that to declare war on the FARC puts
us in league with a Colombian military that has longstanding
ties to the drug-dealing, barbaric paramilitaries that commit
more than 75 percent of the human rights violations afflicting
that violence-torn country?"
"It is curious that a government as sophisticated
as ours should cling to the naive belief that spraying with
herbicides can do anything but drive the campesino cultivators
deeper into the jungle. The campesinos grow coca not just because
it commands bonanza prices but because the traffickers' planes
land nearby and pay cash on the barrel head."
"Alternative production--rubber and palm oil,
for example--could compete because their prices, while lower,
are more stable. But the isolated farmers cannot get their crops
to the city. The $1.3 billion in the Colombia aid package for
war could be more constructively used to build farm-to-market
highways that would peacefully carry the government's authority
into this remote zone."
"Nowhere in the official statements on Colombia
will Congress find any discussion of risks vs. rewards or any
measurement of objectives in relation to resources. Recall that
in El Salvador, our bloody, divisive 12-year pursuit of military
victory proved fruitless. We finally settled for a U.N.-brokered
accord that granted the guerrillas many of their demands."
"The FARC-controlled territory that this program
casually commits us to re-conquer is 20 times as large as El
Salvador--roughly the size of California. The Colombian military
has no experience in carrying the war to the insurgents. What
will happen when FARC troops, at home in jungle and savanna,
repel the army and shoot down our helicopters? Will we then
swallow the bitter pill of political-military defeat? Not if
Vietnam and Central America are any guide. Far more likely we
will plunge deeper into the quagmire."
That quagmire, precisely because it is a quagmire,
will be worth hundreds of billions in direct and indirect defense
contract appropriations. That was Barry McCaffrey's job.