Columbia violates Ecuadorian territory

2008-03-08

Richard Moore

"Such a conflict would be incredibly destructive for everyone involved, for 
Colombia and Colombians, for Uribe and his regime, and of course for Venezuela's
revolution. The US, however, would benefit. When US allies use the same tactics 
in the same sorts of political situations against US enemies, there is reason to
suspect a US role."

http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/3219

Colombia Assassinates Raul Reyes of FARC
March 2nd 2008, by Justin Podur - ZNet Commentary

The second-in-command of FARC (Colombia's guerrilla group), and perhaps its most
visible spokesperson, Luis Édgar Devia Silva, or "Raul Reyes" (the nom de 
guerre), was killed by the Colombian military in bombings yesterday. The 
Colombian military killed some 15 guerrillas in the operation, according to 
their own reports, including Raul Reyes. The reports suggest that it was 
basically an assassination, of the type the Israelis have committed in recent 
decades and are most recently accused of committing against Hizbollah commander 
Imad Mughniyeh (indeed, Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez noted the similarity, 
asking if Colombia was going to be converted into the Israel of the Americas). 
From El Tiempo (Colombia's national newspaper): "Reyes was killed in an 
intelligence operation that included the Army and Air Force, which intercepted a
satellite phone call from the guerrilla chief, in recent hours that made it 
possible to find his exact location."

Raul Reyes was assassinated on Ecuadorian territory. The Ecuadorian army took 
some of the bodies, but the Colombian army took Raul Reyes's and those of other 
FARC officers.

Ecuador has retired its ambassador from Colombia.
Venezuela has also closed its embassy.

Ecuador and Venezuela are both moving troops to their borders with Colombia.

The Ecuadorian President, Rafael Correa, called Uribe a "criminal, mafioso, 
paramilitary" leading a "narco-government".

"We do not want war, but we will not permit the Empire or its puppy, President 
Uribe, to weaken us." Those were Chavez's words on the Venezuelan radio program,
Alo Presidente on March 2. Chavez called Raul Reyes a "good revolutionary" and 
his killing a "cowardly assassination". Further, he said "It is very serious 
that a country arrogates to itself the right to bomb the territory of a 
neighbour and commit an incursion to take bodies, violating many international 
laws. Think of the consequences, not just for Colombia, but for your 
neighbours."

The Venezuelan government's official communication noted that the assassination 
was "a very hard blow against the humanitarian accord and the possibility of 
negotiations, revealing the irresponsibility of those who privilege the military
option and escalate the armed conflict, making more difficult political and 
negotiated solutions, without regard for the consequences."

The assassination was, literally, the answer to FARC's second unilateral release
of four kidnap victims, former Congresspeople, an operation coordinated with 
help from Venezuela. There are, therefore, numerous parallels with Israel. 
First, the tactic of high-tech, long-distance assassination of high-profile 
leaders. Second, the killing of dozens of others around as 'collateral damage'. 
Third, the use of such assassinations to undermine the possibilities for 
dialogue and negotiated solutions.

In this case, as with so much else in the region, the target is Venezuela and 
the objective is to escalate to a regional conflict - or, rather, an 
intensification and internationalization of the military conflict that is 
happening in Colombia. Such a conflict would be incredibly destructive for 
everyone involved, for Colombia and Colombians, for Uribe and his regime, and of
course for Venezuela's revolution. The US, however, would benefit. When US 
allies use the same tactics in the same sorts of political situations against US
enemies, there is reason to suspect a US role.

The US/Israeli approach in the Middle East, from the invasion of Iraq in 2003 to
the invasion of Lebanon in 2006 and the ongoing massacres in Gaza, has been to 
commit atrocities and acts of violence and, using their superior militaries, 
exploit the political and military opportunities that arise (this is a military 
counterpart of what Naomi Klein calls "the shock doctrine"). Even when they have
backfired politically or strained military resources, these violent approaches 
have cost their victims much more than their authors, who continue to have 
reason to believe that more violence can work.

One of the political opportunities that Israel counts on after it commits an 
assassination is some random act of violence by the Palestinian armed groups, 
which it can then exploit, calling the Palestinians terrorists. The FARC have 
been told that if they unilaterally release kidnap victims, the response will be
the assassination of their commanders. What should those who believe the only 
solution to the conflict is a political solution say to them?

It would be a major improvement in world affairs, especially in the Middle East 
but increasingly, perhaps, in the Americas as well, if assassination was not 
viewed as an acceptable instrument of policy. As it is, the best short-term hope
for the region is if there is an outpouring of official and popular disgust at 
Uribe's regime (and those who call the shots for that regime) for what it has 
done, throughout the Americas.

Justin Podur is a Toronto-based writer.
Source: ZNet Commentary
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