11.2.06

 

Democracia sin Contrato Social

What Kind of War for Colombia?

By Julia E. Sweig

From Foreign Affairs, September/October 2002

Julia E. Sweig is Senior Fellow and Deputy Director for Latin America Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. Her most recent book is Inside the Cuban Revolution: Fidel Castro and the Urban Underground.

HISTORY REPEATING ITSELF?

In 1958, the United States sent a CIA team to assess conditions in Colombia, where, over ten years, a low-grade civil war known as La Violencia had brought more than 200,000 deaths. The CIA's agents concluded that the country, due to its predilection for violence, the absence of state authority in rural areas, inequitable land distribution, and widespread lawlessness and poverty, risked "genocide or chaos." Although it doubted that the local elite would agree to major reforms, the CIA team recommended a comprehensive nation-building package to U.S. Secretary of State Christian Herter and the new Colombian president, Alberto Lleras: Washington would help Bogota strengthen its judiciary, implement significant land reform, and eliminate the rural guerrilla insurgency, which at the time numbered between 1,200 and 2,000 members.

Only the security-related recommendations were adopted, however. The conflict never really ended, and thanks to the same gross inequality and culture of violence that existed 50 years ago, a large-scale war over drugs and oil is moving from simmer to boil. Washington and Bogota now face a fateful choice: dirty war, or less dirty war. But the United States must not repeat the mistakes of the past by once more limiting its role to the military sphere. The direction chosen by these two countries will have far-reaching consequences, for Colombia, the Andean region, and the United States.

DEMOCRACY WITHOUT A SOCIAL CONTRACT

Uribe is now planning to wage war in Colombia. His strategy may be politically appealing, and he may even succeed in weakening the FARC somewhat, but his plan fails to address the deeper, crippling social and political causes of Colombia's 55-year-old civil conflict. Saving Colombia from collapse will require Uribe to embark on a radical reconstruction of his country's political culture. Whether he can succeed in such an ambitious project is far from certain, however, for the obstacles he faces are significant. Already there have been troubling signs.

New Map of the Gap: según el CFR (una de las entidades que dirigen la globalizacion) y el pentagono, el origen del mal (terrorismo) se encuentra en los paises que no se han globalizado debidamente (como Colombia por ejemplo). Aqui un mapa de muestra. THE PENTAGON’S NEW MAP: HANDICAPPING THE GAP


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