U.S. Troops, The FARC-EP, Chavez, and Erroe Repeated

An Unacknowledged War

By Toby Westerman
Thursday, August 27, 2009

The United States is at war in Latin America - or more properly - nations and guerrilla armies are at war with the United States. Although under attack, and our citizens have been killed, there has been no acknowledgement by the U.S. government or media that this nation is involved in a full-scale war. America has already lost lives in this war, and now the U.S. government seems set to again commit an error which led to the deaths of hundreds, possibly thousands, of Americans in Vietnam.

After the pro-Marxist government of Rafael Correa government expelled the U.S. from its base in Manta, Ecuador, the administration of U.S. President Barack Obama committed the U.S. military to operate out of at least seven Colombian military bases. Manta was an important center for the U.S. campaign against the illegal drug trade in the region.

While the intent is to replace the anti-drug facility at Manta, the Obama administration has committed U.S. military personnel to an anti-drug campaign within a nation which is fighting an ongoing 40-year civil war. American advisors have assisted the Colombian military for years, but the projected increase of U.S. personnel raises the possibility of larger scale engagements between American and enemy combatants.

Unfortunately for U.S. troops, the enemy are not merely for profit drug traffickers, but are ideologically committed revolutionaries attempting to overthrow the Colombian government.

The link between drug trafficking and revolutionary ideology is seldom, if ever, mentioned in the Centralized Media.

In addition to the perilous situation U.S. troops will be facing in the struggle with the Colombian drug traffickers/revolutionaries, the Obama administration is placing political restrictions on how the military is to conduct its operations.

A VIETNAM-ERA MISTAKE REPEATED?

According to a recent Spanish language report, the U.S. ambassador to Colombia, William Brownfield, stated that U.S. forces will not approach or cross any border into any of Colombia’s neighbors without a prior bilateral agreement.

As a result of this policy, U.S. military personnel may be in hot pursuit of a narco-terror gang, but once the enemy approaches the border of one of Colombia’s neighbors, the Americans will be forced to break off the chase.

Brownfield’s declaration was meant to counter charges from several Latin American nations that the U.S. will use Colombia as a base for military expansion in the region, but it will also cost American lives.

A similar restriction during the Vietnam war frustrated attempts by the U.S. military to eliminate guerrilla formations operating in border regions. The result was unnecessary casualties and a lowering of troop morale.

U.S. restrictions on military personnel will probably have a similar result in Colombia, because cross border raids and counter-raids have been an essential factor in the recent history of Colombia and its neighbors, and the pattern is very likely to continue.

In Colombia, the largest guerrilla force - and the one involved in drug trafficking—is known by the initials FARC-EP, the Spanish initials for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia - Popular Army, usually abbreviated simply as FARC.

The FARC controls most of the drug trade in Colombia, and the profits fund the FARC’s war against the government of Colombia. The FARC also acquires money through kidnapping and extortion.

While the FARC methods of funding their activities are criminal, and the rebel group itself is sometimes dismissed as simply an outlaw organization, the FARC energetically espouses Marxist ideology.

A LINK BETWEEN DRUGS AND MARXIST REVOLUTION

The sale of illegal drugs is a time-honored method of raising money for Communist guerrilla groups. Over seventy years ago Chinese Communist leader Mao Zedong needed a source of income to replace aid from the Soviet Union, which dried up during the early days of WWII.

Mao chose the illegal drug trade to keep money flowing to his revolution. The FARC is following Mao’s example, as is the Shining Path (Spanish, Sendero Luminoso) in Peru. The Shining Path is a much reduced Maoist revolutionary group from its high point in the 1990s, and has turned to the illicit drug trade to fund its remnant force, while offering generous cash inducements to join the revolution.

The FARC is allied or sympathetic with various Communist movements in the region, especially the “21st Century Socialismâ€