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"Six years and $4.7 billion after Plan Colombia
began, and its utility has been absolutely zero," said Adam
Isaacson, a senior policy associate at the Center for International
Policy. "The US government has gotten no return on its investment
and may even be behind where they started. That's because we haven't
provided these farmers with any options except to move, clear land,
and grow coca elsewhere," he told DRCNet.
"If you're worried about crack in America's neighborhoods,
this is really bad news," Isaacson continued. "To keep
going with this spectacularly failed policy is almost immoral even
within the confines of the criminalization of drug use; it has done
nothing to reduce supply," he said.
"These numbers are bad news for the administration,"
said Larry Birns, executive director of the Council on Hemispheric
Affairs. "They try to put them in a context where they don't
look so bad, but it's amazing that no one has really spoken out
or that a significant and coherent congressional bloc doesn't come
to the reluctant conclusions that the anti-drug campaign is a failure
and we should be looking at legalization or other non-conventional
approaches," he told DRCNet.
But it is unlikely that Congress or the administration will radically
change US policy any time soon. For the Washington drug warriors,
Colombia's coca crop is not only a bane for US citizens because
it constitutes nearly 90% of the cocaine that reaches the country,
but also because some of the profits from the trade flow into the
coffers of the leftist FARC guerrillas, helping it finance its decades-long
insurgency against the Colombian state.
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"Washington declared the FARC a terrorist organization
in 2002, opening the way to directly going after the long-lived
guerrilla army, and it declared the rightist paramilitaries
terrorist organizations the following year. But given Washington's
silence in the face of Colombia's failure to extradite paramilitary
commanders indicted for drug trafficking in the US, the infiltration
of paramilitary elements into the Colombian government's intelligence
apparatus, and the "demobilization" that allows
paramilitary leaders to keep their ill-gained wealth and suffer
only the most meager punishments for their crimes -- including
countless massacres and other human rights violations -- it
appears that in Colombia, at least, some terrorists are more
equal than others.
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There has been no public expression of outrage about the paramilitaries,
even though it's extremely likely these guys are sending cocaine
north as we speak," said Isaacson. "But they issue indictments
against the FARC as drug traffickers."
"The final defeat for the US drug strategy in Colombia --
that is, before these figures came out -- was giving up on extradition,"
said Birns. "That was shocking. The US didn't even bother to
protest President Uribe's plan to use non-extradition as an inducement
for the paramilitaries. The Justice and Peace Law that provides
for their demobilization is transparently fraudulent, and the US
will not even officially recognize that extradition is no longer
a weapon. Meanwhile, the former paramilitaries aren't giving up
the trade," he said.
"Our policy in Colombia is one of the reasons why US diplomacy
is now being called the sick man of Latin America," Birns continued.
"If this had been a baseball player, he would have been sent
back to the minor leagues. Our drug policy in Colombia is so stale
and ineffective, it becomes a victory if you can maintain present
levels of cultivation and distribution -- and they can't even do
that! The administration can't possibly regard this as a success,"
he said.
Au contraire. "The obvious question is, 'Is it working?' and
I think the answer is obvious, ONDCP head John Walters told the
Associated Press after the release of the cultivation numbers. "When
there was no spraying, cultivation was up; where spraying is occurring,
cultivation is shrinking."
And the balloon effect continues, now with coca growing now radiating
out from its traditional Colombian cultivation zones to the rest
of the country. Along with the increased production in Peru and
Bolivia, Colombia's increased cultivation means the Andean coca
and cocaine industries are purring right along.
sources :http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/432/colombia.shtml
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