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Columbia at War
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Columbia at War
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Identifier
Thesis
1689
Author
Gutierrez, Christian
Title
Columbia
at
War
Publisher
Central Connecticut State University
Date
2003
Resource Type
Master's Thesis
Notes
During
the
1980's
,
Latin
America
was
one
of the
major
concerns
of the
U.S
.
foreign
policy
.
Countries
like
Nicaragua
,
Panama
,
Peru
and
Colombia
had
unstable
governments
and
civil
war
created
a
clear
and
present
danger
to the
national
security
of the
United
States
.
When
the
Cold
War
ended
,
so
did
some
conflicts
in that
troubled
region
, and as
such
, the
Latin
America
region
took
a
back
seat
to
events
developing
in the
Middle
East
. In
more
recent
times
,
Latin
America
was
once
again
in the
news
as the
civil
war
in
Colombia
became
a
serious
threat
not
only
to their
neighboring
countries
in the
Andean
regions
, but to the
rest
of the
continent
as
well
. The
Colombian
conflict
began
in the
50's
and
is
very
complex
involving
two
basic
issues
:
Control
of the
country
and
drugs
by
three
warring
groups
: the
government
, the
left-wing
guerrillas
and the
right-wing
paramilitary
or
cartels
. The
war
in
Colombia
impacted
the
neighboring
countries
, in
addition
to
fighting
the
Colombian
army
, the
left-wing
guerrillas
kidnapped
neighboring
Venezuelan
and
Ecuadorians
citizens
and the
right-wing
paramilitaries
smuggled
weapons
from
bases
along
the
Panamanian
border
.
After
years
of
intense
anti-drug
efforts
and the
destruction
of the
powerful
Medellin
and
Cali
Cartels
,
Colombia
still
remains
the
world's
largest
producer
and
exporter
of
cocaine
and the
second
largest
supplier
of
heroin
to the
United
States
. The
Colombian
civil
war
and
drug
war
could
not, and
cannot
, be
solved
alone
. The
country
needed
foreign
aid
as an
international
indirect
intervention
by the
United
States
. This
foreign
aid
would
make
a
difference
if
it
comes
in the
proper
form
.
Military
aid
to
train
their
police
and
military
was
considered
extremely
necessary
.
Adequate
equipment
such
as
helicopters
and
armored
personnel
carriers
was also
needed
, as was, a
new
agriculture
program
for the
peasants
.
During
the
Clinton
Administration
, the US
government
provided
1.7
billion
dollars
in
aid
packages
, the
largest
in
Latin
American
history
.
One
billion
went
towards
improving
the
Colombian
military
capacity
to
eradicate
coca
planting
,
which
also
included
the
purchase
of
helicopters
,
spare
parts
,
training
and
intelligence
equipment
to
help
the
army
and
police
destroy
coca
crops
and
retake
guerilla
control
areas
. The
other
seven-hundred
million
would
finance
coca
substitution
programs
,
provide
public
work
in
sensitive
regions
and also
provided
improvements
in
Colombia's
judicial
system
and
human
rights
programs
. This
program
was
called
"
Plan
Colombia
" and was
divided
into a
three-year
package
of
seven
billion
dollars
that
included
a
number
of
loans
not
only
from the
U.S
. but also from
European
countries
. This
program
was
designed
to
reconstruct
Colombian
institutions
,
sponsor
regional
development
of the
coca
areas
and
help
reduce
, and
ultimately
destroy
,
all
coca
production
.
Plan
Colombia
was an
important
step
in
strengthening
the
country
and the
Colombian
people
understood
that the
drug
issue
was
extremely
critical
because
the
guerrillas
and
para-military
forces
relied
on the
financial
backing
of
drug
traffickers
to
keep
fighting
.
However
, the
Colombian
people
knew
that the
conflict
involved
more
than
drugs
and that "
Plan
Colombia
" would have
needed
the
cooperation
of the
people
of
Colombia
to
make
this
happen
.
Colombian
people
have
paid
a
high
price
; the
cost
of the
war
on
drugs
has been
very
high
. In the
last
decade
,
over
two-hundred
bombs
have
blown
up
in
Colombian
cities
, an
entire
democratic
leftist
political
party
was
eliminated
by
right-wing
paramilitaries
,
four
presidential
candidates
,
over
two-hundred
judges
,
1200
police
officers
,
members
of the
supreme
court
,
more
than
one-hundred
journalists
and
over
200,000
Colombian
citizens
have been
murdered
.
It
is
without
exaggeration
that the
Colombian
government's
conflict
with the
guerrillas
could
have been
solved
through
negotiations
. If the
peace
talk
failed
, the
country
would have
gone
into an
all
out
war
and
ultimately
, the
Colombians
would have
lost
their
democracy
. The
U.S
.
government
did
not
recognize
the
guerrilla
groups
that were
wreaking
havoc
on their
homeland
, the
Colombians
knew
them
well
as the
Revolutionary
Armed
Forces
of
Colombia
(FARC)
and the
National
Liberation
Army
(E.L.N)
. The
future
of
Colombia
could
have
only
been
achieved
by
having
an
open
communication
line
between
the
U.S
.
government
, the
Colombian
government
and the
left-wing
guerrillas
,
which
,
unfortunately
never
occurred
. This
assessment
of the
situation
in
Colombia
is
based
on an
extensive
examination
of the
following
:
historical
manuscripts
,
constitutional
documents
,
secondary
sources
,
foreign
news
sources
,
various
internet
resources
,
video
documentaries
,
scientific
journals
and
biographies
. This
thesis
is
organized
topically
,
using
a
series
of
chapters
with
accompanying
sub-topics
within
the
chapters
to
explain
the
always-unstable
relationship
between
the
United
States
and
Colombia
. How the
situation
in
Colombia
has
evolved
over
the
past
fifty
years
to that
paradoxical
perspective
of
today
,
is
the
subject
of this
work
.
Subject
Drug traffic -- Colombia
Guerrilla warfare -- Colombia
Colombia -- Social conditions
Department
Department of History
Advisor
Richard, Alfred Charles, 1937-
Type
Text
Digital Format
application/pdf
Language
eng
OCLC number
713734337
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