The American Fingerprints on Colombia’s Dead
February 24, 2015
A Historian Instructs Peace Negotiators on U.S. Role in Colombian Civil War
The American Fingerprints on Colombias Dead
by W.T. WHITNEY Jr.
Colombia is seemingly a no-go zone for most U. S. media and even for many critics of U.S. overseas misadventures. Yet the United States was in the thick of things in Colombia while hundreds of thousands were being killed, millions were forced off land, and political repression was the rule.
Bogota university professor and historian Renán Vega Cantor has authored a study of U.S. involvement in Colombia. He records words and deeds delineating U.S. intervention there over the past century. The impact of Vegas historical report, released on February 11, stems from a detailing of facts. Communicating them to English-language readers will perhaps stir some to learn more and to act.
The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the Colombian government have been at war for half a century. Vegas study appears within the context of negotiations in Cuba to end that conflict. Negotiators on both sides agreed in August, 2014 to form a Historical Commission on Conflict and its Victims to enhance discussions on victims of conflict. The Commission explored multiple causes of the conflict, the principal factors and conditions facilitating or contributing to its persistence, and consequences. Commission members sought clarification of the truth and establishment of responsibilities. On February 11 the Commission released an 809 page report offering a diversity of wide-ranging conclusions. Vega was one of 12 analysts contributing individual studies to the report.
Having looked into links between imperialist meddling and both counterinsurgency and state terrorism, he claims the United States is no mere outside influence, but is a direct actor in the conflict owing to prolonged involvement. And, U. S. actions exist in a framework of a relationship of subordination.
[T]he block in power had an active role in reproducing subordination, because, (Vega quotes Colombia Internacional, vol 65), there existed for more than 100 years a pact among the national elites for whom subordination led to economic and political gains. As a result, Not only in the international sphere, but in the domestic one too, the United States, generally, has the last word.
More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/02/24/why-is-colombia-a-no-go-zone-for-american-reporters/