Getting
the endgame right in Colombia/ John Kerry is U.S. Secretary of State.
The
Miami Herald | 31/01/06
Fourteen
years ago in the Colombian town of Bojayá, FARC guerillas launched an explosive
that landed on the roof of a Roman Catholic church, killing 79 men, women and
children who were huddled inside, seeking safety.
A
tragedy of such proportions was hard to comprehend even in a nation inured to
the brutalities of conflict. But an event two months ago was in its own way
just as extraordinary: The FARC apologized to the people of Bojayá for the
“misery and misfortune” it had caused and sought forgiveness.
The
FARC, or Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, have been fighting their
country’s government for more than 50 years, meaning most Colombians have never
truly known a day of nationwide peace. During that time, over 220,000 people
have been killed and more than six million displaced. Many more were kidnapped,
forcibly recruited as children, or subjected to sexual violence.
Most
of the conflict’s victims, like those in Bojayá, were civilians, often caught
between warring parties demanding their loyalty or their land.
Today,
Colombia’s peace process is at a pivotal stage. When Colombian President Juan
Manuel Santos visits Washington this week, President Obama and I will commend
him for bringing his country closer than ever before to ending the war. We will
discuss the tough issues that remain to be resolved at the negotiating table.
And we will share plans to support Colombia as it moves into a new era.
We
will also take time to reflect on the partnership that made peace possible.
Plan Colombia — launched in 2000 and sustained over three U.S. administrations
— helped transform a nation on the verge of collapse into a strong
institutional democracy with historically low levels of violence. Under that
initiative, the bipartisan leadership of Congress and the executive branch
worked closely with officials in Bogotá to help train and equip the country’s
armed forces and police so that they would be more professional in providing security
and fighting crime, while also protecting human rights.
The
key to Plan Colombia’s success was its comprehensive vision of how security is
established and maintained. Law and order is only part of the equation. With
support from the United States, Colombians moved ahead on multiple fronts to
improve governance, reform the judiciary, enhance opportunities for
Afro-Colombian and indigenous groups, provide support for the victims of
conflict, and extend protections to journalists and civil society. Just as
important, the government came to terms with the fact that human rights abuses
were committed not solely by rebel groups, but also by its own forces — and
that those abuses, too, must be stopped.
All
this matters to the United States because Colombia boasts the fourth largest
economy in Latin America, a highly-educated population, and a vast potential
for growth. It is an Andean nation, a Pacific nation, a Caribbean nation and an
Amazonian nation with neighbors that include Brazil and Venezuela. The country’s
transformation in the past 15 years — and its ambitions for the future — are
important in themselves but also as a possible example for others.
The
Plan Colombia approach need not apply to Colombia alone. For U.S. taxpayers, it
is important to note that Plan Colombia required an investment of some $10
billion over more than a decade. But we would never have made that investment
if the Colombian people and government had not made their own commitment — and
devoted their own resources — to the plan’s success.
All
told, the U.S. investment in Plan Colombia was less than five percent of the
total cost. As a U.S. senator, I worked across the aisle with colleagues over
successive administrations of both parties to help ensure Colombia got the
support it needed. The success of those efforts makes it all the more essential
that we get the endgame right.
Having
helped Colombia create the conditions for a peace accord, the United States
must now help Colombia seize the enormous promise that peace affords. The Obama
administration will soon present to Congress a successor strategy aimed at
further enhancing security gains, cracking down on trade in illegal drugs, and
providing the means for redress and recovery in areas vacated by the FARC.
As
with the original plan, Colombians themselves will bear most of the cost, but
unique U.S. capabilities can help them win the peace. No peace accord will
bring back the many lives lost in Bojayá and across Colombia over the past half
century. But Colombians now have an historic opportunity to embrace a future
free from conflict and violence; and the United States has good reason to stand
by their side.
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