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Private U.S. Operatives on Risky Missions in Colombia
NYT ^ | February 12, 2004 | JUAN FORERO

Posted on 02/14/2004 11:25:00 AM PST by Tailgunner Joe

After their tiny plane crashed deep in the jungles of southern Colombia, three American civilians on a mission to search for cocaine labs, drug planes and, occasionally, guerrilla units were taken hostage by Marxist rebels.

A year later, the men's families say the captives have been all but forgotten. Some say that is the way American officials and the men's employers want it to be.

The three Americans — Marc Gonsalves, Keith Stansell and Thomas Howes — worked cloaked in secrecy for two subsidiaries of Northrop Grumman, the huge military contractor, in an arrangement used increasingly by the United States government in conflict zones from Colombia to Afghanistan.

The men's families and critics of American policy here say the case sheds light on a shadowy world of secret operations that employ private contractors in deals that make it easy to skirt public scrutiny and for all to wash their hands if something goes wrong.

"My complaint about use of private contractors is their ability to fly under the radar and avoid any accountability," Representative Jan Schakowsky, an Illinois Democrat, said. "Now we're finding out that because of their low profile, and so little scrutiny, they are able to avoid liability or responsibility for these individuals."

American officials and executives at Northrop Grumman bristle at the suggestion that they have not done all they can to secure freedom for the men. Diplomats say there is probably little that they can do.

The American ambassador here, William B. Wood, said that "nothing at this mission has a higher priority than the well-being and safe release" of the crew members, according to a letter sent to the families of the missing men before Christmas.

Jack Martin, a Northrop Grumman spokesman, said in an e-mail message that the company was closely cooperating with the government to ensure the release of the three Americans and "remained in regular and frequent contact with the hostages' families."

But in interviews, family members were aggrieved at what has become a painful and protracted episode that could have implications beyond Colombia. "They're not acknowledging these men, and nobody cares," Jo Rosano, the mother of Mr. Gonsalves, said last month in an interview in her home in Bristol, Conn. "They say, `We're doing all we can.' But what are you doing?"

The number of Americans working in Colombia for private contractors has nearly doubled in two years to 400, the congressional limit. Hundreds more are citizens of Colombia and other countries. American law also allows up to 400 military officials in Colombia.

There are now two dozen American companies here, with the contracts for antidrug programs worth $178 million last year. They spray coca fields, operate eavesdropping devices, organize alternative development programs, repair airplanes, assess intelligence and advise the Colombian Defense Ministry.

In Iraq and Afghanistan, more than 70 American companies and private individuals have won up to $8 billion in contracts in the last two years, according to the Center for Public Integrity in Washington. Much of their work is shielded from the public, critics say, noting that their deaths are not even added to the American body count.

American officials, here and elsewhere, say using contractors saves money, provides essential services and specialists and frees military forces that are already stretched thin. They also say the three men taken captive were working within the legal limits set by the Congress.

But critics say that for American policy makers, the political risks surrounding Washington's deepening involvement in Colombia's conflict made using contractors preferable to placing American forces or intelligence officers in similar jeopardy.

The mission of the three men whose plane went down last Feb. 13 was to fly their single-engine Cessna, its underbelly loaded with sophisticated photographic equipment, over vast jungle tracts to search for illegal drug activities and, sometimes, guerrilla movements.

The intelligence was then shared with the Colombian armed forces in Washington's two-pronged fight against drug trafficking and a 40-year Marxist insurgency.

After the crash, in Caquetá Province, the rebels killed two other survivors: an American pilot, Tom Janis, and a Colombian intelligence officer. Weeks later, on March 25, a plane on a mission to track the captives hit a tree. Three more Americans were killed: Tommy Schmidt, Ralph Ponticelli and James Oliver.

The men were part of a team of a dozen or so pilots and technicians overseen by the American military mission in Latin America, the Southern Command, based in Miami. Their operation was dubbed the Southcom Reconnaissance System, and Northrop Grumman held the $8.6 million contract for the work.

As the program became increasingly successful, several former pilots and others familiar with the program said civilian managers pushed flight crews farther over the jungles, often at night and sometimes 300 miles from their base.

Their mission expanded, too, from locating targets in the illegal drug trade chosen by the American Embassy to keeping a look out for leftist guerrillas, including those of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC.

"The mission is certainly not to look for the FARC," but rather drug traffickers, said one former pilot. "But it's hard, as you know, to separate the two."

By 2002, pilots began to worry about what they perceived to be the lack of power and speed of their planes — the single-engine Cessna Caravan — for a country as big and mountainous as Colombia.

"Pretty soon you're exceeding your limitations," said another flyer, who added that the $150,000 annual salary motivated pilots to accept increasingly dangerous missions.

Two pilots, Paul C. Hooper and Douglas C. Cockes, wrote letters in November and December of 2002 to Northrop Grumman warning that flying single-engine planes was a recipe for disaster. The letters, first revealed by The Los Angeles Times, suggested that the Cessnas be replaced with twin-engine Beech King Air 300's.

Northrop Grumman and American government officials declined to comment when asked about the warnings.

"We had 60 some years of flight experience between the two of us," Mr. Cockes said in an interview, "and the handwriting was on the wall."

The planes were not replaced, and the two pilots resigned. After the two crashes, which temporarily halted the program, Northrop Grumman resumed the operation under a different name, the Colombia Surveillance System, using twin-engine planes.

Today, family members say they still have not received a full explanation of what happened. In January the families of the crewmen killed in the second crash receive a half-page, double-spaced summary from the Southern Command saying the plane hit a ridge and suggesting pilot error.

But conflicting information exists, with an embassy official saying recently that engine failure may have caused the plane to dip just before reaching the 4,400-foot rise.

"It's been sheer hell," said Ralph Ponticelli, the father of one of the pilots killed. "We are just not satisfied."

Family members also remain confused about the contractual obligations of the men's employers. All of the pilots and crew members had begun working for California Microwave Systems, a subsidiary of Northrop Grumman. After the first crash, the program was transferred to a newly created company, CIAO Inc., former pilots and family members said.

Family members, former pilots and a high-ranking official who worked with contractors for years in Colombia contend that the contract switch was aimed at shielding Northrop Grumman from liability.

"There are veils," said John McLaughlin, the former head of the State Department's airborne program in Colombia, in charge of the spraying of coca crops. "If you have to go through this company and that company to try to recover, it puts some people off."

Efforts to reach CIAO — which has an office in Maryland, according to documents — were unsuccessful. Phones were either disconnected or went unanswered.

Northrop Grumman, in a statement, declined to answer a list of questions regarding details of the program and requesting a response to the relatives' claims.

The company did say it had been working with California Microwave "to support the families of the three crew members who lost their lives and to ensure they receive all the benefits to which they are entitled."

But the relatives are far from satisfied.

"We hear that Butch went to work for CIAO three days after he was assigned to Colombia," said Betty Oliver, the mother of Mr. Oliver, who is known as Butch. "And consequently CIAO does not recognize who is working for them. Grumman does not recognize he worked for them. So who did he work for?"

Mr. Schmidt's wife, Sharon, and Mr. Ponticelli's parents said they had since been trying, with no luck, to obtain $350,000 death benefits. Both families received notices from an insurance adjuster saying they could not be paid benefits because the men had not worked for Northrop Grumman when they were killed.

"They say they terminated him and so therefore they have no legal responsibility," Ms. Schmidt said. "The reason they had done this is because they had been made aware, in writing, that serious concerns had been raised about the use of single-engine planes."

As for those taken captive, the FARC is using them as bargaining chips for a prisoner exchange and has hidden them well. Though American forces tracked the Americans after their capture, the trail has since been lost.

"The intelligence picture has, candidly, dried up," General James Hill, commander of American forces in Latin America, told a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on Oct. 29. "We get very little intelligence on them. We do not know exactly where they are."

What little is known of their fate comes from "Held Hostage in Colombia," a documentary by two American producers, Victoria Bruce and Karin Hayes, featuring interviews with the hostages conducted by a Colombian journalist, Jorge Enrique Botero.

"I don't want more deaths," Mr. Stansell, sitting with his fellow crew members as armed guerrillas stood by, said in the documentary, excerpts of which were shown on "60 Minutes II." "I don't want to die. I don't want anybody dying trying to get me out of here."

The families are demanding negotiations to secure the release of the captives, but American policy forbids talks with the FARC, which the State Department has labeled a terrorist group.

"The Americans are truly making no effort to get them out," said a Western diplomat. "The Americans could be there 10 years."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: botero; bruce; caquet; caqueta; caquetaprovince; caquetprovince; cessnacaravan; cockes; colombia; dougccockes; dougcockes; douglasccockes; douglascockes; farc; gonsalves; grumman; hayes; hooper; hostages; howes; janis; jorgebotero; jorgeebotero; jorgeenriquebotero; jorosano; karinhayes; keithstansell; marcgonsalves; markgonsalves; northrop; northropgrumman; paulchooper; paulhooper; rosano; stansell; thomashowes; tomhowes; tomjanis; victoriabruce

1 posted on 02/14/2004 11:25:01 AM PST by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Tailgunner Joe
On the surface, this blows.

I am of two minds on this issue.

I could say that these guys knew what they were getting into and accepted the risks. They knew or were told that something like this coud happen and therefore should not expect anything other than what is happening.

I could also say that this is dispicable behavior by the Federal Government. If you abandon your men like this it is no wonder we don't have reliable human assets in the intelligence wars. My visceral reaction is to "go Roman" on these people and burn their jungle, kill the inhabitants and salt the earth. But, in the end I know this can't and shouldn't be done.

Man this is frustrating.

2 posted on 02/14/2004 11:32:46 AM PST by AreaMan
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Why to we send in humans to do a machine's job? We have excellent remote piloted planes (UAVs) that can gather all the info needed.
3 posted on 02/14/2004 11:39:36 AM PST by Dialup Llama
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To: AreaMan
It's to bad we don't have a covert group to get these guys out.
4 posted on 02/14/2004 12:08:08 PM PST by keysguy
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To: Travis McGee
Ping...
5 posted on 02/14/2004 12:22:34 PM PST by NoCurrentFreeperByThatName
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To: AreaMan; B4Ranch
<< I could also say that this is dispicable behavior by the Federal Government. If you abandon your men like this it is no wonder we don't have reliable human assets in the intelligence wars. My visceral reaction is to "go Roman" on these people and burn their jungle, kill the inhabitants and salt the earth. But, in the end I know this can't and shouldn't be done.

Man this is frustrating. >>

By all means ""go Roman" on these people and burn their jungle, kill the inhabitants and salt the earth" -- but do it among the treasonous scum at secretary Powell's Place in Foggy Bottom DC -- where total responsibility for sending State's fourth and fifth rate "aviators" to dangerous places resides in the "Bureau for International Narcotics Matters and Law Enforcement" and squarely upon the craven shoulders of the recently retired John E McLaughlin [Mentioned in this piece] -- and in all of those who have, for twenty five years, believed that scurrilous phony's abject lies.

For twenty years McLaughlin -- an intellectually and morally bankrupt third-rate bureucrat who epitomises all that is wrong with entrusting government with money -- has, for fear that even second raters would quickly figure him and blow the whistle on his incompetence and effective corruption, hired only fourth and fifth raters.

McLaughlin's every clain during that entire period of have "eradicated" coca and other drug crops is a lie.

Neither McLaughlin nor any associated with him or with the US Department of State have had any effective impact whatever, ever, on a single acre of drug cultivation!

I designed the State Department's aerial anti-narcotics program, sold and final-designed and oversaw the production and international ferry-flight delivery of its first airplanes, trained its first pilot hires from and in Burma [Myanmar] Columbia and other South American states and Cuba and the US, spent several thousand hours authoring all of its initial maintanence and instruction manuals, flew its first ever anti-narcotics' spray missions [In Burma] and worked with John McLaughlin [Who wrote up all of my work as his own and plagerized all of my manuals] for several years.

And -- along with all of those who knew McLaughlin and worked with us [Including some very real veteran aviation heros -- which that lying SoB is absolutely not!] -- have no hesitation whatsoever in saying that, despite that all the gummint ever gets to hire are the bottom feeders left when America's FRee Enterprise businesses and corporations have finished fishing, seining, netting, long-lining and trawling America's talent pool -- and that his competition amounts to zero -- there has probably never been a less competent "aviation" or any other kind of parasitical person -- or a more accomplished liar -- in the employ of the feral gummint in American History or, come to that, a more stupid person to take a dump between two shoes -- ever!

Best ones -- Brian
6 posted on 02/14/2004 12:40:23 PM PST by Brian Allen ("I don't belong to no organized political party -- I'm a Republykin!" - With Apologies to J Robinson)
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To: Tailgunner Joe; americafirst
# 6 -- Bump.

Blessings -- Brian
7 posted on 02/14/2004 12:47:45 PM PST by Brian Allen ("I don't belong to no organized political party -- I'm a Republykin!" - With Apologies to J Robinson)
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To: Squantos; wardaddy; Matthew James; NoCurrentFreeperByThatName
If you haven't seen the movie "Proof of Life" starring Russel Crowe, SEE IT ASAP, for a great look at the life of a kidnapped gringo hostage in south america, and the possible rescue efforts. Very plausible flick.

SEE IT!!!!!

8 posted on 02/15/2004 8:05:19 PM PST by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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To: Travis McGee
Seen it....good flick. Now for the important stuff ....... SHOT SHOW REPORT ???

Stay safe !

9 posted on 02/15/2004 8:08:17 PM PST by Squantos (Salmon...the other pink meat !)
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To: Squantos
I put a short SHOT report on that long old XM-8 rifle thread.

One funny story. We have an Accuracy Int'l (British) sniper rifle in our booth, showing off our AI version butt monopod. (Accu-Shot) I was talking to a British gent about 60 years old for a half hour about everything under the sun: my book, rifles, etc. At the end he gave me a card. "Technical Director, AI." He was the designer and lead engineer for their rifles for the last 25 years! The inventor of the world's best sniper rifle! And here I was shooting the breeze with him.

I mentioned that my book was similar to the Brit novelist Gerald Seymour's superb military/espionage thrillers. He said he had to take an older AI rifle (LR-96?) down to London for photos for the cover of one of Seymour's books, "At Close Quarters." That's the one where the good guy does a sniper mission against a terrorist in the Bekaa Valley. I'm looking at my copy now, and there on the cover is that exotic looking AI rifle, wth the green stock.

And there I was at the SHOT Show, talking about books and guns with the AI's inventor. How about THAT!

10 posted on 02/15/2004 10:26:06 PM PST by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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To: Travis McGee
Great movie!
11 posted on 02/28/2004 5:32:28 AM PST by Matthew James (SPEARHEAD!)
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To: Travis McGee
Yeah, Proof of Life is a sleeper that hangs on in the video stores. Can't sell a documentary but they did a good job of making it real, IMO.
12 posted on 02/28/2004 5:47:41 AM PST by decimon
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To: decimon
Yep, very good flick!
13 posted on 02/28/2004 1:52:04 PM PST by Travis McGee (How many pacifists died to liberate Iraq from Saddam's mass-murder regime?)
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To: B4Ranch

This is as true today as it was in 2004 — and as relevant!

(Happy Independance Day!)

QUOTE:

<< I could also say that this is dispicable behavior by the Federal Government. If you abandon your men like this it is no wonder we don’t have reliable human assets in the intelligence wars. My visceral reaction is to “go Roman” on these people and burn their jungle, kill the inhabitants and salt the earth. But, in the end I know this can’t and shouldn’t be done.

Man this is frustrating. >>

By all means “”go Roman” on these people and burn their jungle, kill the inhabitants and salt the earth” — but do it among the treasonous scum at secretary Powell’s Place in Foggy Bottom DC — where total responsibility for sending State’s fourth and fifth rate “aviators” to dangerous places resides in the “Bureau for International Narcotics Matters and Law Enforcement” and squarely upon the craven shoulders of the recently retired John E McLaughlin [Mentioned in this piece] — and in all of those who have, for twenty five years, believed that scurrilous phony’s abject lies.

For twenty years McLaughlin — an intellectually and morally bankrupt third-rate bureucrat who epitomises all that is wrong with entrusting government with money — has, for fear that even second raters would quickly figure him and blow the whistle on his incompetence and effective corruption, hired only fourth and fifth raters.

McLaughlin’s every clain during that entire period of have “eradicated” coca and other drug crops is a lie.

Neither McLaughlin nor any associated with him or with the US Department of State have had any effective impact whatever, ever, on a single acre of drug cultivation!

I designed the State Department’s aerial anti-narcotics program, sold and final-designed and oversaw the production and international ferry-flight delivery of its first airplanes, trained its first pilot hires from and in Burma [Myanmar] Columbia and other South American states and Cuba and the US, spent several thousand hours authoring all of its initial maintanence and instruction manuals, flew its first ever anti-narcotics’ spray missions [In Burma] and worked with John McLaughlin [Who wrote up all of my work as his own and plagerized all of my manuals] for several years.

And — along with all of those who knew McLaughlin and worked with us [Including some very real veteran aviation heros — which that lying SoB is absolutely not!] — have no hesitation whatsoever in saying that, despite that all the gummint ever gets to hire are the bottom feeders left when America’s FRee Enterprise businesses and corporations have finished fishing, seining, netting, long-lining and trawling America’s talent pool — and that his competition amounts to zero — there has probably never been a less competent “aviation” or any other kind of parasitical person — or a more accomplished liar — in the employ of the feral gummint in American History or, come to that, a more stupid person to take a dump between two shoes — ever!

Best ones — Brian

END QUOTE.


14 posted on 07/05/2008 1:38:59 PM PDT by Brian Allen (B Hussein bin B Hussein bin Hussayn Obama is to Christianity what Mike Jackson is to hetrosexuality)
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To: Brian Allen

Best to ya, Mate


15 posted on 07/05/2008 2:41:21 PM PDT by B4Ranch (Having custody of a loaded weapon does not arm you. The skill to use the weapon is what arms a man.)
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