Posted on 02/14/2003 7:47:15 AM PST by Hemingway's Ghost
Edited on 02/14/2003 7:51:51 AM PST by Sidebar Moderator. [history]
I'm wondering if this has the potential to become a full-scale shooting war given: (1) W.o.D., (2) the presence of Special Forces as trainers, (3) the State Department labeling the leftists "terrorists" in this era of the War on Terrorism.
Interesting . . ..
US plane crashes in Colombia; survivors feared captured
By Andrew Selsky, Associated Press, 2/14/2003
BOGOTA -- A US government plane carrying four Americans and a Colombian crashed yesteray in southern Colombia, apparently killing two of those aboard, and officials feared the survivors were captured by leftist rebels.
Officials with the state prosecutor's office spotted two bodies amid the wreckage, said the government office, which is responsible in Colombia for investigating deaths. US Embassy officials had no comment on the report.
After getting word of the crash, US officials scrambled rescue teams to the the region, but at least one report said rebels had captured those aboard and announced, ''We have them! We have them!'' in an intercepted radio transmission.
There was no statement from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, Colombia's main leftist rebel group. A Colombian military official reported the transmission.
US officials refused to discuss the mission or identities of those aboard the single-engine Cessna, which went down as it approached Florencia, 235 miles south of Bogota, the capital.
The Colombian Armed Forces' high command said the plane was on an intelligence operation.
It was not clear which arm of the US government operates the plane. A host of US agencies and government contractors are in Colombia. They operate radar stations that track drug-smuggling flights, fumigate drug crops with airplanes, and assist Colombian security forces in other antidrug operations. Sources said those aboard the plane were not Drug Enforcement Administration agents.
If the survivors were captured, it would mark the first time in Colombia's decades-long civil war that Americans on US government business had been taken by the insurgents.
Dozens of private US missionaries and businessmen have been kidnapped by FARC and another rebel group, the National Liberation Army.
A US Embassy spokesman said the plane crashed near Florencia ''during an attempted emergency landing'' just before 9 a.m. The spokesman said the cause apparently was engine failure.
Radio contact with the Cessna was lost eight minutes before its scheduled landing, according to Colombia's civil air agency, which said there were four Americans and one Colombian aboard. Florencia is near vast fields that produce coca, the main ingredient of cocaine, and is controlled by rebels and rival paramilitary groups.
Cropdusting pilots contracted by the US State Department have been waging a massive fumigation campaign against the drug crops. But the State Department contractor, DynCorp, said its personnel were not aboard the plane.
Still, DynCorp spokeswoman Caroline Longanecker said the company was helping with rescue and recovery.
A Colombian military official said Colombian military Black Hawks were also being sent to the area, but then were ordered to return, with US officials being in charge of the case.
The crash comes as Washington moves beyond fighting drug trafficking -- which provides profits for rebels and paramilitaries -- to helping the Colombian government directly battle the insurgents.
US special forces in eastern and central Colombia are training Colombian army troops in counterinsurgency tactics. Washington is planning to share intelligence -- both human and electronic -- on the rebels with Colombia.
The area around Florencia contains many rebels.
Florencia is the biggest town on the edge of a huge rebel safe haven that the Colombian government granted to the FARC at the end of 1998 as a site for peace talks.
The government revoked the sanctuary last year and canceled the peace talks after FARC rebels hijacked an airliner, forced it to land on a rural road, and kidnapped a Colombian senator who was aboard.
The FARC and the National Liberation Army have fought the government and outlawed paramilitary groups in Colombia for nearly 40 years. About 3,500 people, mostly civilians, die each year in the fighting.
Government troops have moved into the main towns of the former safe haven, but rebels still control the countryside in the former sanctuary and surrounding areas.
This story ran on page A15 of the Boston Globe on 2/14/2003.
© Copyright 2003 Globe Newspaper Company.
I've heard this too.By the way, a statistic I read today said that only some 3% (three percent) of Colombians support FARC. (I'm sure that 3% is composed almost entirely of university faculty and students.)
How is it then that they've been able to wage this war for 39 years? Or have organizations other than FARC carried the torch in the past, and FARC is merely the latest incarnation of leftist rebellion in the area?
Time to take another editor out back and shoot him...
The name of that South American country is "Colombia", not "Columbia".
As I was reading the article I kept getting visions of civil war and drug cartels in the capital of South Carolina...
They have the weapons - and the support of the international left. I think you could probably look at Cuba and the Communism it exported throughout Latin America as the original source of a lot of this.
The latest FARC urban bombings, btw, show signs that the IRA and ETA have been helping FARC "improve its skills." These organizations are like a worldwide cancer that has different localized tumors, but fundamentally, deep down inside, they're all the same disease.
It's been a shooting war for at least the last 30 years.
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