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The war criminal and the whore:
Barry McCaffrey & Jose Miguel Vivanco
By Alexander Cockburn
No sane person believes in the “war on drugs”
any more. This implies of course that our nation’s affairs are
being directed by madmen, but you knew that anyway. Besides,
there are signs that sanity may be seeping slowly through the
halls of Congress. Three times, the Clinton-Gore administration
has tried to push through a billion-plus aid package for the
Colombian military and security forces. Twice Congress has rejected
the White House request. At the start of this week reports from
the battlefield suggest that there’s more than an even chance
the senate may once again deliver a rebuff to White House drug
czar Barry McCaffrey.
McCaffrey, accused last week by Seymour Hersh
in the New Yorker of having been involved in war crimes in 1991
at the end of the war in Iraq, has been the most conspicuous
advocate for deepening US military involvement in Colombia.
In his comic-book scenario, the cocaine and opium that undermines
America is being cultivated by Colombian peasants under the
supervision of communist narco-traffickers, who use their drug
profits to buy guns to undermine Colombia’s government. Send
down money and advisers to the Colombian security forces to
wipe out the guerillas and the drug war will be won.
No surprises here, since McCaffrey used to head
US Southern Military Command, which has a prodigious institutional
self-interest in the drug war, since it provides a nice updated
rationale for the old, old business of counter-insurgency.
McCaffrey and his prime ally in the House, Rep.
Ben Gilman of New York, prepared themselves for the obvious
objections to the comic-book scenario, which are that the Colombian
military is run by criminal torturers either identical to, or
closely allied with the drug Mafias; that years of “drug interdiction”
have never had the slightest impact on shipments of cocaine
and heroin to the US; and that demands for $1.7 billion in military
aid would be followed by further demands, then by requests for
a bigger commitment of military forces and then, all of a sudden
and without having noticed, we’d be right there in the middle
of another quagmire.
Those with memories stretching back to the 1980s
might note a certain resemblance between the fight over Colombian
aid and the fight about aid to the Nicaraguan contras and to
the government of El Salvador. Back then, there were similar
protests about sending money to the butchers who murdered Archbishop
Romero as he preached in his cathedral in San Salvador, or to
the drug-running contras. The US Congress rebuffed Reagan’s
request for direct military assistance to the Contras, thus
prompting the illegal supply line supervised by Col. Oliver
North. Meanwhile, the Reagan White House issued glowing reports
about amazing progress in imparting a profound respect for human
rights in the minds of Salvadoran officers best noted for the
courage with which they ordered the rape and murder of nuns
and unarmed peasants.
The strategies are unchanged. McCaffrey has been
strenuously wooing human rights groups. So close have been the
contacts that amid McCaffrey’s strenuous efforts to counteract
Hersh’s New Yorker article, the deputy general counsel and human
rights officer at McCaffrey’s Office of National Drug Control
Policy sent a fax to six human rights activists, asking them
to help “discredit the Hersh article from your perspective.”
Of course this fax from David Shull was speedily leaked, causing
people to ponder why Shull should have assumed that he might
get support from human rights activists in protecting a possible
war criminal.
It’s clear that some groups would have nothing
to do with Shull’s invitation. Carlos Salinas of Amnesty International
told AP, after Shull’s bizarre fax had been made public, that
it appeared that Amnesty International was being asked to help
bury a story and that “it’s one thing to refute charges or refute
information quite another to ask for participation in a preemptive
strike to discredit.” But Shull was probably quite correct in
assuming his fax might get a friendlier reception at another
human rights organization, namely Human Rights Watch.
On May 18 Salon, the online mag, published a
hero-worshipping piece by Ana Arana about Jose Miguel Vivanco,
a Chilean-born, Harvard-educated lawyer who heads Human Rights
Watch Americas. In tones breathless with naïve admiration Arana
described how Vivanco had concluded that McCaffrey’s $1.7 billion
aid package was bound to clear Congress and that outright opposition
was useless. The only strategy, according to Vivanco, was to
install in the bill language ensuring that the Colombian military
would be forced to respect human rights. Already, Vivanco told
Arana, the Colombian military have cleaned up their act and
are responsible for only 2 percent of all human rights violations.
“If Human Rights Watch has its way,” Arana wrote
in her Salon piece, “the new bill will clearly call for an end
to all connections between paramilitary groups and some sectors
of the Colombian armed forces.” This Salon-sponsored drivel
meandered on past all of the familiar verbal landmarks, the
“difficult middle course” being steered by Vivanco, the necessity
for pragmatism in “balancing politics in Washington with the
realities of the Colombian conflict.”
Back in the 1980s there were people just like
Vivanco making the same strenuous claims about new found respect
for human rights in the Salvadoran forces. The claims mounted
in lockstep with reports of killings by death squads and paramilitaries.
Year after year the US press here mostly went along with the
charade that these death squads were somehow beyond the control
of Salvadoran military or intelligence.
The fact that Human Rights Watch should lend itself
vigorously to the effort to push the military aid package through
Congress is bad enough. What makes it even worse and even more
stupid is the fact that the premise of Vivanco’s “pragmatism”
is nonsense. The $1.7 billion package is not a done deal. Congress
may either seriously amend it, or the Senate may yet sink it
altogether.
Sanho Tree, who directs the Drug Policy Project
for the Institute for Policy Studies tells me that as of the
start of this week the Senate could reject its version of the
House aid package that unexpectedly drew 183 votes in opposition.
This would make it the third rejection of Colombian military
aid. Last year’s package was stopped by Republican Trent Lott
on procedural grounds. Earlier this spring a House version got
so laden with billions in pork that the Senate threw it out.
And now the Senate has already cut the appropriation down to
$1 billion, with serious amendments by Senators Paul Wellstone
and Arlen Specter further cutting it and one by Leahy maybe
sinking it once again.
The friendly reception of Wellstone’s amendment
shows which way the wind is blowing on the Hill, as regards
the War on Drugs. The Minnesota liberal is proposing to transfer
$225 million in the package from its present proclaimed purpose
of financing an attack by the Colombian military on guerilla
strongholds in southern Colombia. Instead, the $225 million
would go into drug treatment programs here in the US. Arlen
Specter is expected to offer a more drastic version of the same
idea.
No legislator, particularly one in an election
year, likes to be caught out on a limb, charged by opponents
with somehow being soft on drugs. But amid the obvious realities
of a war on drugs that’s gone nowhere, legislators are happy
to be given ammunition allowing them to say that the money is
being spent unwisely. One such piece of ammunition Tree and
others have been circulating is a study of cocaine markets by
the Santa Monica-based Rand think-tank. The study found that
provision of treatment to cocaine users is ten times more cost
effective than drug interdiction schemes, and 23 times more
cost effective than eradication of coca at its source. Yet one
half of adults in immediate need of treatment are not receiving
it, and many treatment programs have long waiting lines. The
easiest place for poor people to get treatment remains prison,
which is also one of the easiest places to get drugs.
If the McCaffrey package prevails, it’s easy
enough to predict what will happen, because it’s happening already
anyway. US dollars, personnel and equipment will flow south.
There will be reports of a spirit of confidence in the Colombian
military. People like Vivanco and unscrupulous outfits like
Human Rights Watch will testify glowingly to great progress
in imparting respect for human rights in the Colombian police
and military. The killings of labor organizers, peasant leaders,
church workers and any other threat to the right wing drug lords
in Colombia will go on, done by the paramilitary death squads
supervised by the army and the drug lords (very often identical)
with extra direction from the CIA. If the McCaffrey package
is beaten back yet again, it will be a heartening sign similar
to those heartening signs in the early eighties when Congress
tried to kill aid to the contras: that our national affairs
are not entirely run by madmen. We don’t need to be fighting
a decade long counter-insurgency war in Colombia. Colombia needs
loans and capital investment. It doesn’t need McCaffrey’s legions,
any more than its farmers need the bio-viruses McCaffrey has
also unleashed upon them.
Now, do your bit, and call your senators today,
and urge them to reject the McCaffrey package
. Source: Counterpunch
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