Log in

View Full Version : How the US terrorizes Colombia, and why the CIA needs to be destroyed



boiler
22nd December 2013, 15:43
How the US terrorizes Colombia, and why the CIA needs to be destroyed

The 50-year-old Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), once considered the best-funded insurgency in the world, is at its smallest and most vulnerable state in decades, due in part to a CIA covert action program that has helped Colombian forces kill at least two dozen rebel leaders, according to interviews with more than 30 former and current U.S. and Colombian officials.

The secret assistance, which also includes substantial eavesdropping help from the National Security Agency, is funded through a multibillion-dollar black budget. It is not a part of the public $9 billion package of mostly U.S. military aid called Plan Colombia, which began in 2000.

Above: A Colombian Air Force member cleans an A-29 Super Tucano, a turboprop aircraft typically involved in strikes on FARC targets. (Raul Arboleda/AFP via Getty Images)

The previously undisclosed CIA program was authorized by President George W. Bush in the early 2000s and has continued under President Obama, according to U.S. military, intelligence and diplomatic officials. Most of those interviewed spoke on the condition of anonymity because the program is classified and ongoing

The covert program in Colombia provides two essential services to the nation’s battle against the FARC and a smaller insurgent group, the National Liberation Army (ELN): Real-time intelligence that allows Colombian forces to hunt down individual FARC leaders and, beginning in 2006, one particularly effective tool with which to kill them.

That weapon is a $30,000 GPS guidance kit that transforms a less-than-accurate 500-pound gravity bomb into a highly accurate smart bomb. Smart bombs, also called precision-guided munitions or PGMs, are capable of killing an individual in triple-canopy jungle if his exact location can be determined and geo-coordinates are programmed into the bomb’s small computer brain.

In March 2008, according to nine U.S. and Colombian officials, the Colombian Air Force, with tacit U.S. approval, launched U.S.-made smart bombs across the border into Ecuador to kill a senior FARC leader, Raul Reyes. The indirect U.S. role in that attack has not been previously disclosed.

The covert action program in Colombia is one of a handful of enhanced intelligence initiatives that has escaped public notice since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Most of these other programs, small but growing, are located in countries where violent drug cartels have caused instability.

The roster is headed by Mexico, where U.S. intelligence assistance is larger than anywhere outside Afghanistan, as The Washington Post reported in April. It also includes Central America and West Africa, where trafficking routes have moved in response to U.S. pressure against cartels elsewhere.

Asked to comment on U.S. intelligence assistance, President Juan Manuel Santos told The Post during a recent trip to Washington that he did not wish to speak about it in detail, given the sensitivities involved. “It’s been of help,” he said. “Part of the expertise and the efficiency of our operations and our special operations have been the product of better training and knowledge we have acquired from many countries, among them the United States.”

A spokesman for the CIA declined to comment.

MUCH MORE…

http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/investigative/2013/12/21/covert-action-in-colombia/

La Guaneña
22nd December 2013, 16:00
The role of US imperialism currently in Latin America must be underlined. Imperialism did not end with Op. Condor, and still shows itself strong in recent situations such as Honduras, Paraguai and Venezuela. Mexico's "war on crime" that kills social fighters is also important to notice, along with the privatization of Pemex.

And I don't even have to talk about Colombia, if anyone wants to learn about another recent interesting case there is Bogota's mayor, Petro, who just suffered a political coup.

I may deepen in these subjects later if anyone wishes, but it's also interesting to see the promiscuous relationship between Brazil's "progressive" government and Colombia's terrorist one, that ended up in the sale of the famous Super Tucanos along with weapon systems, such as that US guided bomb mentioned.


Edit: also a note on how important the Super Tucanos are in fighting the FARC: http://www.fightbacknews.org/2012/7/16/colombian-rebels-shoot-down-military-plane

And the ironic part is that this happened on a trip by president Santos to the Cauca region to show how things were "calm". They set up a massive security system, but the plane got hit and a media crew got stopped in the middle of the road and had a note from the guerrilla delivered in their hands.

xxxxxx666666
22nd December 2013, 16:03
I may deepen in these subjects later if anyone wishes, but it's also interesting to see the promiscuous relationship between Brazil's "progressive" government and Colombia's terrorist one, that ended up in the sale of the famous Super Tucanos along with weapon systems, such as that US guided bomb mentioned.

Yes, please deepen the subject, I want to learn!;)

adipocere
22nd December 2013, 16:04
Love this: "500-pound gravity bomb into a highly accurate smart bomb. Smart bombs, also called precision-guided munitions or PGMs, are capable of killing an individual in triple-canopy jungle"
Yeah an individual and the entire village he is in. Seriously, nobody would drop a 500lb bomb on just one person.

Here is the story in the Guardian:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/dec/22/cia-helped-colombia-kill-rebel-leaders

(And fuck these cowardly journalists with their military/intelligence jargon.)

Slavic
22nd December 2013, 19:17
Love this: "500-pound gravity bomb into a highly accurate smart bomb. Smart bombs, also called precision-guided munitions or PGMs, are capable of killing an individual in triple-canopy jungle"
Yeah an individual and the entire village he is in. Seriously, nobody would drop a 500lb bomb on just one person.

(And fuck these cowardly journalists with their military/intelligence jargon.)

Actually the 500lb bomb is one of the most highly used and standardized bomb used today. It is also one of the smallest general purpose bombs utilized, it has a lethal blast radius of up to 20m which is actually fairly small for air dropped bombs.

500lb bombs are dropped on individuals all the time. These bombs are relatively cheap and mass produced.

adipocere
22nd December 2013, 19:50
Actually the 500lb bomb is one of the most highly used and standardized bomb used today. It is also one of the smallest general purpose bombs utilized, it has a lethal blast radius of up to 20m which is actually fairly small for air dropped bombs.

500lb bombs are dropped on individuals all the time. These bombs are relatively cheap and mass produced.

Mass murder is very banal isn't it.

La Guaneña
23rd December 2013, 17:35
These are the bombs they talk about in the article:

yKNNL56o5SE


The craters are only 3m deep and 10m wide, totally cool to use for killing one person... :rolleyes:

SensibleLuxemburgist
26th December 2013, 10:35
These are the bombs they talk about in the article:

yKNNL56o5SE


The craters are only 3m deep and 10m wide, totally cool to use for killing one person... :rolleyes:

The killing of individuals, especially by mass-produced weapons of destruction, should never be trivialized or made into a light-hearted joke. These weapons pose a threat to our global struggle for revolution. Let us campaign against them... always.

RedWaves
26th December 2013, 21:02
The CIA has been in Colombia for decades. Don't think Pablo Escobar and his Medellin Cartel gained the power they had for nothing. That's how the CIA works, they also tore up Bolivia in the same way.