Lagniappe
Juan
Forero:
Venezuela
offered aid to Colombian
rebels
High-ranking officials in Venezuela
offered to help Colombian guerrillas obtain surface-to-air missiles
meant to change the balance of power in their war with the Colombian
government, according to internal rebel documents.
Venezuelan officials served as middlemen with Australian arms dealers
and agreed to help the rebel commanders travel to the Middle East
to receive missile training, according to files on computer hard
drives seized by Colombian authorities and shown to The Washington
Post. In interviews, Colombian officials said they have no evidence
that the guerrillas obtained the antiaircraft missiles but added
that Venezuelan authorities appear to have provided light arms, thousands
of rounds of ammunition and rocket-propelled grenade launchers.
The disclosures have already started to reverberate in the Bush
administration and among Latin America policymakers on Capitol Hill,
where a small group of Republicans has proposed classifying Venezuela,
a major oil exporter to the United States, as a state sponsor of
terrorism. The United States and Europe long ago blacklisted the
rebel organization, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or
FARC, as a terrorist group.
At Colombia's request, Interpol, the international police agency,
has completed an extensive forensic analysis on the hard drives,
which were confiscated in an army raid on a rebel camp on March 1.
On Thursday, Interpol is expected to announce that there is no evidence
that anyone tampered with the hard drives after they were seized,
though the agency cannot vouch for the veracity of the rebels' claims,
according to an American official knowledgeable about the study.
The documents
are the latest to be released among 16,000 files and photographs
being reviewed by Colombian and U.S. officials that describe
meetings between FARC commanders and Venezuelan officials, including
Interior Minister Ramón Rodríguez Chacín; the
military intelligence chief, Gen. Hugo Carvajal; other top generals
such as Clíver Alcalá; and Amilkar Figueroa, who organizes
Venezuela's civilian militias.
President Hugo
Chávez, who has publicly lauded the FARC and
characterized Colombia's government as illegitimate, ridiculed the
latest batch of correspondence Sunday as "imbecilic documents." He
cast Colombian President Álvaro Uribe as a "manipulator" linked
to drug trafficking and charged that the Bush administration is using
the documents as a pretext to invade Venezuela from Colombia.
Communications
Minister Andrés Izarra, speaking to a group
of American newspaper editors on Tuesday in Caracas, called the findings "laughable."
"It's part of the lies that are spread around every day against
what we are doing," he said.
Colombian officials
made dozens of documents available to reporters shortly after commandos
recovered laptops and hard drives in a rebel
camp just inside Ecuador's northern border. The documents belonged
to Luis Edgar Devia, alias Raúl Reyes, a top commander killed
in an airstrike on the camp.
But documents released more recently to the Wall Street Journal,
El Pais of Madrid and The Post reveal that ties between Venezuela's
government and the FARC included plans to procure a range of arms
to help the guerrillas turn back Colombian government offensives.
"What they show is that the level of cooperation was much more
than what we had earlier estimated," Colombian Defense Minister
Juan Manuel Santos said in an interview this week. "We knew
there was a level of cooperation, but not as intense, not as close
and not as effective as we're now seeing."
Former FARC guerrillas who operated in southern Colombia and along
the Venezuelan border said in interviews that their units received
Venezuelan munitions. Colombian intelligence officials also described
the funneling of weaponry, with one official providing documents
showing how Colombia's military has confiscated more than 210,000
rounds of Venezuelan-made ammunition in FARC camps since 2003.
"We believe they act in Venezuela, fully protected, and that
from there they prepare terrorist acts," one intelligence operative
in Colombia said of the FARC. "There is fluid communication
between the two."
Santos, in some
of his strongest comments to date, said Colombia has frequently
provided the Caracas government with information about
the activities of the FARC inside Venezuela. That information has
included the locations of senior members of the group's leadership. "We
have in various opportunities told them about guerrilla chiefs in
Venezuela, about the presence of narco-trafficking in Venezuela,
of camps in Venezuela, and they have never responded," he said.
In Washington,
officials are worried that Venezuela's aid to the FARC, if proved,
could threaten the progress Colombia has made against
the FARC. "I think the obvious problem is that a serious threat
to both Colombia and a terrorist threat in the region has apparently
had pretty direct support from Chávez and his government," John
P. Walters, the White House drug policy chief, said by phone from
Washington.
Still, a high-ranking official in the Bush administration and senior
aides in Congress said the United States must remain cautious about
drawing conclusions from the documents and prudent about the adoption
of policy initiatives.
After a recent
fact-finding trip to the region, Carl Meacham, a senior aide to
Sen. Richard G. Lugar (Ind.), the ranking Republican
on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, noted in a report that
a hard line against Venezuela could damage trade with the United
States and inadvertently strengthen Chávez's position.
Colombian officials
have also debated the ramifications of a tough stance, since it
could endanger $6.5 billion in annual trade with
Venezuela. Santos, the defense minister, said, "I want to normalize
relations with Venezuela because it would be convenient for all of
us." He added: "But to do that, they cannot help the FARC."
Colombian officials
and former FARC guerrillas said the close ties between the group
and Venezuela are not new, though officials in
Chávez's government and rebel commanders have drawn closer
since 2005.
One mid-level guerrilla who recently deserted described how Venezuelan
forces provided the ammunition the FARC needs for its assault rifles,
as well as explosives. The guerrilla, who operated inside Venezuela's
border, said Venezuelan authorities also provided sanctuary to guerrilla
units escaping Colombian attacks.
"It's a state policy. What we were told was that Chávez
liked to see us expand in Venezuela and in Colombia," said the
guerrilla, who spoke on the condition his name not be used.
In FARC correspondence,
the guerrillas talk about obtaining weapons either directly from
the Venezuelans or with their help. On March
1, 2007, a commander named Rodrigo Londoño Echeverry says
Venezuelan intelligence operatives offer "parts to build" antiaircraft
missiles.
Another letter,
from a commander named Luciano Marin Arango on Jan. 20, 2007, talks
of how two Venezuelan officials, identified in an
earlier e-mail as Gens. Carvajal and Alcalá, provided "85mm
antitank rockets." Colombian officials believe the "rockets" are
grenade launchers, often used to attack police outposts.
In another message
dated Sept. 6, 2007, Marin Arango tells other FARC leaders that
he met with two Australian arms dealers with the
help of Figueroa. The items for sale included "Chinese missiles" that
are "very easy to operate and they guarantee the instruction," he
wrote, speaking of antiaircraft missiles.
In exchange,
FARC documents show, the Venezuelans have asked the FARC to train
the Venezuelan army, in order to repel the U.S. invasion
Chávez frequently warns is about to come.
Juan
Forero is
a journalist with Washington Post Foreign Service. Petroleumworld
not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
Note: This commentary was originally published by The
Washington
Post, on Thursday, May 15, 2008; A01.Petroleumworld
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