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by James Petras
I read with great interest your letter to FARC leader Manuel Marulanda. I share with you a humanitarian impulse to end the imprisonment of political prisoners in Colombia. However let us be clear, principled and realistic about this: The freedom of the political prisoners of the FARC is dependent on a quid pro quo – the liberation of the resistance fighters of the FARC in the dungeons of the Colombian state.
Your dramatic and highly publicized intervention has focused world public opinion on the prisoners held by the FARC, but you failed to mention the plight of the Colombian government’s political prisoners, tortured and brutalized by a President, whose many closest Congressional associates are awaiting trial for their long-term ties to the paramilitary death squads and narco-traffickers.
Let us begins anew, President Sarkozy. If your want to be an
honest mediator or consequential humanitarian leader you must act
impartially with a spirit of reciprocity. You have, up to now, acted in
a one-sided manner, which is not conducive to a positive resolution of
the interchange of prisoners. In your short, highly publicized appeals
you have not acted in good faith and equanimity.
For example,
early in December you appealed ‘solemnly’ to the FARC (specifically to
its Secretary Manuel Marulanda) to unilaterally release its prisoners
including Ingrid Betancourt without any parallel appeal to President
Uribe to release his prisoners and those held in the United States.
Your appeal resembled more a publicity stunt with its empty substance
and theatrical ‘solemnity’. Do you think Latin America’s most astute
and legendary guerrilla leader would be intimidated by your rhetoric
putting the onus ‘for the life’ of Ingrid on Marulanda’s shoulders?
Your colonial double morality convinced no one and certainly did not
advance the process of negotiations. Your ethical posturing may delight
some middle age, ex-Maoists-turned soap opera philosophers in Paris,
but has no place in dealing with serious and consequential
revolutionaries.
Let me suggest that, since you have formed such
a carnal relation with your ‘good friend’ President Bush, you turn your
charm on him and tell him to return the two FARC leaders back to
Colombia as part of the prisoner exchange for the three US
counter-insurgency operatives serving time in a FARC jail. Reciprocity,
Sir, is sine quo non of any negotiations among equals.
Secondly
you have made a public issue of condemning the ‘methods’ and ‘goals’ of
the FARC – but not Uribe. This is certainly not a way to begin
negotiations. It gives the appearance that Uribe is a democratic
politician which goes contrary to every United Nations, Colombian,
Organization of American States, International Labor Organization,
human rights report which document that Colombia is the most dangerous
place in the world for journalists, trade unionists, human rights
lawyers and peasant leaders because of state-sponsored terrorism. It is
presumptuous of you, President Sarkozy, to question the moral
credentials of the FARC since you and your Foreign Minister Kouchner
have given the State of Israel your unconditional support despite the
fact that they hold over 10,000 political prisoners, most of whom have
been brutally tortured and many have never been officially charged or
brought to trial. A regime like yours, whose foreign minister endorses
the economic stranglehold (cutting food, medicine, water and
electricity) on an entire people in Gaza and the US bloodbath in Iraq,
has no moral authority to give lectures in ‘methods’ and ‘goals’. Let
me speak to the point, Mr. President: The FARC neither hold 10,000
political prisoners like your ally, the Jewish State, nor invades and
colonizes independent countries like your ‘good friend’ President Bush.
So having lifted the veil of Gallic hypocrisy, let us turn to some of
the real issues that confront the opening of negotiations.
Location of the negotiations
The FARC’s insistence on a specific location is not a choice of
foliage and fauna, but a guarantee of their security in the face of
numerous broken agreements with the Uribe regime. President Sarkozy,
your insistence on, indeed demand for, ‘photographic proof’ of the
survival of Ingrid Betancourt led to the most recent example of Uribe’s
fundamental untrustworthiness: The emissaries carrying the ‘proofs’ to
you via Venezuela were arrested and jailed, blatantly violating an
implicit understanding of safe conduct among yourself, President Uribe
and President Chavez.
Between 1984-1990, the FARC reached an
understanding with Presidents Betancourt and Gaviria to give the
electoral process a chance. Many former FARC members with other
progressive individuals and leftist groups formed the ‘Patriotic Union’
(UP). In the course of 5 years, over 5500 members of the UP were
murdered, including two Presidential candidates, destroying those
electoral methods so close to your heart. President Sarkozy, I call
these events to your attention, in case your advisers have failed to
inform you of the dangers and pitfalls facing any FARC negotiations
with the Colombian Government. More to the point, the FARC’s insistence
on location is to protect its leaders and negotiators from any sudden
move by Uribe to break off negotiations and capture or kill FARC
leaders.
You should be aware that Uribe has accompanied his call
for a reduced territorial de-militarized zone with a $100 million
dollar reward to FARC members to assassinate or turn over their leaders
to the Colombian Army.
Uribe’s Unilateral Imposition of Conditions
President Sarkozy, as you well know, to enter into any
negotiations, one side cannot unilaterally and arbitrarily impose
conditions that prejudice the other side, as Uribe has done. The
‘paramilitary’ President has not only decided the location, but also
the length and breadth of the de-militarized zone, the limited time
span for a settlement, the subsequent behavior of the released
resistance fighters and a Red Cross visit to the clandestine jail of
the FARC, as well as insisting on a slanderous characterization of his
negotiating partners.
The reduced size of the de-militarized
region (as well as its choice and time span) raises deep suspicion
about the motives of the government. A smaller demilitarized zone makes
it easier for the Uribe regime to invade and capture FARC negotiators.
A larger de-militarized zone does not affect the substantive issues to
be negotiated; it facilitates negotiations by increasing the security
of the negotiators.
Secondly, the negotiations cannot be
arbitrarily decided in the course of a single month as there are
numerous issues of great complexity that need to be resolved: First and
foremost the inclusion of the two FARC leaders jailed in the United
States thanks to their arbitrary transfer by Uribe.
There is no
way in the world that the FARC will agree to allowing a Red Cross
delegation to FARC’s political prisoners, which facilitates Uribe’s US
high tech advisers to detect and attack FARC’s location. Uribe’s insane
obsession to physically annihilate the FARC as shown in his latest
outburst should lay to rest his claim for Red Cross humanitarian
assistance.
Needless to say, Uribe’s call on the ‘impartial’
Church to assist in negotiations is a joke in bad taste: The Church has
been an uncritical apologist of Uribe, his political organization and
his jailed death-squad Senators and Congress-members (thirty in
number). There are several Colombian human rights groups, which have
been recognized internationally for their courage and impartiality
including Justice and Peace and Reiniciar that can better serve any
intermediary role.
President Sarkozy, despite the limitations
and your predictable moral posturing, you have successfully exposed
Uribe’s failed and dangerous policies of ‘freeing’ the FARC prisoners
by force. You have, through promises and threats, got Uribe to
partially agree to the reasonable FARC demand for a de-militarized zone
for the negotiations. Concessions wrought from Uribe however are
elusive – what he gives with one hand, he takes back with the other: He
multiplies unacceptable conditions precisely to undermine the
negotiations. For it is in the details that the process will progress.
Now
here is the danger, President Sarkozy. Your opening gesture, and more
your successful pressure to secure a terrain for negotiations has won
you the support of many French citizens deeply committed to the freeing
of their compatriot, Ingrid. You have become the darling of the French
and Western media. I will not hold that against you; You took interest,
you spoke, you acted…but you have not yet succeeded.
To even
begin the negotiations, you must once again convince Uribe to be
reasonable (at least to the rest of the world), to forget his hidden
agendas and to accede to a safe and secure demilitarized zone of
adequate size and give negotiators adequate time to resolve their
differences. Under normal circumstances, Mr. President, you must admit
these are reasonable demands. But as you must now know, Uribe is
neither a willing negotiator nor disposed to an equitable settlement.
You have the media spotlight. You have wide domestic and international
support. You have all the political credibility (and power) to
persuade, pressure or drag Uribe to the negotiating table to free
Ingrid and the others as well as the 500 FARC prisoners rotting in the
TB holes of Colombia and the US. Success or failure is now in your
hands, President Sarkozy. You have assumed the solemn duty to free
Ingrid. Let us hope you live up to your responsibility.

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