After the TV cameras were off, Sarkozy put his Foreign Minister, Bernie Kouchner in charge of negotiations with the FARC by long-distance mobile phone. Kouchner’s background as an ardent supporter of the US war in Iraq (his first trip in office was to fly to Iraq and announce his backing of US troops), a lifetime unconditional supporter of Israel’s war against the Palestinians, including its genocidal war against Palestinian Gaza and his presiding over the ethnic cleansing of over 200,000 ethnic Serbs from Kosova in the late 1990s made him a less than reliable interlocutor with the FARC. Kouchner established phone contact with FARC leader and negotiator Raul Reyes, joining President Chavez of Venezuela and President Correa of Ecuador… The CIA and Colombian intelligence agents monitored Kouchner’s phone conversations with Reyes, with or without Bernie’s knowledge2.
Reyes (perhaps unaware of Kouchner’s role as imperialist enabler) negotiated in good faith, even promising to release Ingrid and other prisoners in exchange for a promise of a reciprocal response from the Colombian government to free 500 imprisoned FARC members and sympathizers. In the meantime, the Colombian government continued its massive and brutal military sweeps of the countryside where hundreds of villagers suspected of pro-FARC sympathies were massacred. Colombian President Uribe’s stated goal was to militarily ‘liberate’ the prisoners3. Sarkozy’s abject failure to convince Uribe to negotiate and Kouchner’s unwillingness to pressure him led to the breakdown of the humanitarian mission.
A month later Sarkozy once against convoked the world’s mass media and
read a letter addressed to FARC leader Manuel Marulanda demanding he
immediately free Ingrid or else face the opprobrium of the
international community and eternal condemnation for a crime against
humanity
4. Once again, the mass media gave top coverage to his speech
with accompanying photos broadcast throughout the world. Needless to
say, as the conductor orchestrating the entire ‘humanitarian’ act,
Sarkozy thought it inconvenient to mention the FARC demands for a
reciprocal exchange of prisoners and a demilitarized zone for
negotiations. Maestro Sarkozy’s silence on Colombian President Uribe’s
(and US President George Bush) ongoing bombing campaign in the
Colombian countryside and their refusal to negotiate was never
mentioned during or after his press extravaganza. Ignored by the FARC
as well as by Uribe and Bush, Sarkozy turned to President Chavez and
asked him to demand the FARC provide fresh proof including recent
photos of the FARC captives
5.
The FARC notified Chavez and Sarkozy that they would comply by sending
two emissaries, who were promptly captured by the Colombian military,
tortured and jailed. Evidently the Kouchner-Chavez communication lines
were actively monitored. Throughout the ‘negotiating process’, the US
backed Colombian regime never received a single public message (let
alone demand) from Sarkozy urging it to respond positively to the good
will gestures of the FARC by releasing some of their political
prisoners. On the night of March 1, 2008, US satellite intelligence
pinpointed the precise location of Reyes just across the Ecuador
frontier, Uribe directed the Colombian armed forces to bomb the FARC
negotiators’ camp - a cross border raid which killed Reyes, the head of
the FARC’s negotiators and 18 other guerrillas, 4 Mexican university
students and one Ecuadorian civilian
6. Colombia’s cross-border military
operation was a blatant violation of Ecuadorian sovereignty and
destroyed the negotiations in progress. Uribe deliberately killed off
the principal FARC negotiator working with Sarkozy, Chavez and Correa
7.
Clearly, the FARC’s unilateral humanitarian concession was extremely
costly in terms of loss of key leaders increasing its vulnerability to
Colombian military detection and assault. At no point did Sarkozy or
Kouchner criticize Uribe. In fact Kouchner praised Uribe’s
‘anti-terrorist’ assaults.
Sarkozy, like those actors whose stale jokes no longer evoke laughter
except when they strike a solemn tragic pose, once again convoked the
world’s mass media to inform the FARC that they should allow the
International Red Cross to meet with Ingrid. He announced that he was
sending a plane to Colombia with French medical personnel and that the
FARC should prepare a welcoming contingent to escort the ill Ingrid
Bentacourt to the French delegation for medical treatment. Relegating
the FARC to playing second fiddle, Conductor Sarkozy assumed that they
had no choice but to follow his baton, because refusal, he stated,
would reveal their ‘inhumanity’ in not allowing a ‘near terminally ill
captive’ elementary medical care
8.
Like all moral blackmailers, Sarkozy followed the practice of
escalating demands after the first payment. Having secured the earlier
‘proofs’ of the captives’ existence, he returned to demand new
unilateral concessions. In early April, Sarkozy mounted his show
accompanied by a ‘Free Ingrid’ demonstration in Paris: The planeload of
medical personnel landed in Colombia and as usual Sarkozy made a grand
show of offering to go to the jungle if necessary, knowing full well
that it was a cheap publicity stunt.
This time, however, there was no Latin Americans to offer to ‘backup’
his media show. Argentine President Cristina Kirchner, who was in Paris
on an official visit, told the mass media that the freeing of
Betancourt should be part of a reciprocal exchange of prisoners,
sounding a dissonant note in Sarkozy’s show
9. President Chavez was even
more direct. He told Sarkozy that he should address his humanitarian
message to Presidents Bush and Uribe since they were the principle
obstacles to any reciprocal exchange of prisoners
10.
Sarkozy’s airplane sat on a Colombian runway, the French contingent sat
bored and eager to return to Paris. The International Red Cross
received no message. The FARC made no response, aware that any
communication or humanitarian mission would once again facilitate
another military assault on the FARC negotiators.
Sarkozy’s demands and dictates to the FARC went unanswered. The show failed to retain the attention of the mass media.
The FARC was predictably silent, knowing that any communications with
Bernie Kouchner would be monitored by his friends in the CIA. No
exchanges, no consultation, no security, no answers. The Latin
Presidents who had attended Sarkozy’s previous humanitarian media shows
failed to send even third echelon officials to accompany the bored
French medical and media personnel lolling about in a mosquito-infested
airport. Several days later, the FARC e-mailed a public communiqué
(April 4, 2008) to Sarkozy and to world public opinion in which it made
clear why Sarkozy’s ‘One Man Show’ was predetermined to failure. The
FARC communiqué emphasized four points
11. It affirmed that the previous
unilateral release of six prisoners was a ‘sovereign decision’ of the
FARC and not a product of weakness or pressure – thus making it clear
that they were not to be forced into making any further concessions.
Secondly they underlined their priority in freeing their 500 guerrilla
comrades incarcerated in Colombian and US prisons as part of a
reciprocal agreement. They emphasized that Uribe had not met any of the
essential conditions for negotiations, namely a demilitarized zone
where the humanitarian exchange could take place. This was a reminder
to Sarkozy that his lopsided and distorted emphasis on a unilateral
release of FARC-held prisoners was a non-starter. The FARC further
reminded public opinion and Sarkozy that the Uribe and Bush
Administrations’ militarization of the countryside were a mortal threat
to any FARC negotiating team.
The third part of the communiqué pointed Sarkozy directly to the murder
of their previous negotiating team by the Uribe government, including
the killing of Reyes, which made any humanitarian exchange impossible.
Sarkozy, by totally ignoring the murder of Reyes and his colleagues,
and failing to recognize and condemn Uribe’s deliberate policy of
murdering negotiators, ended any possibility of proceeding with the
humanitarian mission.
In the final section, the FARC made clear that under the above
conditions, they would not cooperate with the medical mission. And in a
pointed reference to Sarkozy’s unilateral arrogant, but impotent,
impositions and his pretensions of being a world-class humanitarian,
the FARC clearly stated: ‘We do not act in response to blackmail and
media campaigns. If, at the beginning of the year, President Uribe had
demilitarized Pradera and Florida (two municipalities) for 45 days,
both Ingrid Betancourt, as well as the military prisoners and the
guerrilla prisoners would have recovered their freedom and that would
have been a victory for everyone.’
Curtain Time
The plane and medical-media entourage flew back to Paris. There were no
media waiting on the empty, dark tarmac. Once more, Sarkozy, the
conductor and sole actor in his one-man-show, had demonstrated his
virtuosity as a failed performer and a mediocre politician.
Epilogue
Two months later Bernard Kouchner hailed the death of FARC leader,
Manuel Marulanda, and the killing of other FARC leaders as opening the
way for the freeing of Betancourt – echoing the line of the Uribe
regime. This effectively put an end to any French role in the process
and was in line with Kouchner’s long affinity with gangster regimes.
1 BBC December 6, 2007 and AFP, February 28, 2008
2 Reyes last interview, February 28, 2008 by Anibal Gurgon and Ingrid Storgen, found in KAOSENLARED.NET
3 ‘Uribe order the Army to ‘localize’ the kidnapped by the FARC’, La Jornada March 30, 2008
4 La Jornada March 26, 2008
5 La Jornada March 30, 2008
6 Miami Herald March 6, 2008. On the collaboration of US, see
Expresso/Guayaquil ‘Colombian pilots Operated from the (US) base in
Manta”
7 Richard Goff ‘Uribe’s Illegal Cross Border Raid’, Counterpunch March 3, 2008
8 La Jornada April 3, 2008. On April 8, just 5 days later, Kouchner
admitted that Ingrid Betancout’s health was better than Sarkozy had
presented it.
9 La Jornada April 7 and 8, 2008
10 La Jornada April 4, 2008.
11 FARC Communique, April 4 2008. Agencia Bolivariana de Prensa