Yahoo – AFP, Andrew Beatty, February 4, 2016
Washington (AFP) - US President Barack Obama announced a $450 million plan to fund Colombia's peace process on Thursday, shaking up a controversial military aid program that defined relations for 15 years.
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US
President Barack Obama (R) waves following a reception with Colombia's President
Juan Manuel Santos at the White House on February 4, 2016 (AFP
Photo/Mandel Ngan)
|
Washington (AFP) - US President Barack Obama announced a $450 million plan to fund Colombia's peace process on Thursday, shaking up a controversial military aid program that defined relations for 15 years.
Hosting
President Juan Manuel Santos at the White House, Obama said that as the
country's 50-year conflict with leftist FARC guerrillas winds down it was time
to rethink "Plan Colombia."
"A
country that was on the brink of collapse is now on the brink of peace,"
Obama said, expressing optimism that an agreement can soon be reached.
A March 23
deadline has been set for the peace talks to conclude, designed to bring to an
end a conflict which has killed more than 220,000 people and displaced six
million.
Over the
last decade and a half, Plan Colombia caused billions of dollars' worth of
military aid to flow to Colombia's security services, fortifying the state
against well-armed and well-funded drug cartels and rebel groups, chief among
them the FARC.
Hailed in
Washington as a bipartisan success story, Plan Colombia was launched by
president Bill Clinton and continued by his Republican successor George W.
Bush.
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US
President Barack Obama shakes hands with Colombia's President Juan Manuel
Santos at the White House on February 4, 2016 in Washington, DC (AFP
Photo/
Mandel Ngan)
|
But the
policy has also been fiercely criticized inside Colombia and by rights groups,
who say it made internecine conflict bloodier and left a trail of abuses.
"For
many Colombians directly affected by the conflict, Plan Colombia is shorthand
for a war without quarter," said Gimena Sanchez of the Washington Office
on Latin America, a non-profit group.
Under the newly
styled "Peace Colombia," the White House said there would still be
cash for the military and counternarcotics, but the focus would also be on
demobilizing rebels, mine clearance, humanitarian assistance and funding truth
and reconciliation efforts.
"Just
as the United States has been Colombia's partner in a time of war," Obama
said, "We will be your partner in waging peace."
Growing
regional power
Once a
virtual failed state, Colombia is increasingly seen as a pivotal player in
Latin America and one of the region's most dynamic and democratic countries.
"Today's
Colombia is much, much different from the Colombia of 15 years ago," said
Santos.
"Practically
a third of our national territory was controled by paramilitaries. Another
third was being controled by the guerrillas, and both were financed by drug
trafficking. We had a very dark and uncertain future.
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Colombia's
President Juan Manuel Santos speaks during a reception in the
East Room of the
White House in Washington, DC on February 4, 2016 (AFP
Photo/Mandel Ngan)
|
"Today,
we see the future with hope."
Obama has
made common cause with Santos on a range of issues from climate change to
peacekeeping and the White House is betting a more peaceful Colombia could play
a larger regional role.
Recasting
Plan Colombia is just the latest move by Obama's administration to cast off
policies borne of the Cold War era.
Obama has
also moved to normalize relations with Cuba, long a point of contention with
the entire region.
Some are
calling on the United States to go further, by examining the legacy of Plan
Colombia and its own role in Colombia's long and dirty war.
Virginia
Bouvier of the US Institute of Peace said the US could help by declassifying
documents and offering transparent information about events that haunted
Colombia's past.
"The
US has collected lots of information that could be helpful to the Colombians in
trying to sort out exactly what happened, including some violations during the
war," she said.
"We
call on other countries to search for the truth as a mechanism for assuring
stability, justice and non-repetition of wars."
She added:
"The US has certainly made mistakes -- in wars there are no clean
hands."
But with
long-standing allegations of collusion between US-backed leaders and right-wing
militias, declassification is likely to be deeply contentious inside Obama's
administration.
"We
have had no requests nor have we had any discussion to release documents,"
said US envoy to the peace process, Bernard Aronson.
"I
suspect most of those are privileged and would not happen, but we'll have to
wait and see what kind of requests are made."



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