The war in Colombia isn't about drugs. It's about the annihilation of
popular uprisings by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and
the National Liberation Army (ELN) guerrilla groups, or Indian peasants
fending off the ravages of oil companies, cattle barons and mining firms. A
good old-fashioned counterinsurgency war, designed to clear the way for
American corporations to set up shop in Colombia, with cocaine as the scare
tactic.
Last year, the U.S. Air Force commissioned the Santa Monica-based RAND
think tank to prepare a review of the situation in Colombia. In early June,
RAND (progenitor of many a blood-sodden scenario in the Vietnam era)
submitted its 130-page report, called "The Colombian Labyrinth: The Synergy
of Drugs and Insurgency and Its Implications for Regional Stability." RAND's