Can Colombia鈥檚 left survive the persistent logic of armed conflict?

February 1, 2022
Issue 
Gustavo Petro addresses supporters in Santander, Colombia.
Leftist Gustavo Petro addresses supporters in Santander, Colombia. Photo: @PactoSantander/Twitter

Across Latin America, voters have rejected the Washington Consensus of Neoliberal economics and military imperialism. From Bolivia and Peru to Chile and Honduras voters have called on left governments to build a more equitable future.

Now in Colombia, a country whose successive governments have ranged from hard to center right throughout its modern history, Gustavo Petro, the runner up in Colombia鈥檚 2018 presidential elections, is the leading candidate for a coalition of left of center political parties called Pacto Historico (Historic Pact), which seeks to change Colombia鈥檚 status as a 鈥渃enter right鈥 country, for the first time in its history.

If Colombia鈥檚 left is successful in the spring 2022 congressional and presidential elections (March 13 and May 29 respectively), it will be a miracle that defies the brutal logics of Colombia鈥檚 52-year-long internal armed conflict; a half century of United States-backed counter-insurgency and extrajudicial killings of civilian leftists.

Although peace accords were signed in 2016 and the principal guerilla group 鈥 the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) 鈥 officially demobilised in 2017, wartime logics continue to colour dynamics between the far-right Colombian state and the Colombian left.

Cold-War-era counterinsurgency logics, exported to the world by the US military, blur the lines between civilians, state actors and insurgents. These logics, present across Latin America from the early 1960s onward, posited that every civilian in a territory of conflict had to pick a side: either collaborate with the military or be seen as a 鈥渃ommunist/guerilla鈥 and risk extrajudicial execution.

In 1962, two years before Colombia鈥檚 conflict began, US Colonel William Yarborough suggested during a visit to Colombia 鈥渢he organization of local death squads accountable to the US government鈥 (Hylton, 2006) to stamp out the threat of Colombia鈥檚 peasant communists. In 1963, General Alberto Ru铆z Novoa, a veteran of the Colombian battalion that fought alongside the US in Korea, slightly tweaked Yarborough鈥檚 formula: he advocated for the creation of armed civilian 鈥減easant self-defense鈥 groups, accountable to the Colombian military, and trained to fight communists within their communities. (ibid)

Through the enduring political influence of military and paramilitary groups, counterinsurgency doctrine has persisted, even as the war came to an official close.

Stretching from 1964 to 2016, the Colombian conflict is the longest running cold war conflict in Latin America. Many attribute the length of Colombia鈥檚 conflict to the FARC finding a sustainable income source through territorial control of Colombia鈥檚 frontier regions and levying taxes on cocaine production. While this is a major factor, the rise of anti-communist paramilitaries and their implementation of scorched earth tactics against the civilian Left meant that an earlier negotiated end to the war was impossible.

In 1982, then-president Belisario Betancur began negotiating a peace process with the major Left insurgencies, offering the opportunity for leftists and demobilised guerillas to compete in electoral politics. By 1985, the FARC and the Colombian Communist Party had formed the Union Patriotica (UP), a political party that emerged as a popular alternative electoral option for Colombians. What followed was As Andrei Gomez-Suarez notes, between 1985 and 2002, 鈥渕ore than 5000 UP members had been assassinated, hundreds had been disappeared or forced to leave the country, others had gone back to continue waging war against the state, and many others had abandoned their political identity in order to survive the violence.鈥 (Gomez-Suarez, 2014)

In the 1980s and 鈥90s, anti-communist paramilitarism 鈥 encouraged by US counterinsurgency doctrine and often fused with narco-trafficking 鈥 was booming in Colombia. In the paramilitaries鈥 war on the Left, civilians often paid the price. In in 1988, the military abandoned a security checkpoint to let anti-communist paramilitaries into the town. In this case, paramilitaries commanded by killed 43 civilians, one among many massacres that led to 1988 being dubbed 鈥渢he year of the masacre.鈥 On the subject of civilian casualties, Carlos Casta帽o said, 鈥淚n war, unarmed civilian is a relative term. Two thirds of the guerrillas are unarmed, act like civilians, and collaborate with the guerrillas.鈥 (Romero, 2002) Paramilitaries committed crimes with impunity, with official state forces either collaborating or looking the other way.

Paramilitary power

With the growth of paramilitary power, these organisations soon found their political expression on a national level. Alvaro Uribe Velez, a wealthy cattle baron from Antioquia, rose to prominence as a senator and then governor of Antioquia. There, he fostered paramilitary structures called convivirs (Lyndsay-Poland, 2018), which reported directly to the military.

By 2002, a time when paramilitaries began to run electoral candidates and win by intimidating voters, Uribe ran for president, on the platform of what he called 鈥渄emocratic security:鈥 no more than recycled cold war counterinsurgency theory. His message was clear: in order for the war against the FARC to be won, citizens would have to collaborate with the military. In his own words, 鈥淚n democratic societies there is no citizen neutrality in the face of crime. There is no distinction between police and citizens.鈥 (Hylton, 2006)

After assuming the presidency in 2002, Uribe continued links of patronage with paramilitary actors, While waging all-out war on the Left insurgencies, The deal capped prison sentences at 6.5 years and was rejected by both the EU and UN for failing to punish crimes against humanity.

Under his plan for Democratic Security, Uribe organised more than one million civilians to be paid informers, and presided over Plan Colombia, a major influx of US military aid which began in 2000 and massively modernise the armed forces. With this influx of US defence money, and the FARC at an all-time low popularity, Uribe was convinced that now was the time to win the war on the Left insurgents.

But victory, for Uribe鈥檚 policy of democratic security, required complete submission to the state. For communities that sought neutrality in the conflict, like San Jose de Apartado, in the banana region of Uruba, this was a doomed endeavour. Long caught in the crossfires of armed groups, San Jose de Apartado declared itself a neutral 鈥減eace community鈥 in 1997 and was the site of international human rights accompaniment. Despite international focus, in 2005 prominent community leader Luis Eduardo Guerra was killed, along with four children and three other community members. This massacre meant that, since declaring itself a 鈥減eace community鈥, 115 community members had been killed. (Lyndsay-Poland, 2018) Of the killings, president Uribe said: 聽鈥淭here are good people in the community, but some of its leaders, patrons, and defenders have been signaled by people who live there as FARC auxiliaries.鈥 (ibid)

Again, Uribe blurs the lines between combatant and civilian, and through encouraging the use of force, emboldened his security forces to do the same. As one soldier said, 鈥淚 feel supported by the government because finally there is someone who understands us and encourages us to win this war.鈥 (ibid)

During the period 2002-10, when Uribe commanded the armed forces with US-trained General Mario Montoya, Through a mix of zeal, impunity, and incentive systems for kills, many units in the military began the widespread practice of kidnapping working class Colombians, often displaced because of the internal armed conflict and living in a new community. These civilians would then be dressed up as insurgents and killed.

In 2022, the memory of the Uribe era of armed conflict persists, as does his political influence. Throughout the term of Uribe鈥檚 protege and current president, Ivan Duque, Colombia experienced a series of paros nacionales (general strikes). A popular chant through long days of street protest has been 鈥Uribe Paraco, el pueblo est谩 berraco鈥 (鈥淯ribe, you paramilitary, the people are fed up鈥).

A paro nacional convened in response to a tax reform and the handling of COVID by president Duque on April 28, 2021. These strikes were brutally repressed, but protesters remained in the streets for months, now protesting militarisation in the country. 鈥淲e saw how bodies appeared dead in the rivers. We saw how the police and the ESMAD (riot police) shot at young people point blank,鈥 says Miguel Villanuevas, a student leader in Caqueta. 鈥淭his showed us that the military and police don鈥檛 serve the constitution, but instead serve a specific political class that wants to defend its privileges at all cost.鈥

Throughout the months of mobilisation, viral videos circulated of police committing atrocities against protesters, which fed the indignation behind the marches. President Duque, for his part, took a hard line in his defense of the police and military, and Uribe went further,

This rhetoric is a classic tack for Colombia鈥檚 far right: demonise political opponents as the terrorist, the guerilla, the vandal, or the criminal in order to excecute them with impunity. So far, adding to the ever-growing list of 鈥渟ocial leaders鈥 killed in Colombia.

Since the peace process in 2016, extrajudicial killings of territorial or environmental defenders, political party activists, human rights defenders, displaced peasants, and ex-combatants of guerilla groups have been cast into this euphemistic frame of 鈥渟ocial leaders鈥. For protesters in the paro, the killing of social leaders, along with the lack of implementation of the 2016 peace agreements, are major sources of ire with Duque鈥檚 鈥淯ribista鈥 government. In 2020,

After the strikes and brutal repression, the Duque government With mass participation in the national strikes, there is a growing popular opposition to the paramilitary doctrines of Uribe.

For the Pacto Historico, their intention is to translate the energy of street protests and rejection of the status quo into a positive project of major reform. Attempting to ally themselves with the paro movement, their slogan has become: 鈥渇rom the streets to the polls, from the polls to power.鈥

Miguel Villanuevas, a student leader in Caqueta, is a Pacto Historico volunteer. 鈥淣ow there is a fracture,鈥 Villaneuvas says. 鈥淭he strike of April 28, 2021 changed the consciousness of the (Colombia鈥檚) citizens. Not just in Cali or in Bogota, but in many places in the country where there had never been a strong mobilization, citizens went to the streets to say: Enough.鈥

The Pacto Historico, as a political movement, hopes to tie messages of national unity to social spending and poverty reduction, in what Villanuevas describes as not just a rejection of militarism, 鈥渂ut a social pact with Colombia鈥檚 citizens鈥.

From their campaign announcement video, it is clear the Pacto hopes to break with past dynamics and provide a positive vision moving forward. In the video, a smiling young person cheerily affirms: 鈥渢he past doesn鈥檛 matter, this is our opportunity to generate a positive change. This is our moment of national unity.鈥

The question is whether the paramilitary and can sow enough fear in the population to prevent a leftward shift. After such monumental national strikes, can counterinsurgent logics (the fear of being stigmatised as a guerilla and killed) continue to regulate people鈥檚 political participation? In many ways, it already does.

Because of the spectre of political violence in frontier regions where armed groups from the conflict still operate, many political leaders look for electoral vehicles outside of left parties like Pacto Historico. In these territories, where the majority of social leaders are killed, vote winning will prove to be most dangerous.

Villanuevas notes that 鈥渋n the places where Pacto Historico campaigners do not have control over security, we鈥檙e not going to go, because the war, at this moment, is beginning.鈥

According to Villanuevas, the Right is launching their strategy of reaction, knowing the deep unpopularity of their movement. 鈥淭he Uribistas know they鈥檙e going to lose power, they鈥檙e afraid to lose power, and the only method they have to prevent this is taking up arms.鈥

[Reprinted from .]

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