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Getting the FARC Out of Colombia

May 20, 2008 9:45 AM

Getting the FARC Out of Colombia

By the Editors(NRO)

The surrender of Nelly Avila Moreno, a top commander in the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (known by its Spanish acronym “FARC�), is yet another milestone in Colombian President Alvaro Uribe’s remarkable campaign against the leftist guerilla group. Uribe is succeeding in his efforts to stabilize Colombia even as documents found on captured FARC computers show that Venezuelan dictator Hugo Chávez has been supporting the FARC’s narco-terrorist activities in Colombia.

This latest outrage from Chávez has prompted calls for Venezuela to be placed on the U.S. State Department’s list of state sponsors of terrorism. Unfortunately, we have every reason to believe that Chávez would welcome such a move. The imposition of sanctions on Venezuela would allow Chávez to deflect attention away from his own misdeeds and onto what he would characterize as an unfair Bush-led attack on Venezuelan interests. It is a sad fact of the world that petty tyrants like Chávez often find their power at a high ebb when they are able to convincingly blame all of their countries’ problems on the United States.

What’s more, the disruption of Venezuelan crude oil imports would hit the U.S. economy hard at a time when gasoline prices are already at record highs. Most of the oil that Venezuela exports is of an extra-heavy crude variety that the U.S. has a unique capacity to refine. Blocking Venezuelan oil imports into the U.S. would have the effect of taking most of Venezuela’s oil off the market — more devastating to Venezuela, to be sure, but nevertheless harmful to the U.S. economy.

The better way to punish Chávez is by supporting Uribe, his regional nemesis and a loyal ally of the U.S., and the single best way to do that right now is to pass the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement. The Democrats in Congress have stalled the agreement ever since the Bush administration sent it to the Hill last month. Those who oppose the agreement cite an allegedly high rate of violence against unionists in Colombia, even though the number of unionists killed has fallen by 88 percent since 2002, and court records show that most of these murders had nothing to do with unionism.

Colombia is a violent place, but it is much less so today than it was when Uribe began his campaign to eradicate narco-terrorism. Since he first assumed office five years ago, violent acts across the board — murders, kidnappings, assassinations and other acts of terrorism common in Colombia five years ago — have all decreased by double-digit percentages. Now, thanks to information obtained from the captured computers, we know that Uribe’s efforts have succeeded in spite of Chávez’s active support for the Marxist guerillas attempting to overthrow the Colombian government.

As the Cato Institute’s Juan Carlos Hidalgo noted last week on National Review Online, the Democrats have done Chávez an enormous favor by holding up the U.S.-Colombia FTA. Chávez has pointed to the Democrats’ delay as proof that Uribe is isolated and weak. “On his weekly TV show Aló Presidente last Sunday,� Hidalgo wrote, “Chávez noted that the Uribe government has poor relations with its neighbors and with the Americans, ‘since they even rejected the FTA.’�

The political cowardice the Democrats are showing with regard to the U.S.-Colombia FTA is truly astonishing. Almost all of Colombia’s exports already enter the U.S. duty-free. The FTA is nothing more than a formalization of that arrangement; a market-opening opportunity for U.S. businesses; and a show of support for a stalwart ally with whom we share a common threat to peace in the region. As policy, it’s a no-brainer. As politics, it’s proof that today’s Democratic party is more deeply in hock to its labor-union supporters than at any time in the last two decades.

By aztec on May 21, 2008, 12:02 in Politics & the war. AddThis Social Bookmark Button


b bruce says on May 21, 2008, 12:31:

Bravo, Bravo, Bravo! aztec wonderful post! I think the FARC should take their movement over to Venezuela.President Hugo Chavez (Monkey Boy) is already trying to turn that wonderful country in to a socialist prison like Cuba. Chavez believes he has the momentum to pull it off. So if he is half way there, the FARC would at least stand a chance of perhaps winning. They will never come close to winning in wonderful Colombia! I belieive we will see many more FARC desertions in the coming weeks and months. The Colombia Military has them on the run and they are very disorganized. When Chavez moved his troops to the border after the Ecuador raid, he told the Colombian Army exactly where the FARC were on the Venezuela side of the border. Uncle Hugo's move was to protect the FARC camps, not to protect Venezuela. Uncle Hugo is on barrowed time! Today the CEO's of the big oil companies were before a Senate Sub-Committee again in Washington D.C. Of course the socialist liberals blame the Bushman and Big Oil for sky rocketing oil prices here in the U.S. But the head of Shell Petroleum called the Senators at their own game. He stated in part that at present the oil business in the U.S. is not free trade. He further stated that congress with the backing of the environmentalist movements have not allowed drilling for oil or natural gas, or the building of new refineries in the U.S. for the last thirty years. If you want to help the consumer in the U.S. by lowering fuel prices, we must have the opportunity to drill our own resources. The look on the Senators faces was priceless!!!!!!!!!! Eventually the American people will wake up. And when they do, we will be drilling our own oil and natural gas.The OPEC executives will be throwing themselves out of tenth floor windows when the price of oil comes tumbling down. The best news will be Monkey Boys financial resources will dry up as well. That will be the death blow to the FARC!

0 funny, 0 helpful.

CatGirl says on May 21, 2008, 12:48:

Damn! you need to comment here more often ;)

Love and Time: the only two things that cannot be bought, but only spent

0 funny, 0 helpful.

Gator says on May 21, 2008, 12:58:

Good God! Buggy will have a heart attact.

"Credidi pretio parvo emere et magno vendere tibi in animo fuisse!" .

0 funny, 0 helpful.

CatGirl says on May 21, 2008, 13:14:

Gator - from the looks of the latest posts, your comments are probably music to some peoples ears.

Love and Time: the only two things that cannot be bought, but only spent

0 funny, 0 helpful.

cali373 says on May 21, 2008, 20:54:

I was about to add practical comments but after reading the later posts, it is not worth my time.

Smile if you are a thinker!

0 funny, 0 helpful.

billyb says on May 22, 2008, 06:08:

But it was worth your time to add the comment above? LOL.

0 funny, 0 helpful.

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