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Plan Colombia: Cashing-In on the Drug War Failure
New DVD Release:
"Plan Colombia" is a $ 3 billion U.S. Government program intended to eradicate drugs in Colombia. With $ 110 million earmarked to protect Occidental Petroleum alone, did you know that most of this money will end up supporting U.S. oil interests in Colombia? What kind of "war-on-drugs" is that?
          The 57 minute documentary shows how the U.S. so-called anti-drug war in Colombia is actually a scheme to secure oil-rich regions of Colombia. The DVD includes both English and Spanish versions (Ed Asner or Dolores Huerta narrate) along with an additional hour of full interviews featuring the late Senator Paul Wellstone, Noam Chomsky, Sanho Tree, Bill Hartung and many others along with their biographies.
  • "A stinging rebuke of recent U.S. anti-drug policies." - Los Angeles Times
  • "For policy wonks, this sobering work is a must see." - Entertainment Weekly
  • "This potent new documentary shows that U.S. interference in Latin America is still alive and well." - The San Francisco Bay Guardian





On July 13, 2000 U.S. President Bill Clinton signed Public Law 106-246, which included $1.3 billion in aid to Colombia. The bulk of this aid is for Colombia's military.

In the context of the current situation in Colombia, the most important thing to understand about the US aid package is this: every single Colombian organization with which we met was certain that the aid would only escalate the conflict in the country.

--Witness for Peace - Columbia: A Call to Witness

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The "push into southern Colombia," a cornerstone of the US aid package, ignores the fact that an estimated 40% of the country's coca cultivation takes place under paramilitary control in northern Colombia. It cannot be an accident that the US aid package trains its sights on the south, a major coca-producing area to be sure, but one under the control of the FARC. Support for the "push" includes combat helicopters and resources for the creation of three counternarcotics battalions in the Colombian army The helicopters will accompany the planes doing aerial spraying of drug crops should the planes come under attack from the ground. But if the push goes according to plans, the battalions will reduce the risk of ground fire. They have been created to sweep through coca growing areas prior to spraying, in order to neutralize the guerrilla forces that would shoot at the spraying planes.
        The outcome of this so-called "push into southern Colombia" is almost certain, and the winners and losers have already been decided. The counternarcotics battalions will forcibly displace innumerable people in their counterinsurgency sweeps. Subsequent aerial spraying of the region will contaminate the land and water to the point of making present or future agricultural production impossible
        Combined, these tactics will force thousands from their land and their homes. NGO estimates of displacement run as high as 300,000. The US government expects (and has budgeted for) the displacement of 15,000 people from the south. With southern Colombia thus deserted and desertified, the region will be ripe for "investment" by multinational corporations (MNCs).

 

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