Showing posts with label Colombia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colombia. Show all posts

Saturday, May 17, 2008

The next shoe drops in Colombia's cross-border raid into Ecuador to get the FARC

I ended my earlier post Capture of Victor Bout related to raid on FARC in Ecuadorby saying "So, we wait for the next shoe to drop." Here from the BBC is a shoe dropping:
Farc rebel link files 'genuine'

International police agency Interpol says Colombian officials did not tamper with computers which they claim provide proof Venezuela financed Farc rebels.

The hard drives were purportedly seized after a raid on a rebel camp in Ecuador at the beginning of March.

Although Interpol certified the authenticity of the files, not their contents, correspondents say their tests add credence to Colombian claims.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez vehemently dismissed the allegations. [Snip]

Both Venezuela and Ecuador say that any contacts with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) were solely made as part of a humanitarian effort to free hostages held by the left-wing guerrillas.

Authenticity confirmed

Colombian forces attacked the Farc camp located just across the border in Ecuador on 1 March.

The computers they seized contain files which, according to Bogota, show that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez was personally involved in financing and supplying arms to the rebels.

They also suggest that Ecuador maintained links with the Farc.

The Colombian authorities asked Interpol to check the files after Mr Chavez accused them of faking the documents.

Interpol head Ronald Noble said his team had not analysed the information contained on the drives, as Interpol's remit extended only to certifying the authenticity of the documents, not their contents.

Mr Noble said that deep forensic analyses showed Colombia did not modify, delete or create any files, although it did not always follow internationally accepted methods when handling the computers.

"We are absolutely certain that the computer discs our experts examined came from a Farc terrorist camp," he said.

But he was quick to stress that the fact that the files had not been tampered with did not prove that the information contained within them was totally accurate.
There are a lot of reports in the Internet about this Interpol report, but none add anything significant to BBC report above.

So we wait for more shoes headed groundward.

Friday, March 07, 2008

Capture of Victor Bout related to raid on FARC in Ecuador

It doesn't surprise me that the recent attack by Colombian forces 1.8 KM into Ecuador which killed the second ranking man in the FARC was based at least in part on Intelligence supplied by the U.S. The American Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) has a long-standing relationship with the Colombian government and a clear reason to want the FARC taken down, since it is a revolutionary movement that is financed by a combination of drug profits (based on drugs smuggled through Colombia, up Central America and Mexico, and into the U.S.) and kidnappings.

Nor am I surprised that Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout was arrested in Thailand Thursday. Bout is reputed to have sold and smuggled arms in a lot of hot spots around the world, sometimes on contract to U.S. government agencies. His reputed connections to U.S. agencies has apparently been a major reason why he has avoided capture as long as he has. His capture in Thailand was apparently based on a U.S. warrant through the DEA.

It is the connection between the capture of Bout and the raid into Ecuador that killed FARC deputy commander Luis Edgar Devia Silva (known as "Paul Reyes") that surprises me. This connection is suggested by the involvement of the DEA in Bout's capture as well as the claims that the warrant is for selling arms to the FARC.

The cross-order raid into Ecuador to kill Reyes has upset both the President of Ecuador and Hugo Chavez of Venezuela, but It appears that both Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa were allowing the FARC to operate from sanctuary behind the Ecuadoran border
Colombian President Alvaro Uribe leveled allegations of his own, saying he would bring charges of state-sponsored terrorism against leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez at the International Criminal Court, citing evidence from the dead rebel's laptop computer that Chavez gave $300 million and other resources to the FARC.
The truth of Uribe's charges has yet to be confirmed. It is known that Chavez wants the FARC to be considered a legitimate political movement within Colombia rather than merely as a terrorist organization. Uribe's allegations fit that context, but that doesn't make them true.

If the allegations of Chavez's support to FARC prove out, then his movement of troops to the border of Colombia to be little more than bombast to cover the fact that he has been caught attempting to destabilize Colombia. The arrest of Victor Bout in Bangkok under a DEA warrant suggests that there is a lot we don't know, and that we need to know.

So, we wait for the next shoe to drop. It shouldn't be too long.