Monday, March 17, 2008
Colombia:
Unintended Consequences of the Raid on FARC
By
Sam Logan
·
Colombia's assassination of FARC's number two leader and the unintended
consequences that almost started a war with its neighbors could signal the beginning of the end for the leftist group.
When Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez made a phone call to the number two in command of the Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia (FARC), Raul Reyes, on 27 February, he did not know others were listening. The conversation was long enough
to triangulate Reyes' position, and within 48 hours the Colombian military had launched a strike on the rebel leader's jungle
camp, killing him and dozens of others in an early morning bombing raid.
The mission was a success (though the bombs landed two kilometers inside Ecuador, causing Colombia some headaches).
The FARC leader's death was a boon for Colombia, but once Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa went public with caustic complaints
of Colombia's lack of respect for Ecuadorian sovereignty, a wave of response resulted in the rapid escalation of what could
have been a war between Ecuador, Venezuela and Colombia.
But most of it was for show. After much saber rattling, the deployment of a cursory number of troops to various
borders and some tough words, the three presidents managed to make up after two rounds of high-profile diplomatic meetings.
No one came out the winner, and no one seemed worse off for the experience. Among all the actors involved in the
10-day barrage of tough talk, the only loser appears to have been FARC.
Raul Reyes represented in many ways the best of what FARC officers had to offer. A decent military tactician and
a commander long experienced in jungle warfare, Reyes was also the group's political leader. He was considered one of the
masterminds behind FARC's overall campaign to keep its struggle relevant as regional geopolitics moved beyond the Cold War.
His death for many members of FARC was a psychological blow, not so much for what Reyes represented as a man, but
what he represented as the end of a myth of invincibility that shrouded the group's leaders.
As a member of the seven-man FARC secretariat, Reyes was the first of any member of the leadership council to have
been killed. For decades, members had only died of natural causes. And while many FARC leaders have been killed in battle,
those who were most important to the organization's national and international endeavors always managed to survive. His death
has broken that myth.
Three days after Reyes' death, a mid-level leader killed his commander and turned himself in after walking for
three days, carrying the commander's severed hand to prove his death. The commander, Ivan Rios, was killed on 4 March by a
mid-ranking FARC soldier known as Rojas who operated Rios' radio and worked as his chief of security. Rios was the youngest
member of the FARC Secretariat to be killed, but this time because of mutiny.
Rios' death has led to further demystification, but more importantly it will likely lead to a series of purges
among mid-level FARC leaders, some desertions, and invariably a lack of operational cohesion, which, according to the Colombia
news magazine La Semana has plagued the FARC for the past 10 months. Morale has never been lower.
Since the peak of FARC's numbers – counted at 16,900 in 2002 according to the Miami Herald –
until now, many analysts have commented on the presence of a de facto impasse between FARC and the Colombian military. With
the deaths of Reyes and Rios, as well as the deaths of at least two leaders in FARC's command and control structure last year,
the Colombian military has demonstrated a superior level of intelligence gathering not utilized before.
For months the Colombian government has used an intelligence gathering and dissemination system whereby different
organizations within the country's security structure focus on gathering and deciphering intelligence tied to one specific
member of the FARC secretariat. Other organizations that collect intelligence on someone other than the specific target immediately
share that intel with the appropriate group.
Via this system, the Colombian military was able to slowly circle Ivan Rios, cutting off his supplies until one
of his near-starved soldiers snapped and killed him for the US$2.6 million bounty.
Intelligence gathered by tapping Reyes' phone call led to his death within 48 hours.
Superior intelligence, more than firepower, has begun to tip the scales in favor of the Colombian government.
Operation Phoenix, the bombing raid that killed Reyes and sparked a regional spike in tension, was commanded by
Colombian President Alvaro Uribe himself. He gave the order to make sure his bombers did not invade Ecuadorian air space,
but he had no problem with them aiming for a target just inside Ecuador's border.
Uribe gambled and knew he would upset Ecuador and Venezuela, but he could not have foreseen the fortunate results
of his actions. This time, unintended consequences could be viewed as the beginning of the end for Latin America's oldest
insurgency.
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This
article was originally published at ISN Security Watch (03/12/07). The International Relations and Security Network
(ISN) is a free public service that provides a wide range of high-quality and comprehensive products and resources to encourage
the exchange of information among international relations and security professionals worldwide.
Sam Logan is an investigative journalist who has reported on security, energy, politics,
economics, organized crime, terrorism and black markets in Latin America since 1999. He is a senior writer for ISN Security Watch. For issues related e-books go
to www.samuellogan.com/publications.htm.
Reprinted with permission from ISN.