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- <text id=90TT1910>
- <title>
- July 23, 1990: Colombia:The War That Will Not End
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 23, 1990 The Palestinians
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 33
- COLOMBIA
- The War That Will Not End
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Despite the government's costly campaign and the pain inflicted
- on the drug empire, the cocaine cartels are holding their own
- </p>
- <p>By John Moody/Medellin--With reporting by Tom Quinn/Bogota
- </p>
- <p> General Miguel Maza Marquez narrows his hard brown eyes when
- he mentions his quarry. "He's somewhere in Medellin, and very
- soon we'll get him." The chief of Colombia's secret police, or
- DAS, has been offering that prediction for nearly a year. But
- each time authorities announce that the capture of Pablo
- Escobar Gaviria is imminent, the overlord of the Medellin drug
- cartel slithers away. Just last week Escobar managed to elude
- the police once again after a massive drug raid in the
- northeastern part of the country. But 11 top advisers of his
- drug ring, including his brother-in-law, were not so lucky and
- have been detained.
- </p>
- <p> After 11 months of all-out war, the government of President
- Virgilio Barco Vargas has damaged but not destroyed Escobar's
- multibillion-dollar empire. Since last August, when cartel hit
- men murdered presidential candidate Luis Carlos Galan, dozens
- of cocaine laboratories have been torched, one top drug baron
- has been killed, hundreds of suspects have been arrested, and
- more than a dozen extradited to the U.S. In response, Escobar
- has unleashed a campaign of terror that has claimed some 300
- civilian lives. After two successive weekends of violence in
- Medellin took more than 40 lives, the government two weeks ago
- extradited two more suspected cartel money launderers to the
- U.S., reaffirming Colombia's will to win the war.
- </p>
- <p> Yet cartel profits remain solid, and Colombia is still the
- undisputed axis of cocaine trafficking. "It's an
- extraordinarily exhausting and frustrating fight," says a
- Western diplomat in Bogota, "and it's nowhere near being over."
- The stalemate raises questions about the government's inability
- to defeat the bad guys.
- </p>
- <p> Why can't the 200,000 members of the Colombian armed forces
- and police defeat the cartels? The top-heavy law-enforcement
- agencies were not designed to be a narcotics strike force.
- According to a secret government report, the army, navy and air
- force--all involved in the drug war--are still mainly
- structured and equipped to repel foreign invaders, not
- homegrown terrorists. The air force bought fighter jets in
- 1987-88 but needs helicopters to search the rugged hillsides
- and dense jungles where drug laboratories are concealed. The
- navy spent $90 million to repair submarines instead of
- investing in light powerboats to chase traffickers who infest
- the country's rivers.
- </p>
- <p> Better coordination is also needed. Last year army troops
- were closing in on cartel chieftain Jose Gonzalo Rodriguez
- Gacha when an A-37 air force reconnaissance jet buzzed
- overhead. The aircraft was on an unrelated mission, but it
- alerted Rodriguez Gacha to the military's presence, and he
- escaped. And the explosion of narcoterrorism has diverted
- manpower: half of DAS's 3,000 agents guard politicians and
- judges whose lives are at risk.
- </p>
- <p> Why hasn't Escobar been found and captured? Nearly 2,000
- national police have been assigned full time to the manhunt,
- and Escobar is almost certainly hiding in Envigado, a suburb
- of Medellin. But knowing his whereabouts and bringing him to
- justice are two different matters. Escobar is well protected
- in Envigado, which he once represented in congress. Even on the
- run, he is hard to find in a mainly rural country nearly as
- large as France, Spain and Portugal combined.
- </p>
- <p> When the government put a $400,000 bounty on his head,
- Escobar countered by offering $500 to $2,000 for each policeman
- killed in Medellin; so far this year, 140 lawmen in the city
- have died. Those who dare cross him also pay dearly: the bodies
- of several subordinates suspected of betrayal have turned up
- in recent months.
- </p>
- <p> Will the capture of Escobar end the drug trade? No. Escobar
- may be Public Enemy No. 1, but he is not the only drug boss.
- A ring in Cali, thought to control the flow of cocaine to New
- York City, functions with almost no police hindrance because
- the group has refrained from using terrorist tactics. It also
- provides police with information about its Medellin rivals.
- </p>
- <p> Escobar's demise would probably not even slow down coke
- production. Rodriguez Gacha's death last December created a
- power vacuum, which a new, even more aggressive generation of
- drug merchants is vying to fill.
- </p>
- <p> Are the Colombian police and army corrupt? Some are; most
- are not. Colombian officials privately acknowledge that the
- army and, to a lesser degree, the police are infiltrated by the
- drug gangs. Says a Western diplomat: "There's too much money
- to be made by being Escobar's friend. And being his enemy is
- the quickest way I know to get killed."
- </p>
- <p> Last month Barco announced a shake-up of the military's top
- brass. Among other things, an army captain has been sentenced
- to five years in prison for warning the cartel of upcoming
- antidrug operations.
- </p>
- <p> Do Colombian authorities really want to destroy the cartels?
- No. The goal is primarily to drive them out of Colombia, which
- would not necessarily curtail cocaine production. Officials
- distinguish between drug trafficking, which mainly threatens
- the consumer countries, and narcoterrorism inside Colombia,
- which they are determined to stop. The constant terror bombings
- and assassinations have led to widespread calls for negotiation
- with the cartels. But that option has been rejected by both
- Barco and President-elect Cesar Gaviria Trujillo, who has
- promised to pursue the war when he takes office in August.
- </p>
- <p> Who is supporting the cartel? Anyone who buys cocaine. But
- foreign governments help too. Earlier this year, Colombia
- disclosed that Israel had sold a large consignment of automatic
- weapons to Antigua, purportedly for its army. The guns wound
- up on one of Rodriguez Gacha's country ranches, where they were
- confiscated after his death. Chemicals needed to refine
- cocaine, once ordered from the U.S. and Western Europe, now
- come from Brazil and Ecuador, which are also becoming new
- production centers.
- </p>
- <p> How much longer will the war go on? That question is asked
- with fear and frustration in Bogota. As long as cocaine
- trafficking is so profitable, someone is willing to kill, or
- die, for it. Says a U.S. narcotics expert: "Colombia is winning
- the war, but I wonder whether its economic and political
- structure can withstand the long-term commitment." The signs
- are discouraging. In Medellin a small boy kicking a ball around
- a field built by Escobar called him a hero: "To me he's more
- important than God." The crop of tomorrow's would-be drug lords
- is as abundant as the marketplace of users who make such
- profane comparisons possible.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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