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No Strategic Exit for FARC?

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Title: No Strategic Exit for FARC?


1
No Strategic Exit for FARC?
Woodrow Wilson Center Washington April 3th, 2008
2
Key Strategic Features of FARC
  • A decentralized organization in military and
    financial terms.
  • Each bloc and front collects its own money and
    recruits its own combatants.
  • Combat units develop their own logistical
    networks independently.
  • Each member of the Secretariat represents a
    particular regional bloc inside the leadership of
    the organization.
  • A peasant armed group in an urban country.
  • Most of FARC combatants are of peasant origin.
  • Increasing difficulties to find new recruits
    because of the decline in the Colombian rural
    population as a consequence of the quick
    urbanization process.
  • FARC units resort to recruit women and children
    to compensate for the lack of young males willing
    to join its ranks.
  • The lack of a significant number of combatants
    of urban origin means that FARC has confronted
    insurmountable problems to build terrorist major
    cities of Colombian.

3
Key Strategic Features of FARC
  • High level of corruption and criminalization
  • A great proportion of FARC militants have been
    assigned tasks connected with different illegal
    business -trafficking, kidnapping, extortion, etc
    - instead of fighting against Colombian
    government troops.
  • Sectors of the guerrilla highly cohesive in
    ideological terms and active in the military
    field have been struck particularly hard by the
    Colombian Armed Forces. (Example Teofilo Forero
    Mobile Column )
  • The joining into the ranks of FARC of an
    increasing number of recruits coming from social
    sectors connected to the drug industry has
    increased the contamination of the organization
    with the narco culture.
  • A number of guerrilla units have changed their
    organizational culture from having a
    revolutionary type morale to acquiring a more
    narco way of living. (Example 16th Front).
  • A significant number of middle rank commanders
    have deserted taking with them money from the
    organization.

4
Key Strategic Features of FARC
  • A Terrorist organization with a high level of
    internationalization.
  • The guerrilla has the control of networks to
    smuggle cocaine through Venezuelan territory.
  • FARC also has connections with Mexican and
    Brazilian drug cartels.
  • FARC developed a close relationship with the
    Provisional IRA acquiring new military technology
    and new tactical procedures.
  • The organization has been involved in black
    market operations in Central America, and Eastern
    Europe to acquire MANPADS.
  • A 35kg. Uranium cache belonging to FARC captured
    by Colombian authorities shows the role played by
    the guerrilla in the smuggling of nuclear
    materials.
  • FARC has developed connections with medium and
    high ranking officials in Venezuela and Ecuador.

5
The governmental military campaign
  • A structural increase in the lethality of
    Colombian Armed Forces military operations
    against FARC.
  • - An improvement in the reaction capability of
    the Military Forces.
  • - An increase in the accuracy of the attacks
  • - An acceleration in pace of Counterterrorist
    Operations.
  • - Better coordination between military and
    police units.
  • A break up of the guerrilla Command and Control
    structure because of
  • - The governmental improved capability to
    monitor guerrilla communications.
  • - New demobilization program aimed at middle
    rank commanders.
  • -The capability to neutralize the leadership of
    the organization.
  • An expansion of the programs of rewards to give
    incentives to the reporting of the localization
    of FARC units and leaders.

6
The impact of changes in the military balance
  • The break down of the combat morale of FARC
  • There is an increase in the number of cases of
    collective defections and the total number of
    defectors
  • The dissolution of the guerrilla social base as a
    consequence of the expansion of State control
    over most of the Colombian territory.
  • The weakening of the Command and Control
    structure.
  • The change in the strategic value of time.
  • The increased pace of attrition of FARC military
    structure changes the pressure from the
    government side to the guerrilla side in order to
    find a strategic rupture through
  • - An agreement for demobilization
  • - A radicalization of the military response by
    the guerrilla resorting to alternative tactics
    (urban terrorism) or special weapons (MANPADS).

7
The political side of the strategic game
  • The strategy of FARC to improve its political
    image has failed at least temporarily
  • - FARCs cheating during the negotiation with
    the Pastrana administration continues damaging
    the credibility of the organization as a
    potential participant in any negotiation process.
  • -The Emmanuel affair when FARC offered to
    release a child-hostage who was no longer in
    their hands.
  • - The international rejection of president
    Chavezs proposal to give FARC political
    recognition as a step to open negotiations.
  • - The implication of FARC in nuclear material
    smuggling has increased the difficulties of
    taking them out of the international lists of
    terrorist organizations.
  • -The Venezuelan-Colombian crisis makes the
    continuation of president Chavezs role as
    mediator impossible.

8
The Venezuelan Factor
  • There are common political goals between
    Venezuela and FARC
  • -Both have a Bolivarian ideology understood as a
    populist and nationalistic political project.
  • -Both of them share the same interest of erasing
    US influence in Latin America.
  • -Both are equally interested in expanding the
    Bolivarian revolution to Colombia.
  • In this sense, the Venezuelan government has a
    strategic interest in
  • -Preventing the military defeat of FARC
  • -Promoting FARC as a political actor which has
    to be taken into account in defining the
    political future of Colombia
  • -Forcing a negotiation where FARC has a military
    position strong enough to be able to demand
    drastic changes in the Colombian political and
    economic system in exchange for peace.

9
The Venezuelan Factor
  • As a consequence, radical sectors of the
    Venezuelan administration could be interested in
    supporting FARC
  • - Allowing the use of Venezuelan territory as a
    safe heaven for guerrilla
  • - Providing military equipment and training to
    FARC militants.

10
No Strategic Exit
  • A political option
  • Making additional concessions to improve the
    image of the organization (For instance, by
    liberating Mrs. Betancourt or other hostages)
  • But..
  • - It doesn't fit in the traditional strategic
    culture of FARC based on a systematic refusal to
    make unilateral concessions.
  • - The unilateral release of hostage reduces the
    assets in the hands of FARC to capture public
    attention and press for concessions from the
    Colombian authorities and other governments.
  • -Finally, the end of international attention
    aroused by the hostages in the hands of FARC
    would render a militarily weakened organization
    politically irrelevant.

11
No Strategic Exit
  • A military option
  • Abandon the idea of improving the international
    image of the group and turn towards a military
    escalation with two goals
  • -Increase the military attrition of the
    Colombian government.
  • -Prolong war to wait for a new Colombian
    government prone to making political concessions
    to the guerrilla.
  • But
  • The improvement in the military performance of
    the Colombian armed forces is a structural one
    which is irreversible.
  • The rebuilding of the guerrillas military
    capability would also require the active support
    of one or several of the countries surrounding
    Colombia.
  • The US pressure will work as a powerful
    deterrent to prevent any Latin American country
    from deciding to support a terrorist organization
    such as FARC.
  • The strategic dependence of FARC on any
    government supporting it would make the guerrilla
    looks like a proxy finishing with its
    nationalistic credentials and provoking a
    political crisis inside the organization.

12
The route to internal fragmentation
  • Several factors would stimulate the internal
    division of FARC
  • The financial and military autonomy of FARC blocs
    and fronts.
  • The lack of ideological cohesion and the
    weakening of internal discipline.
  • The increasing level of corruption
  • The weakening of FARCs command and control
    structure
  • The lack of clear strategic options in a
    particularly difficult situation for the
    organization.

13
The Strategic Consequences of the FARC Split
  • As a consequence, at least, two sectors would
    appear
  • A pragmatic side
  • Ready to opt for the IRA option
  • Negotiating with the government for the
    demobilization of the group in exchange for a
    complete amnesty and some political concessions.
  • A radical side
  • Ready to opt for the Shining Path option
  • Escalating military activity by resorting to
    urban terrorism
  • And also
  • Ready to opt for the Polisario Front option
  • Becoming a strategic proxy of one or several
    neighboring countries and increase military
    activity in the border areas of Colombia.
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