Obama Sending Troops to Colombia to fight Drug War

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Deal: United States soldiers will deploy to Colombia


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By Stephen C. Webster

Published: August 15, 2009
Updated 1 day ago

Chavez: ‘The winds of war [are] beginning to blow’
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Some American troops will soon find themselves stationed at military bases scattered across the South American nation of Colombia with a mission to use advanced Predator drone technology to aid in fighting the drug trade and to combat terrorism, according to published reports Saturday.
But Colombia’s neighbors certainly do not see it that way.

In Venezuela, officials bristled. President Hugo Chavez warned, “the winds of war [are] beginning to blow.”
Chavez has already accused Colombian troops of making an incursion over the border and regional tensions are running high. Honduran de-facto President Rafael Correa also took exception, saying the United States would target Colombia’s neighbors if the deal is finalized.
“It has also sparked concern from moderate Colombian allies, such as Chile and Brazil, who want assurances that U.S. forces won’t be operating outside Colombia’s territory,” The Wall Street Journal adds.
Colombia says its agreement with the United States will allow Washington to use its military bases to track drug-runners through the use of remote aircraft.

“The Brazilian president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, called for a meeting between US President Barack Obama and the region’s leaders, saying the ‘climate of unease disturbs me,’” reported the BBC.
“This agreement reaffirms the commitment of both parties in the fight against drug trafficking and terrorism,” Colombia’s foreign ministry said in a statement Friday.
Officials here said the two countries agreed the text of an agreement, which now has to be reviewed by government agencies in Bogota and Washington before getting a final signature.
The controversial deal would permit the US military to operate surveillance aircraft from seven bases to track drug-running boats in the Pacific Ocean.

A senior US general said Thursday that the United States needed to reassure regional powers about the deal.
“I think we need to do a better job of explaining to them what we’re doing and making it as transparent as possible, because anybody’s concerns are valid,” General James Cartwright, vice chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a news conference.
Washington sought out its ally Colombia to make up for the loss of its hub for counternarcotics operations in Manta, Ecuador.
Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa had refused to renew an agreement that allowed the US military to fly out of Manta for the past 10 years.
The deal is worth over 40 million dollars for Bogota, along with expanded US military assistance for Bogota’s counternarcotics efforts, according to a US defense official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Cartwright and Defense Secretary Robert Gates also said this week the deal was not a unilateral move but the product of a partnership with Colombia designed to target drug cartels.
“The strategic intent is, in fact, to be able to provide to the Colombians what they need in order to continue to prosecute their efforts against the internal threats that they have,” Cartwright said.
Colombia raised concern throughout the region, which has a troubled history of US military interventions, after announcing July 15 that it was negotiating the deal.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez led the charge, alongside his Ecuadoran counterpart and ally Correa.
Speaking in Quito at a regional summit last weekend, Chavez said he was fulfilling his “moral duty” by telling fellow leaders that the “winds of war were beginning to blow.”
“This could generate a war in South America,” he said.

Other regional leaders, including Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, have asked Colombia to explain its decision.
Responding to criticism, Colombian President Alvaro Uribe said Friday the purpose of the deal was to “defeat terrorism,” adding that the accord with the United States will serves “as an insurance policy for neighboring nations.”
Uribe said he would attend an emergency summit of the Union of South American Nations (Unasur) that will gather on August 28 in Bariloche, Argentina, to discuss the situation created by the Colombian base agreement.
However, Frank Mora, a US Defense Department official for Latin America, said the controversy was a storm in a teapot.
“This agreement simply formalizes what already almost exists right now,” he told AFP.
In his remarks, Uribe also extended an olive branch to Ecuador, saying the two countries “could have dialogue” and “resolve their differences in the future.”

Ecuador broke off diplomatic relations with Colombia over last year’s air strike by the Colombian military against a Colombian leftist guerrilla base located in the Ecuadoran selva. Raul Reyes, a top leader of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), was killed in that attack.
“I apologize for that,” Uribe said. “But we are interested in the future, and the same goes for Venezuela.”
 
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So what will this do make the prices go up? ... Take care of Demand & Supply will take care of itself.
 

I'm from the government and I'm here to help
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right in line with the last 8 months with this administration. take a complete farce like "the war on drugs" and amp it up to another level
 

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could you at the very least spell the name of the country correctly in the title of the thread?

if I had a cent for every time an American spells Colombia as Columbia........there would be no economic crisis :laugh:
 

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could you at the very least spell the name of the country correctly in the title of the thread?

if I had a cent for every time an American spells Colombia as Columbia........there would be no economic crisis :laugh:
And they don't want to change the public education system either...d1g1t

But really your country can control the Heroin from Afghanistan and the Cocaine from Colombia you'll have the global drug trade locked down. Two words "Economic Recovery"
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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The number of US troops is strictly restricted.

Though that doesn't make it any less of an absurd use of American tax dollars.
 
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So what will this do make the prices go up? ... Take care of Demand & Supply will take care of itself.


It will make the price go down. The government has been caught time and time again shipping in the cocaine and heroin.
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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So what will this do make the prices go up?

Not based on history of past 25 years, no.

The stated intention of the DEA during the late 1990s and early 2000s was to do just that. Create enough problems for the cocaine producers and distributors; raise their cost of doing business and they would be forced to raise end prices - thus creating a reduction in demand.

But in fact what happens is that regardless of how much trouble the US and Colombian governments try to cause the cocaine sellers, end prices on the streets of North America and Europe are as low as they have ever been and the percentage of people using (between 1 to 2% of the adult population) remains constant as well.

Make no mistake. Neither the DEA or any other US law enforcement agency has any interest in either "reducing cocaine use" or "reducing the trafficking of cocaine".

They are simply working to help assure that those currently in control of this multi-billion dollar market remain in control.

It's more than reasonable to conclude that significant portions of the over $100Billion per year cocaine market are funneled directly into the election coffers of US Congressmen most likely to be deciding the details of US "drug war" policies.
 

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