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FARC is being demonized: scholar

Colombia news - FARC guerrillas

A controversial new book by a Canadian scholar who spent nearly ten years studying the FARC-EP says the rebel group has been “demonized” by domestic and foreign powers. His book is intended to dispel the myths surrounding their cause.

In an interview with Colombia Reports, James J. Brittain, an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at Acadia University in Nova Scotia, said that the book, released three months ago in North America and Europe, had already had an intensely polarized reception in academic and political circles.

Brittain said his research, which includes interviews carried out in the field with guerrillas and peasants alike, gave him an understanding of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia - Peoples’ Army (FARC-EP) different from that portrayed in the “mainstream media.”

Scholars, journalists, and governments alike have categorized the FARC-EP as a “movement void of ideological position seeking individualistic economic power through violent means,” he claims.

On the contrary, in his book, titled “Revolutionary Social Change in Colombia: The Origin and Direction of the FARC-EP,” Brittain argues that history has shown the rebel group to be “the most powerful and successful guerrilla army in the world.”

He says that no in-depth scholarship has previously been conducted on the FARC-EP’s ideological or practical relation to contemporary social change.

The book traces the growth of the rebel movement, from its roots in the Colombian Communist Party following the tumultuous era of political upheaval known as “La Violencia,” to its emergence as the FARC in the 1960s and early skirmishes with U.S.-backed government forces, and finally to the present day FARC-EP.

Brittain’s book is highly critical of U.S. involvement in Colombia, and argues that Washington has been the most influential force in the demonization of the FARC.

From his home in Canada, Brittain spoke with Colombia Reports about his fieldwork, and the passions his research has invoked from both sides of the political spectrum.

Colombia Reports: What was your motivation in conducting this study? Was it for political reasons, or scientific research?
Brittain: Definitely scientific research. I was interested; can a Marxist-Leninist guerrilla movement really create change? Can we see a Marxist-Leninist revolution create change that is legitimately of the people? Is the FARC really a people’s army? Over the years, I was amazed at a lot of the responses of everyday people - campesinos and indigenous people. There seems to be a very different presentation of the FARC coming from them than what I was reading in El Tiempo and the international mainstream media. Not that all the people were in open arms, but people were expressing different opinions of the FARC.

CR: Was the Colombian government aware of the theme of your research? Were there any problems from the government with visa issues or restriction of movement?
Brittain: There weren’t too many problems until the last year and a half. There have been issues, but interestingly they were from the Canadian government. The Canadian government seems to be really interested in what I was doing and they were getting info from the Colombian government. I had members of the Canadian version of the DAS (immigration service) contact me, asking what is the research about, etc. There have been threats, though. For example I received messages from the paramilitaries, from the Black Eagles. And most recently there have been accusations that I am not an academic but a sympathizer of the movement.

CR: How did you make contact with the FARC? And how did you move in and out of FARC-held territory?
Brittain: Since 2002 - this was when Plan Patriota was in full effect - it was actually quite easy. I was surprised. I think the FARC did a lot of intelligence to see who I was, what I was doing, but to get into guerrilla territory was easy. Because of the economic disparity, you can ask someone to take you to rebel areas for 50 bucks. And they'll do it. You hop into a boat, and sure enough it doesn’t take time for a guerrilla to stop the boat. Later there was an increased sensibility of what I was doing. You can literally email the FARC through a website. After I sat with them a few times they became comfortable enough to let me sit in a camp and let me document; that I wasn’t a gringo informant but an actual academic.

CR: Was there any moment when you felt threatened? Or that you felt uneasy?
Brittain: Well I think there were several times I was nervous, because I was obviously asking questions that perhaps they didn’t want to be asked. But I never felt threatened. The attitude was, among the peasants, that there was no one coming to talk to them. So on that end there was an attitude among the peasants, "please come and see what the guerrillas are doing here." I think, if something did happen to me, there would be backlash. It would have reflected negatively on them. The only times I felt threatened was running into state forces, or paramilitary groups; that was a whole different ballgame. There was one time I was stopped and they said freely, "let’s just take him out back and shoot him." Being told, "we could disappear you," that really stayed with me.

CR: How do you perceive the rebels, and why do you say people misunderstand the guerrilla?
Brittain: I think geopolitically Colombia is very important, and that there is a need to make Colombia look dangerous. Washington worked very closely, especially with Pastrana, to stabilize the country. From their perspective you have to make sure you eliminate any viable alternative, be it the Bolivarian alternative or what the FARC is doing. I think what is being portrayed in the mainstream media, they tell very clearly one side of the story. It is always from a single lens, be it the military or government officials. It paints a very different picture of the civil war.

CR: Your work is highly critical of U.S. involvement in Colombia. How has that been received?
Brittain: It is quite interesting because there has already been controversy...there seems to be almost a complete divide, people either agree with it or there is a completely polar opposite response, where people are dramatically opposed to the research, where they feel it’s propaganda or not true. And the fact that the government seems to be so interested in the research shows there is some interest in the subject.

CR: You mention the book as dispelling many of the myths surrounding the rebel group. What are the myths?

Brittain: The absolute number one myth is their indirect relationship to coca cultivation and the drug trade. It has not been thoroughly addressed. I hope what one gets out of the book is how the guerrilla is not directly involved in the process, cultivation, production or trafficking of drugs. But there are clearly fronts that are involved in taxing of the trade. It is clear they receive income from taxing but not from the production.

CR: What about reports of the FARC killing those engaged in coca eradication, some of them campesinos themselves? Doesn’t that suggest they have more of a keen interest in protecting the illicit crops and have more involvement than you say?
Brittain: Yes it has been seen that they will protect coca fields that are the only source of income for campesino farmers, to guarantee a return on their income. But unfortunately you get a minimal form of eradication, it is severely down recently. But their involvement is indirect. Another myth is the issue of human rights abuses. I think there is some very good work coming out by international human rights groups. But who is the actual perpetrator of human rights abuses? Since 2003 you see a significant proportion of human rights violations are at the hands of state or state-assisted paramilitary forces. Since ‘98 you see a minority of human rights abuses perpetrated by guerrilla fighters. Obviously the guerrilla is going to be involved in atrocious violent acts, but you have to put it in a proper context so that you don’t say the guerrilla is primarily responsible.

CR: Based on your personal experience, what sort of people is the FARC comprised of at present; are they forced conscripts, or are these really idealistic, radicalized peasants?
Brittain: The issue with force conscription is important to address. Unlike the paramilitary the FARC do not pay a monthly income to their average fighter. I actually argue forced conscription is potentially not as truthful as the state or the main media makes it out to be. From what I have seen if there were forced conscription there would be terrible low morale. If people wanted to leave, they could. People are overly encouraged to leave if they feel they can not devote their entire lives to the movement. In my ten years of research I have not seen one case where there was a child under sixteen, or any forced conscription at all.

CR: Do you think the common peasant, given the conditions in the campo, such as illiteracy and lack of education, can truly have a grasp on Marxist theory? Couldn’t it be argued that they are influenced by anti-Yankee demonization, i.e., they idea that the United States is the cause of all their problems?
Brittain: In the camps, you'll have some peasants that don’t know how to read at all. It’s ridiculous for a comandante to start lecturing on Trotsky because many of them can not read. Their education is very basic. It is only at higher levels that Marxist theory is touched upon. And outside the camps, the guerrillas are working with peasants, teaching them how to read. But, on the other hand, what ended up being said at a lot of these camps, in the aftermath of 9-11, is that they are not against the United States. What they are against is the political-economical system that is often enforced on the world. Instead of breeding this "Yankee imperialism blah blah blah," what they are doing is educating the average peasant that it is not the average American citizen that is against them.

CR: A lot of reports seems to indicate that lately the FARC have degenerated into a corrupt, dirty organization. Has the FARC tarnished itself through forced conscription, use of child soldiers, landmines, extortion, its leaders enjoying lavish lifestyles, and extrajudicial killings both within and outside their ranks?
Brittain: I have found very different reactions. There are many international actors looking to label FARC as a belligerent force, which under the Geneva Conventions would legitimize their fight to confront the state. The landmines they use are really primitive; they use whatever they can improvise to confront the state. So yes they do use this horrible weapon in their war. As for lavish lifestyles, in the camps the comandantes live the exact same life as the average fighter. On one trip I made, the lavish meal I shared with them was rat. That was the big fancy meal the comandante was eating. There is more of an outside distortion of what the FARC is, rather than them tarnishing themselves. I think the FARC are still for what they have been fighting for the last 45 years.

CR: What do you think about the recent account that three American contractors wrote about their observations of the guerrillas while held in captivity for 5 years? They describe inequality in the ranks between FARC commanders and subordinates, rebels who question their cause – even to the point of suicide as a way out.
Brittain: I think it is interesting what arises with the three contractors. They were treated as prisoners of war. If the FARC didn’t want to hold them according to the Geneva Conventions, they would have eliminated these people. They saw them as political commodity; they see all prisoners as a way to enter into peace talks. In my research what I saw was different. I think it is far more important to look at why the guerrilla continues to keep these people prisoners still. What I suspect is that they’re using these people, many of whom the FARC see as involved in the conflict; members of the government, members of the military, large landowners. They see these people as a means to set up a humanitarian exchange or to bring about peace negotiations. I think it is in no way comparable to Middle East image of hostages, where they are torturing or pulling out toenails. They are seen as political commodities as a way to get the state into negotiations to end the conflict.

CR: What would it take to get the FARC to the table? Do you think they could follow the example of FMLN in El Salvador, which fought a civil war, then became part of the political process, and now has seen the election of its first president?
Brittain: I really do, 100%. The parties can very easily start a peace process and negotiations. First of all a demilitarized zone, respected by all sides, where all can sit down in a place without conflict, with no threat from the resurgence in paramilitary activity which we have seen lately. Then I think we can see humanitarian exchange take place and also negotiations to end the conflict. Until there is a demilitarized zone there is no assurance. You have to stop the fighting in order to have negotiations.

CR: A demilitarized zone was ceded to the FARC in the past, and weren’t there accusations that they violated the ceasefire?
Brittain: Well yes, in the first days of that the AUC paramilitaries [United Self-Defence Groups of Colombia] murdered hundreds of people. In the past the state did nothing, so the FARC again took up arms in self defense and the defense of civilians. We can learn from the 1998-2002 peace process to set up a new, lasting peace process. The state has to ensure that there is a demilitarized zone, with enforcement to prevent aggression from gangs or paramilitaries. That was what we saw at that time, it was state forces or state forces with paramilitaries committing massacres. That's what we were seeing with the "false positives" [extra-judicial killings of civilians by the military, which are reported as FARC fighters killed in combat].

CR: What changes do you foresee in Colombian society, should the FARC ever achieve political power?
Brittain: I think it's really hard to foresee what they would do. If the FARC ever took state power, the response from the U.S. would be incredible, and we would see something like what happened in Nicaragua in the 1980s. If the FARC are to achieve any form of political power it would have to be with the backing and support of the people.


Comments (36)add comment

joshhyman said:

joshhyman
...
Thank you for an incredible article/interview. You asked the right questions which exposed the author for who and what he is. His answers speak loudly to his real agenda.

Not once in this interview did the author condem the FARC for their actions or call them terrorists. His attempt to legitimize the FARC willl fail, as will the FARC itself.

The people of Colombia will never embrace or accept the FARC. The people of Colombia know that the FARC is a henderence to a better future not any help.
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +2

Oibrigade said:

0
...
You are correct Josh. Very shady guy. Almost sounds like the FARC paid him and told him how to write and answer questions.
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +2

Compatriota said:

0
...
The problem is people are either extreme Left or extreme Right in politics in Colombia which makes them all wrong. There must be a middle ground. The only way to end the war is the same way the AUC did it, turn in their weapons and start rebuilding the country. Fight their battles with the pen in the Senate instead of a rifle in the jungle.
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +0

Friend of CR said:

Friend of CR
...
great article CR....keep setting the bar higher for your publication.....I as an avid reader I truly appreciate articles that aren't tpico off she shelf BS...

as for the FARC...of course they are demonized, just as the FARC demonize those they portend to struggle against. Isn't' that how the world has always worked?

For me anyway the civil strife seen in Colombia, like forever, is directly a result of the exclusion of the Colombian people from mainstream society. However I see (first hand living here) an amazing amount of energy being undertaken to resolve this historical issue. Access to education, health care, transportation and many other area's of society.

Until Colombia can resolve the older issue of exclusion, where parts of the country are considered 'failed', then the FARC will be a viable alternative to those excluded.

I disagree with Mr. Brittan's statement that if the FARC as a political party came into power....that the US would come down hard or otherwise overthrow it....I don't see the US toppling Chavez. The US stopped toppling LA governments post cold war.
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: -2

tomtom33 said:

tomtom33
...
It seems that 10 years of scholarship may have been a bit too much. Objectivity can be lost. It seems that it was in this case.

Poor, misunderstood FARC. That must have been someone else who came to take my wife's children from a small pueblo outside of Armenia 10 years ago. Maybe it was those dirty paras. They were probably financed by those beasts from the north.
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +1

Kalcu said:

Kalcu
...
There is an objectivity that is more believable than the usually propaganda, it's more involved for some that do understand that the US Government treads on all people. If the US Government doesn't see a mutual benefit, which very few people get, then you are looking at the other offer the US Government imprisons you in. People that actually worked with the US Government, fear the country more than the people that get on the band wagon. Any time you want to know the truth, it must be objective or it's just propaganda that doesn't change anything other than opinions that don't even matter. I suppose people can and are putting pressure on the US Government to not be so hard core in their approach to world domination. They are containing Chavez, which isn't confused with FARC anymore than a supplier. It is unfair for the US Government to get involved against people that have so much less and that is why proxy wars exist. It would be a very small problem if the US didn't get involved, they created this mess! They see no solution other than having nobody speak of it again, other than their 'perspective' of history. The US misses 90% of their historical involvement, they usually flat out deny any involvement. Apparently they can walk on water, and there is no way FARC paid this guy to write a story. It seems the truth is the easiest to report and I know that people FEAR reporting the truth that is very much against the US and Colombian 'Governments'.
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: -2

Kalcu said:

Kalcu
...
They are more like strangle holds than 'Democracy', rich people have more influence and most of the world is very very poor or careless (in American, very cowardly, careless, arrogant to extreme measures, selfish and inconsiderate which is part of the arrogance). People enjoy the American image of power which is false if it wasn't for Fascist dictations of 'reality'. America is only free if you are stupid and fall into line, or rich and basically the same thing but on another level of glamor. The people that run Colombia idolize American power, people don't want that and as long as that is the situation there is a conflict. Most people go their entire lives without knowing anything about how the US doesn't live up to their 'policy'. Fact is, if the USA stopped owning Colombia by proxy (massive funds) I'm sure most of Colombia would join these rebel groups. So in fact I see people that don't even listen to what people reporting balanced truths that are not just out to hate a group of people....as weak, by simply reporting what every state funded media reports. Media in America is what you watch for humor, for how far out of line with reality it really is!
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: -2

Kalcu said:

Kalcu
...
the fact is that if people didn't believe in rebel groups, the groups wouldn't stand a chance. It's only since the end of WWII, that the western hemisphere is largely against rebel groups. Terrorist groups fought Fascist in Italy before WWII and the same fascist that worked with Hitler, so don't confuse dictations. People will always have good and bad traits, the propaganda wants people to be entirely evil. Rebels only create 'evil' for those that have a lot of money and power, or in some cases some rebel groups are bad (Africa)...but that doesn't mean every African rebel group (armed people). Rebels built America, fought Hitler, move a lot of Intelligence out of countries and I feel that intelligence sharing is good but can be bad....the US has no qualms about damaging anyone's live that doesn't give them power (ANYONE'S) so that gives small countries such as Colombia a lot of motivation!
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +0

Bluebird said:

0
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I would like to know who with CR was tossing this guy all these "softball" questions. The questions are all framed so that it makes it easy for this jerk to paint the FARC as the real victims.............. "well, yes they use landmines...but only primitive ones." Oh my god! Please! Should we be raising money for them so they can buy better landmines and thereby injure, maim, and kill more effeciently???

Why wasn't one single hardball question asked in this interview?
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +1

tomtom33 said:

tomtom33
...
Very objective, Kalcu.

"People that actually worked with the US Government, fear the country more than the people that get on the band wagon." I actually worked for the US government for many years in several different capacities. I do not fear the US at all.

Government, by its very nature, can be seen as treading on people. Government will always be less-than-perfect. After all, it is created and populated by less-than-perfect human beings.

I can not abide a movement that has now failed for many decades. Yet they continue to kill, maim, "tax" illegal profits(but of course they aren't actually producing the stuff), and imprison. And someone has the gall to demonize them?
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: -1

Bluebird said:

0
...
@ Katclu......que que? uhhh...what exactly is your point? I did get part of what you are saying........U.S bad......rebel groups good. Is that about the sum of it? Thanks.....I had no idea....
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +2

Adriaan said:

Adriaan
...
@ Bluebird,

Because we're no hardballers. The guy did a study and came up with conclusions we found peculiar, because they differ so from what you and I think.

Honestly, the guy is right that there's a lot of opinions and very little actual research. The fact that someone bothered to actually research a very relevant Colombian phenomenon should be applauded, whether you agree with his conclusions or not. If we have a problem that needs solving, but don't look closely at what the problem is and where it comes from, we will never be able to solve it. This guy researched the FARC and came up with what for many would be surprising conclusions. And you gotta admit, the guy's got balls actually going into guerrilla territory.

Anyway, we were curious why he came up with these specific conclusions he came up with, so we asked him about it and let him explain, so you'd know about it.

It's now up to you to draw your own conclusions and share your ideas about it. We just allow people to express their views. We are not the judges. You are.
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +1

Bluebird said:

0
...
@ adriaan.... yes I understand what you are saying, I just think he was let off the hook too easily. This guy is simply trying to recycle that tired, old, romanticized view of the FARC and make some money in the process.....unless maybe he is donating the proceeds to the FARC so that they can buy better landmines! LOL
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +1

Adriaan said:

Adriaan
...
@ bluebird,
Now who's being soft? ;-)
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +0

Bluebird said:

0
...
@ adriaan....LOL good point. I am sure he intends to keep every dollar for himself!!! LOL
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +0

seattlesounder said:

seattlesounder
...
Sounds like in 10 years he learned very little. To say in 10 years he never saw one recruit under the age of sixteen sounds suspect at best. Sorry, for me, his credibility is shot. I too have lived in Colombia and the accounts I got from common people and poor peasants were much closer to what the 3 Americans wrote about in their book. I wish the USA was not spending a dime down there, but that just isn't going to happen with the geopolitical importance Colombia has.
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +1

tomtom33 said:

tomtom33
...
Does anyone think, perchance, that he saw exactly what the FARC wanted him to see? Apparently he is not bright enough to figure that out for himself.
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +1

Adriaan said:

Adriaan
...
Without doubting the guy's brightness (he beats me in degrees) I am with tomtom. The chance of the FARC not trying to at least attempt to alter reality while a gringo is present seems practically non-existent to me. The FARC would be the first armed actor in any conflict who wouldn't try.

But! Taken that into consideration, Brittain has probably seen more than any of us and is able, even though many of us would disagree with his conclusions, to inform us plenty.
 
December 21, 2009
Votes: +1

Bluebird said:

0
...
Adriaan.....I disagree. We all know people with multiple degrees that barely have the sense to come in out of the rain. Since I have no basis for questioning his common sense ( other than purposely placing himself in the clutches of the FARC) I think that either a lot of this book is contrived, or the FARC purposely "put on a show" for him, or he is sympathetic to their " cause"and is trying to do some PR on their behalf. In any case, we have all read enough reports from former captives, former FARC, etc. to know that this is a bunch of baloney.
 
December 22, 2009
Votes: +0

James J. Brittain said:

0
...
I am so pleased that this article has stimulated so much discussion. What I find disconcerting, however, is the veracious attacks related to the author rather than the qualitative and quantitative research found within the book itself. It is interesting how many of the commentators seem to criticize the contents of the text but have yet to actually read or properly critique the theoretical and pragmatic context in which the FARC-EP is sociologically examined. In addition to this, none of the above, in any capacity, has provided a material counter-response (through research) to the work therein; hence, who, in reality, is projecting ideological statements? Those who are open to democratic analysis and scholastic integrity examine before they condemn (or applaud). In many ways, several of the commentators prove one of the points made within the text: anyone who simply critiques the state, the political economy, and/or presents a view of the civil war other than that which is expressed by the administration in power is immediately labeled a member of the FARC-EP. One can disagree without being disagreeable. Debate is important and necessary. Therefore, I am willing to accept invitations to any public/open debates related to this work. Furthermore, Colombia Reports (especially Adriaan Alsema and Bryon Wells) should be applauded rather than condemned for allowing an open discussion of Colombia’s conflict and the actors therein to exist – the job of true journalists.
 
December 22, 2009
Votes: +3

Adriaan said:

Adriaan
...
@ James,

Thanks :-)

I agree that people who have actually read the book will be more equipped to criticize.

But what do you say about the doubts concerning your ability to see what really is going on? I mean, to me it seems worth a discussion similar to that about journalists embedded in Iraq; the party allowing you entrance (in this case the FARC) will attempt to color any reports coming from the zone. To what extent did you take this into consideration while investigating / writing?
 
December 22, 2009
Votes: +0

joshhyman said:

joshhyman
...
I haven't read your book but I already know that the FARC use landmines, kidnap innocent people, murder and tax the drug business from your interview. I don't care what they dream of, fight for or demand. Those are acts of terrorists. So please don't think they are anything but.

On one hand is a horrible third world situation of rich/poor issues. On the other hand are terrorists that only terrorize others to maintain their own existence. It's a disservice to the poor people of Colombia and all third world countries to try and justify the FARC.
 
December 22, 2009
Votes: +1

Bluebird said:

0
...
You can paint an outhouse with the most beautiful colors available and then theorize, debate, critically examine the theoretical as well as the pragmatic context of the whole thing but in the end anyone with a drop of common sense immediately recognizes it for what it is............a stinking outhouse.
 
December 22, 2009
Votes: +1

gringomedellin said:

0
...
Kalcu, just how did the USA create the FARC I would be interested in knowing. maybe the FARC wouldn't be demonized if they didn't attack those they claim to be fightin gfor, if they didn'tplant landmines which kill and mame mor bystanders then military personal in pursit, The FARC dig its own grave and now lies in it.
 
December 22, 2009
Votes: +0

gringomedellin said:

0
...
@ James I for one willnot waste my money or my time reading your book, I don't need a book to tell me that the FARC is a terrorist group that kills inocent people and deals drugs to fund itself
 
December 22, 2009
Votes: +0

azunoman said:

fixer
...
..all I want for Christmas is for Colombia to apply the boot to the neck of the FARC terroirsts..thank you
 
December 22, 2009
Votes: +0

Juan109 said:

0
...
I think it is great that someone has done some serious research into the FARC. For far too long those expressing opinions about them have basically just repeated the Colombian Government line - hardly an objective position - which has led to a huge amount of misunderstanding about the Colombian reality. It is sad that so many people seem content simply to accuse this academic of one thing or another or claim that they know better. It just makes those throwing the accusations around look silly - and further discredits their own positions! I am reading the book myself now and it is very interesting and will no doubt help those interested in helping to construct peace in Colombia. Those of you simply throwing unfounded accusations and words like 'terrorist' around are part of the problem in Colombia, not part of the solution.
 
December 22, 2009
Votes: +2

tomtom33 said:

tomtom33
...
Some of us live here. My wife's grandmother lost a farm to the FARC years ago. Her children were nearly taken from her by the FARC 10 years ago. My information comes from Colombians who have had actual contact with the FARC. As such, I doubt that I will take the time to read the writer's book, especially since his reported conclusions differ so greatly from the first-hand reports I have heard.
 
December 22, 2009
Votes: +1

Bluebird said:

0
...
@ juan....... read all the headlines in today's issue of CR. If we are silly for acknowledging them does that make you stupid for ignoring them?
 
December 22, 2009
Votes: +1

jarl said:

0
...
How come the failed demilitarized zone under Pastrana doesn't get more than a small -and vague- paragraph? He mentions paramilitaries and false positives, but no word about kidnapped people being taken to the demilitarized area... No word about the kidnapped airplanes, no word about the weapons trafficking between Venezuela and the demilitarized area. No word about all the meetings the FARC missed because of "security concerns" (hint: all of them)
I can't argue about what he thinks he saw, but the lack of a whole perspective greatly diminishes any respect anyone may have for this "scholar"
 
December 23, 2009
Votes: +0

cococo said:

cococo
...
So the FARC are misunderstood & demonised eh? Tell that to the family of Caqueta Governor. They are pure evil.
 
December 23, 2009
Votes: +0

Bluebird said:

0
...
@concoco..... I feel badly for the governor's family. One more sensless killing by a group of murderous criminal thugs . Maybe James Brittan can explain to the family the theoretical as well as the pragmatic context of why this man was slaughtered. I am sure he would be more than willing to launch into a lofty, lengthy explanation of why the FARC just cannot be held accountable for this kind of behaviour................. makes me want to puke!!!!
 
December 23, 2009
Votes: +0

joshhyman said:

joshhyman
...
Juan,

Every western government on this planet categorizes the Farc as a terrorist organization. That word was not just thrown around. It was earned through actions. The Farc are a living, breathing, TERRORIST organization. That's not my opinion, it is the worlds.

I don't deny that Colombia has great social injustices and the rich abuse the poor. This is a true statement. Just don't confuse that truth with what the Farc has become. They speak lies. They say one thing but do another. You have been bamboozled.
 
December 23, 2009
Votes: +0

joshhyman said:

joshhyman
...
Is the murder of the Governor a media publicity stunt to demonize the Farc? I would love to hear your responses.
 
December 23, 2009
Votes: +0

gringomedillin said:

0
...
maybe James can explain here to all of us based on his research how we are misunderstanding the FARC's lastest action of kidnapping a 69 year old and slitting his throat.
 
December 24, 2009
Votes: +0

tomtom33 said:

tomtom33
...
http://www.thestar.com/news/on...terrorists

Maybe James can explain this. His anti-Uribe bias is clear.

James?
 
January 01, 2010
Votes: +0

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