PAUL JAY, SENIOR EDITOR, TRNN: Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm
Paul Jay in Washington. In Colombia, the new president, Juan Manuel
Santos, has done something that seems quite unexpected: he made peace
with Venezuela. In fact, he ran much of his election campaign only a few
weeks ago with one of the main planks being how he was going to be
tougher with Venezuela, with all kinds of rhetoric against Hugo Chávez,
the president there. Now the two have met, and they seem to have
reconciled. Now joining us to make some sense out of all this drama is
Forrest Hylton. He joins us from Bogotá, Colombia, where he teaches at
the university there. Thanks for joining us, Forrest.
PROF. FORREST HYLTON, UNIVERSITY OF THE ANDES, BOGOTÁ: Good to be here, Paul.JAY:
So Santos used to be the minister of defense, and at the time, he was
involved in a scandal with what they call the "false positives", where
they were apparently killing ordinary peasants and dressing them up as
FARC soldiers so that they could up their body count. Of course, he
denies being involved in that. But at any rate, his election campaign
was tons of anti-Chávez rhetoric, and now he's made peace. So what's
going on there?HYLTON: Well, in many ways I would say that
Santos has shifted postures from looking a little bit like McCain on
the campaign trail. Now that he's in office, he's made many Obama-like
[inaudible] He's managed [inaudible] coalition that accounts for 80
percent of Congress, and he's brought almost all of his kind of rivals
and opponents into his cabinet, and some of them in very important
ministerial positions. So he looks to be ruling with a consensus that
not even Álvaro Uribe had. He has also adopted a much more conciliatory
posture towards Venezuela and is really, right now, the man of the hour,
as someone who has put down the basis for what could be a lasting peace
between these two countries.JAY: So in the weeks before
Uribe left power, he upped the rhetoric against Venezuela, charging
Venezuela with harboring FARC rebels and so on. It reached such a point
that Venezuela broke off diplomatic relations with Colombia. So is there
a bit of a "good cop, bad cop" going on here, with Uribe playing "bad
cop" and setting up the conditions for Santos to come in looking like a
diplomat?HYLTON: Well, it's interesting. The Colombian
government used the Organization of American States—it called an
extraordinary session in order to launch these charges against
Venezuela, claiming that Venezuela harbors FARC and ELN insurgents in
its territories, somewhere on the order of 1,500 or 2,000. Obviously,
after 2001 it's extremely dangerous for any country to be labeled as
harboring terrorists, as Venezuela was at that meeting. Lula expressed
his surprise at that announcement. He thought the timing of it was very
strange, because apparently back channel diplomacy with the incoming
administration of Juan Manuel Santos had been going quite well between
Venezuela and the incoming Santos administration. So it looked like an
obstacle that had been placed [inaudible] road toward the improvement of
diplomatic relations between Colombia and Venezuela, and Juan Manuel
Santos was able to resolve it. What's interesting, though, is that it
was really UNASUR that took the lead in resolving this crisis, as it has
taken the lead in resolving regional diplomatic crises in recent years.JAY: Explain to our viewers what UNASUR is.HYLTON:
UNASUR is the regional diplomatic association of the South American
republics that has taken on an ever-increasing role in regional
diplomacy, particularly as Brazil has thrown its weight behind this new
regional diplomatic organization, in order to counteract the more
US-influenced Organization of American States, which on both the issue
of Honduras and the coup in Honduras, as well as the issue of these
accusations launched against the Venezuelan government—which, by the
way, the Colombian government retracted. The Colombian government
retracted its request for independent international verification of
whether Venezuela is harboring Colombian insurgents on its soil. Now,
what's interesting is that the United States immediately backed
Colombia's claim that Venezuela was harboring insurgents as soon as it
was launched in the Organization of American States, on July 22. Many of
Washington's right-wing allies in the hemisphere either issued
statements of neutrality, as in the case of Chile, or simply declined to
pronounce on the issue, which is to say they kept their distance from
these accusations. And countries like Brazil clearly looked for an
immediate resolution to the diplomatic crisis, which they found through
UNASUR rather than the OAS. So Philip Crowley, the spokesperson for the
US State Department, commented on the positive role that former
Argentine president and current secretary general of UNASUR Néstor
Kirchner had played in repairing Colombian and Venezuelan relations. So
in fact the US State Department itself has officially admitted that
Brazilian diplomats, essentially, and other diplomats from around the
region, were able to make an end run around the United States and
Colombia, around the OAS, through UNASUR. So that's happened in Honduras
previously; that's happened with respect to Colombian military bases,
where all other South American countries came to an agreement that such
bases would not be permitted on their soil; and that also happened
previously with the massacre of innocent people in Bolivia in 2008,
which was carried out by the opposition to Evo Morales's government. So
that's several times, three or four, in fact, that UNASUR has been
tested in regional diplomatic crises and has come out ahead of the
United States in terms of finding effective resolutions to them.JAY:
Now for Santos to say—withdraw the claim that FARC bases are being
defended in or harbored in Venezuela is an enormous split with the
propaganda machine that the US has had towards Venezuela. I mean, are we
seeing a bit of a split on the US side? In other words, is there a
section of the State Department that has the campaign going against
Chávez, and another one that seems to want to integrate Santos more into
Latin America? Or is this just a straight split with the US?HYLTON:
Well, it looks to me like a bit of a split with the US. I don't think
that Santos fears any consequences from this. On the other hand, at 5:30
this morning, a car bomb went off near the city's financial district.
It's not clear who was behind the attack, but some are speculating that
it's people who are opposed to the type of peace that Juan Manuel Santos
has been able to establish with Chávez, which has a clear agenda for
the future, five bilateral commissions. The first high-level diplomatic
meetings will take place in Caracas on August 20. It appears that there
may be ultra-right-wing sectors who are opposed to this kind of
rapprochement with Venezuela. The flip side of that is that Santos has
also promised an agrarian reform, and he's promised to give back some of
the hundreds of thousands of acres that were stolen from peasants under
the Uribe regime. And if in fact Santos is serious about carrying out
such an agrarian reform and he has named previous Colombian presidents,
like Carlos Lleras Restrepo, who carried out an agrarian reform in the
'60s, as models that he intends to follow, if he's serious about
following such models and carrying out an agrarian reform, particularly
in relation to lands that had been stolen, then he would be touching
some very powerful interests in the region, and those interests tend to
be ultra-right-wing as well. So there may be this type of opposition to
Santos on the far right. On the other hand, Santos does have 80 percent
of the Congress in his favor, and it's clear that he's going to be able
to pass most of the bills that he wishes to pass. And as I said, he's
been able to draw many opposition figures—or not opposition; I don't
mean opposition from the left. But people on the right and the
center-left who might have been opposed to Santos have been integrated
into his government. So he's ruling with a very, very broad consensus.
And what's notable about the left wing opposition is the extent that it
is divided and weak in the face of Santos's new regime.JAY:
It sounds very surprising, based on what we understood of his campaign.
Is this as surprising inside Colombia as it seems to be from the
outside?HYLTON: Well, what people do know about Santos is
that he is a consummate insider and he has a long history of occupying
ministerial posts and forging very good ties with different economic
groups, as well as the military when he was minister of defense between
2006 and 2009. It should be mentioned that when he was minister of
defense, Colombia bombed Ecuadorian territory on March 1, 2008, and in
that crisis, there was a very similar dynamic: UNASUR really took the
lead in opposing those types of actions in South America. And to some
extent it's not only a rapprochement with Chávez and Venezuela; it's
also a rapprochement with Brazil and Argentina and the rest of the
countries that are grouped into UNASUR. So Santos clearly has fulfilled
expectations that he would move Colombia in a direction of closer
integration with its neighbors in South America, as opposed to the
exclusive reliance upon and dependence upon the United States—precisely
the kind of maneuver that we saw on July 26 in the Organization of
American States, launching the accusations against Venezuela. It's clear
that retracting those accusations, insofar as Colombia is no longer
calling for an international commission to verify whether Venezuela's
harboring terrorists, represents a clear cooling of the temperature and
an important diplomatic victory for Santos right out of the gate.JAY: Thanks very much for joining us, Forrest.HYLTON: Thanks, Paul.JAY: And thank you for joining us on The Real News Network.
End of Transcript
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BIO Forrest Hylton teaches history and politics at the Universidad de los
Andes (Bogota). He is the author of Evil Hour in Colombia (Verso, 2006),
and with Sinclair Thomson, co-author of Revolutionary Horizons: Past
and Present in Bolivian Politics (Verso, 2007). He has contributed to
New Left Review, NACLA Report on the Americas, and CounterPunch, and his
short fiction and translations have appeared in the Brooklyn Rail. His
first novel, Vanishing Acts: A Tragedy, which won the Ben Reitman Award
from CityWorks Press, is forthcoming in 2010.
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