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The hostages included three American contractors who had
been working on an anti-drug mission for the Pentagon in 2003
when their plane crashed in the Colombian jungle. The most
famous hostage was Ingrid Betancourt, a French-Colombian politician
who was abducted while campaigning in 2002. Eleven Colombian
soldiers were also rescued.
A complicated and audacious rescue mission
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Politician Ingrid Betancourt, pictured here in captivity
in 2007, brought attention to the plight of the hostages
through letters she wrote her mother. |
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The planning for last week's
operation started in March when Colombia soldiers seized a laptop
at a rebel camp in neighboring Ecuador. The laptop contained
dozens of e-mails with key information about how the group operated
and the whereabouts of the hostages.
On July 2, government agents tricked the rebels in charge
of the hostages into believing that they were ordered to transport
the captives in a helicopter to one of the guerrilla group's
leaders in a different camp.
Colombia's Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos said that
he instructed his special rescue team to "Use your imagination,
be audacious and catch the enemy off guard,'" he told
the Washington Post.
The plan was so convincing that Betancourt later told reporters
that it was not until the rescuers told her she was free that
she realized she was not among FARC rebels.
"The chief of the operation said: 'We're the national
army. You're free,'" she said. "The helicopter almost
fell from the sky because we were jumping up and down, yelling,
crying, hugging one another. We couldn't believe it."
Hollywood Reporter magazine reports there are already several
movies being scripted from the events.
The impact on FARC
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FARC rebels were under intense military pressure in 2007
and lost several leaders in 2008. |
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The Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia, known as the FARC, have been battling the
Colombian government for 44 years. They had hoped to use the
high-profile hostages as bargaining chips to gain the release
of their own members imprisoned by the government.
The rebel group's roots lie in the country's highly segregated
society with an upper class of Colombians of Spanish descent
and a lower class of poor Colombians of mixed-race descent.
The leftist group FARC, which was established in 1964, said
it would use armed struggle to seize power from the elitist
government and return it to the common people.
The group largely uses money from the illegal drug trade
to finance its operations. And some analysts believe that
the group has lost its political focus and is more concerned
with making money.
There are an additional 700 captives still in the jungle,
and their families fear they are in greater danger from the
now-embarrassed rebels.
Meanwhile, civilians continue to be caught in the crossfire
between FARC and the government and other right-wing paramilitary
organizations.
U.S. foreign policy in Colombia
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A U.S. Justice Department map shows the flow of cocaine
from Colombia to U.S. cities. |
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The United States considers
FARC to be a terrorist organization.
U.S. foreign policy in Colombia is linked to ending the drug
trade. Nearly 90 percent of the cocaine in America comes from
Colombia. Much of the over $5 billion spent in the region since
2000 is used to eradicate the country's cocoa crops, which are
used to make cocaine.
The three Americans captured by FARC, Marc Gonsalves, Thomas
Howes and Keith Stansell, were working for U.S. Defense Department
contractor Northrop Grumman Corp. when their crop surveillance
plane crashed.
FARC's future
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Colombian Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos said he
would have resigned if the plan to free the hostages was
unsuccessful. |
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Many believe that the dramatic
rescue is the beginning of the end for FARC and that the rebel
group will disintegrate and look to negotiate for peace.
"It's reaching a point where most of the leaders of
FARC are going to say, 'We're not going to win, we don't have
a chance.'" Peter DeShazo, of the Center for Strategic
and International Studies, told the New York Times. "And
when they reach that point, then political negotiation becomes
more possible."
Colombia's defense minister agrees that peace negotiations
are possible.
"We need to insist on military pressure. And at the same
time, we are offering them a peace negotiation. If they want
to negotiate seriously a peace agreement, we are willing to
sit down, but we will not repeat what they have done in the
past of using a negotiation simply to strengthen themselves,"
Santos told the NewsHour.
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