Policy Briefs & Testimonies

2 Items

People place lighted candles on bricks with names of people murdered or missing allegedly by paramilitary groups in front of Costa Rica's embassy, in Bogota, Apr., 22, 2008, after one of President Uribe's allies entered the embassy to request asylum.

AP Photo

Policy Brief - Center for International Studies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Re-Plan Colombia

| January 2009

"The financial crisis will require a reevaluation of U.S. aid. Critics of Plan Colombia argue that, in Colombia, union leaders remain at risk, human rights abusers are not brought to justice, the military commits "false positives," and drug eradication has failed. Based on this record, they conclude that the U.S. should reduce or withhold aid from Colombia. This is unsound advice. Colombia has made great advances against the guerrillas and paramilitaries because of U.S. aid. Some 340 politicians who conspired with paramilitaries, 3,000 paramilitaries who committed crimes against humanity, and 14 perpetrators of abuses against union leaders face prosecution because of U.S. aid. These advances in security, justice and democracy would not have occurred without U.S. assistance. However, the critics are not wrong; there is much work left to be done."