Subject: Fwd: URGENT VOTE ON COLOMBIA Date: Wed, 22 May 2002 13:36:40 -0400 To: lp_manhattan , From: Bob Armstrong If any of you have time : --- Original Message --- From: "Drug Policy Alliance" To: LIST: DPA_ACTIVIST Cc: Sent: Wed, 22 May 2002 12:51:14 -0400 Subject: URGENT VOTE ON COLOMBIA --- Dear Friend, Every U.S. action in Colombia implicates our misguided War on Drugs and attempts by the administration to link it to terrorism. There is an extremely urgent vote taking place this week in both the Senate and House. We urge you to call regarding the information below, but in addition to the points mentioned there, please also tell your Representative and Senators that funding military aid for counter-drug efforts is not working and that we should put our money into funding harm reduction efforts and education here in the U.S. instead of the military in Colombia. The following information comes from our coalition partners at the Latin America Working Group: Please please call now: URGENT ACTION, MAY 21 Colombia Bill May Come to Vote as early as Wednesday 5/22 or Thursday 5/23. Bush Administration to Expand US Mission in Colombia, Subsidize Occidental Oil Pipeline If We Don't Act Now! We have just heard that the emergency supplemental, which contains dangerous language expanding US military aid to Colombia, may come to a vote in the House as early as tomorrow (Wednesday) afternoon and in the Senate as early as Thursday. House offices are telling us they AREN'T HEARING FROM CONSTITUENTS on this issue. Please take two minutes and make a call now! If we lose this vote, it could take us YEARS to regain our ground. Below please find: 1) What to tell your representative or senators when you call; 2) background on what the supplemental does; 3) talking points for your calls. 1) PLEASE CALL NOW. If you don't know who your representative is, please see http://www.house.gov/writerep. If you don't know who your senators are, please see http://www.senate.gov. The Congressional switchboard for both sides is 202-224-2131. When you make your call, please ask the foreign policy aide how they think your member will vote on these amendments. If you get an answer, please e-mail mailto:estarmer@lawg.org to let me know -- it's very helpful for us to have a sense of who is supporting these amendments. Timing of the bill: HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES We expect the House of Representatives to vote this week, maybe even Wednesday afternoon! The following GOOD amendments will be proposed: a) Reps. Skelton (D-MO) and McGovern (D-MA) will offer an amendment against mission switch! (this amendment will prevent the move to counter-insurgency) b) Rep. Kaptur (D-OH) will offer an amendment that takes out the money for pipeline protection. (more details below) If you can only make one phone call, please call your Representative about these 2 amendments! Timing: SENATE The Senate is going to committee Wednesday and may vote in the full House on Thursday. We don't know what amendments might be offered. If you can make 2 more calls, it is important to call your Senators too! When you call your representative's office, ask to speak with the foreign policy aide. Please ask him or her to support the Skelton-McGovern amendment to the emergency supplemental bill, which takes out the language in the bill that expands US military involvement in Colombia from counter-drug efforts to counter-insurgency and other non drug-related operations. Also, ask him or her to support the Kaptur-Schakowsky amendment, which takes out $6 million designated to start training a battalion of the Colombian military to guard an oil pipeline owned by US company Occidental Petroleum. When you call your senators' offices, also ask to speak with the foreign policy aide. We're not yet sure what amendments might be offered, so you can't advise them to support a particular amendment, but you should voice your concerns to the aide, tell him or her that you don't want to see US military involvement in Colombia expanded, and that you hope your senator will speak out on the Senate floor against current US policy in Colombia. 2) What is the emergency supplemental about? This is a huge global bill for counter-terrorism efforts, but it contains a section on Colombia that dramatically changes our policy there. = This policy change is a MASSIVE EXPANSION. Currently, Congress has restricted US aid to go only towards counter-drug efforts; but if the EMERGENCY SUPPLEMENTAL bill passes without= amendments, US aid can be used to do counter-insurgency and fund other, non- drug-related programs. Besides getting the US directly involved in Colombia's civil war, the money could be used to fund a Bush proposal to train a battalion of the Colombian military to guard an oil pipeline in Colombia, belonging to none other than US- based Occidental Petroleum. 3)TALKING POINTS On the Bush Administration's effort to expand the US mission in Colombia: (Skelton-McGovern amendment would eliminate this) -ENDING VIOLENCE- FARC violence is brutal and intolerable. But US military aid will be counter-productive. The Colombian military works closely with illegal paramilitary groups, who are on the US terrorist list and commit the majority of politically-motivated killings in Colombia each year. The paramilitaries regularly attack indigenous and Afro-Colombian leaders, as well as human rights workers and union leaders -- and the Colombian military does nothing to protect civilians from these attacks. We shouldn't reward this brutal relationship with more aid! If we do, we are openly supporting terrorism, not stopping it. -QUAGMIRE. The Colombian civil war has gone on for 40 years, and has no easy military solution. When the US got involved in counter-insurgency in El Salvador in the 1980s, it cost the US $6 billion and 70,000 Salvadoran civilians lost their lives. Colombia is 53 times the size of El Salvador. Are we ready to deal with the cost-- both human and financial-- that getting involved in this war would mean? Support for negotiated peace talks with the FARC will go much further at ending violence in Colombia than more military aid will. On the oil pipeline protection program: (Kaptur amendment would eliminate this) -CORPORATE WELFARE- The Critical Infrastructure Brigade, as the Bush administration calls it, would be protecting a pipeline that, when operational, pumps about 35 million barrels per year. This equals a $3 per barrel subsidy to Occidental, payed by U.S. taxpayers. -WHO ARE WE FUNDING? WHAT PROTECTION? Beginning in December 2001, the AUC paramilitaries began systematically killing people in two towns about 100 miles from the pipeline, Tame and Cravo Norte. The 18th Brigade of the Colombian military -- which the US wants to re-train to guard the pipeline -- has shown no response to the paramilitary offensive in Arauca. If the paramilitary presence grows in this area, indigenous groups and civilians that live in the area may come under increasing threat-- and the violence against them will grow. -JUST THE BEGINNING. U.S. Ambassador Anne Patterson told Colombia's El Tiempo newspaper that "There are more than 300 infrastructure sites that are strategic for the United States in Colombia." Other corporations are already lining up to lobby for protection of their holdings in Colombia. Will other U.S. corporations with investments in Colombia get a similar U.S.- funded military shield? When you make your calls, please ask the foreign policy aide how the rep will vote on the two amendments, and then tell them why you want your representative to support them. Many members of Congress have told us that they are still waiting to hear from constituents on this issue-- it's critical that we make these calls now! ########### You have received this message from the Drug Policy Alliance ( http://www.drugpolicy.org ) because you are signed on to one of our Listservs. If you are interested in receiving messages on other topics, please visit: http://www.drugpolicy.org/listserve.html If you do not want to receive further emails, send a message to mailto:Majordomo@soros.org and type "unsubscribe dpa-activist" in the body of the message, (no quotes and not in the subject line). If you are subscribed to more than one Drug Policy Alliance list and wish to sign-off all of them, type "unsubscribe *" in the body of the message. Alternately, please contact Jeanette Irwin at: mailto:jirwin@drugpolicy.org To re-subscribe send a message to mailto:Majordomo@soros.org and type "subscribe dpa-activist" in the body of the message. If you are not yet a member of the Drug Policy Alliance, please consider joining: http://www.drugpolicy.org/membership ____________________________________________________ -- =A0Bob Armstrong -- http://CoSy.com -- 212-285-1864 Manhattan Libertarian Drug Affairs Director ( DaD ) =A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A02002/05/22 1:30:50 PM