Every year the United States spends millions of dollars to help the
war-ravaged country of Colombia. But help it with what? In Colombia and
the U.S. Mario Murillo explores the misdirected and devastating impact
that U.S. military aid continues to have on the war torn-people of
Colombia. Beginning with a brief history of Colombia, Murillo analyzes
the complex forces driving Colombia's current decades-old guerilla war,
U.S. involvement, media perceptions, and possible paths to peace.
Whether it has been the U.S.-led war against drug trafficking, the newly
constituted war against terrorism, or, as we have seen over the last two
years, a convenient marriage of the two, the main effect has been to
allow the U.S. to further expand its role in Colombia. The foundations
of Colombia's social, political, and military conflict are rarely
addressed by U.S. policy. Murillo describes Colombia's history of
institutionalized corruption, state neglect, far-reaching poverty, and
political violence and how they precede by decades the introduction and
expansion of the drug trade.
Colombia and the U.S. argues that the conflict in Colombia is not about
drugs, nor guerrillas, nor terrorism, but rather about the unwillingness
of the country's elite to open up spaces for truly democratic
participation in areas of economic and social development and political
representation.