Feral Jundi

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

News: American Contractors Rescued in Colombia!

Filed under: Colombia,News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:51 PM

    This is outstanding news and certainly an excellent outcome to a frustrating story.  There will be a ton of happy families about this one.  This is also an indicator that the FARC is losing, and the government of Colombia and it’s military are finally seeing the fruits of their labor in their war there.  Bravo.  It will be interesting to see all the details of this, in the coming articles and books.  –Head Jundi 

 American Contractors, Colombia

Colombia Rescues Hostages Held by Guerrilla Group for Years

By William Branigin

Washington Post Staff Writer

Wednesday, July 2, 2008; 6:13 PM

The Colombian military said today it has rescued 15 hostages from a leftist guerrilla group, including three American defense contractors and former Colombia presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt.

Colombian Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos told a news conference in Bogota that all the rescued hostages are in reasonably good health after being held for years in jungle camps by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known as FARC. Eleven of those rescued are members of the Colombian army and police.

The three Americans — Keith Stansell, Marc Gonsalves and Thomas Howes — were conducting an aerial surveillance mission as part of an antidrug program when their plane crashed in FARC-held jungle territory in February 2003. Last year, videos captured by the Colombian military from suspected rebels showed the three haggard men standing in a clearing in what appeared to be a clandestine jungle camp.

Betancourt, a writer with dual French and Colombian citizenship, was seized by the FARC in 2002 while campaigning for the presidency in rebel territory. Captured with her was her aide, Clara Rojas, who was released along with another woman in January in a deal brokered by neighboring Venezuela.

Betancourt was last seen in a rebel video in late 2007 looking gaunt and dispirited. The release of Rojas raised hopes that Betancourt also would soon be freed, but those hopes were dashed amid increasing recriminations between the Colombian government of President Alvaro Uribe and Venezuela’s leftist president, Hugo Chavez. According to the Colombian government, captured computer records showed that Chavez had secretly aided the FARC.

Santos said no one was injured in today’s rescue operation in the jungle province of Guaviare in southern Colombia.

“Fifteen hostages were rescured without firing a single shot,” he said in a statement.

Santos said the rescue, dubbed Operation Jaque and carried out by Colombian military intelligence, began with the infiltration of a FARC squad commanded by guerrilla known as Cesar. The squad has controlled a group of hostages in recent years, he said. Jaque is a Spanish chess term meaning “check.”

In a ruse in which Cesar was told the hostages were to be flown to a meeting with the FARC commander known as Alfonso Cano, the hostages were brought together and put on board a helicopter supposedly operated by a humanitarian organization, Santos said. In fact, the organization was fictitious, and the helicopter belonged to the Colombian army, he said.

While the hostages were flown to freedom, Cesar and another member of his squad who were to accompany them to the meeting were “neutralized in the helicopter” and will be brought to justice, the defense minister said.

As for about 15 other members of Cesar’s squad, as well as other FARC guerrillas a few kilometers away, “we decided not to attack them” in hopes that the rebel group will reciprocate by releasing the rest of its hostages, Santos said.

“This was an unprecedented operation that will go down in history for its audaciousness and effectiveness,” Santos told reporters.

The U.S. State Department said the United States played no role in the rescue.

“This was a Colombia planned, led and executed operation,” said Air Force Lt. Col. Patrick Ryder, a Pentagon spokesman.

U.S. Defense officials said Colombia provided advance warning of the operation so that the U.S. government would be prepared to provide medical support and air transportation for the hostages in the event of their successful rescue.

The freed Americans were scheduled to return to the United States on an Air Force C-17 Globemaster cargo jet. Officials said they were expected to arrive tonight at Brooke Army Medical Center, at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Tex. There, the three Americans will go through a repatriation and reintegration process of unspecified length, largely to ensure their good health and a safe reunion with their families, officials said.

According to Gordon Johndroe, a spokesman for the National Security Council, President Bush spoke with Uribe this afternoon and congratulated him on the release of the hostages, telling him he is a “strong leader.” Johndroe said Uribe thanked Bush for his support and confidence in the Colombian government.

Lynne Stansell, the mother of freed hostage Keith Stansell, said this afternoon from her home in southwestern Florida that the family is overwhelmed as it tries to make sense of the news and confirm details of her son’s release.

“Some people are coming to help us handle this,” she said. “We can’t really react right now. It’s just all too emotional.”

In Connecticut, George Gonsalves was mowing his lawn this afternoon when a neighbor rushed over to tell him about reports that his son Marc had been rescued after six years in captivity in the Colombian jungle.

“She was just as excited as me,” George Gonsalves said. “We went dashing back to the house, and there it was on CNN.” He said he did not know when he would be reunited with his son. For now, he is just beaming at the prospect.

“It’s just wonderful,” he said. “Just wonderful.” He said the family has been numbed by Marc’s kidnapping and was particularly worried recently as a new FARC commander seemed to break off communications about the hostages’ possible release.

“There’s not really been a good time since . . .” he said, his voice trailing off. “Well, it’s not been good. But this — this is really exciting news.”

In an apparent coincidence, the rescue operation came shortly after Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), the presumptive GOP candidate for president in the November elections, concluded a visit to Colombia. He met with Uribe last night and later said he received assurances that every effort was being made to secure the release of the American hostages.

The FARC, which has waged a guerrilla war against the Colombia government for four decades, has been losing strength in recent months, with fighters deserting in droves. It has lost three of its top seven commanders since March, and Colombian forces have captured a number of sensitive documents and computer records.

The group began its campaign in the 1960s as a Marxist rebellion, but it later became heavily involved in cocaine production, drug trafficking and kidnapping. The United States, the European Union and Colombia have labeled the group a terrorist organization.

The 15 freed hostages were among about 40 high-profile captives held by FARC in hopes of exchanging them for jailed rebels. In all, the group was estimated to be holding more than 700 hostages.

Staff writers Josh White, Glenn Kessler and Carol D. Leonnig in Washington contributed to this report.

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