Resources - Policy Statements

NGOs and Academia

Below are key statements from non-novernmental or academic analyses related to the U.S. defense and security assistance to the rest of the world. 

Date Range
***To filter by region, select a region from the View Site by Region menu at the top of the page
Thursday, July 14, 2005
On July 12, many members of Congress received a fax from the Colombian Embassy <br />offering “information about the Justice and Peace Law recently passed by the Colombian <br />Congress.”English
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Publisher / Source: 
Friday, July 1, 2005
Why a weak peace agreement with Colombian paramilitary groups may be worse than no agreement at all.English
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Publisher / Source: 
Tag(s): 
Wednesday, May 18, 2005
If reducing drug use at home and fighting terrorists abroad are vital U.S. interests in the Americas, our current policy in Colombia is failing.English
Country(s): 
Colombia
Tag(s): 
Thursday, April 1, 2004
IN AUGUST 2003 COLOMBIA AGAIN became the center of lavish attention from Washington,DC government officials. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Richard Myers, Undersecretary of State Marc Grossman, and Director of the White HEnglish
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Tuesday, March 23, 2004
Colombian President Alvaro Uribe visits Washington, D.C, seeking assurances of continued American military aid. A U.S. program that gives Colombia's armed forces about $10 million a week to help battle drugs and terrorism is due to expire next year.English
Country(s): 
Colombia
Publisher / Source: 
Tag(s): 
Saturday, March 1, 2003
More than three years of frustrating negotiations had come to nothing. That morning, an elite unit of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia — FARC), the larger of two leftist insurgent groups active in English
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Tuesday, October 1, 2002
Against all evidence, on September 9 the U.S. State Department certified that the Colombian Armed Forces are making progress on three human rights criteria,a condition for receiving more U.S. military aid. Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and thEnglish
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Publisher / Source: 
Tag(s): 
Tuesday, April 2, 2002
With peace talks broken down, Colombia has plunged into all-out war with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), one of the world's largest and most brutal insurgencies. Washington's response is a bipartisan rush to offer &quot;counterterror&quEnglish
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Publisher / Source: 
Monday, April 1, 2002
In its most recently published report, the CCJ found that political violence in Colombia claimed 3,538 lives between April and September 2000—twenty people per day. As recently as early 1998, the CCJ was reporting ten political murders per day. Fed by aEnglish
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Publisher / Source: 
Monday, April 1, 2002
El coordinador del programa de seguridad para America Latina en el Centro para las Politicas Internacionales, con base en Washington, hace una revision de lo que seria una guerra total en Colombia y asegura que sus costos seran mucho mas altos de lo que cSpanish
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Publisher / Source: 
Wednesday, February 6, 2002
&quot;En algun momento los paramilitares van a tener que ser tratados en un proceso y creo que el Gobierno y la sociedad colombianos deberan decidir como abordar este asunto.&quot;Spanish
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Publisher / Source: 
Tag(s): 
Sunday, January 13, 2002
Two years ago, when the United States was debating the $1.3 billion &quot;Plan Colombia&quot; aid package, we often heard a curious argument: &quot;military aid will speed negotiations by forcing the FARC to negotiate in good faith.&quot; English
Country(s): 
Colombia
Publisher / Source: 
Tag(s): 
Sunday, January 13, 2002
Analistas del CIP, que han seguido en detalle el Plan Colombia, dicen que una mediacion salvaria el proceso.Spanish
Country(s): 
Colombia
Publisher / Source: 
Tag(s): 
Monday, May 7, 2001
Deep within the Defense Department’s civilian bureaucracy, the Clinton administration made a quiet shift in 1999 that speaks volumes about the current U.S. relationship with Latin America.English
Author(s): 
Publisher / Source: 
Tag(s): 
Tuesday, May 1, 2001
Today, the U.S. war on terrorism is currently focused on Afghanistan, but other countries may soon feel the full force of the U.S. commitment to stamp out the world terror networks. U.S. officials have hinted that Colombia may fit within the anti-terrorisEnglish
Country(s): 
Colombia
Publisher / Source: 
Tuesday, February 6, 2001
Esta en el pais porque intercambia informacion sobre las relaciones con Estados Unidos, y porque sigue convencido de que el componente militar del Plan Colombia puede tornar critico el proceso de paz. English
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Publisher / Source: 
Tag(s): 
Thursday, February 1, 2001
The Bush administration should rethink the US's misguided and dangerous anti-narcotics policy in the Andes, says Adam IsacsonEnglish
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Publisher / Source: 
Tag(s): 
Friday, October 6, 2000
Presidents who require that all major foreign policy initiatives undergo detached, searching analysis by foreign-policy professionals immediately make this world a saner and more secure place. English
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Publisher / Source: 
Sunday, October 1, 2000
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Publisher / Source: 
Wednesday, February 16, 2000
Robert E. White, president of the Center for International Policy and former U.S. Ambassador to Paraguay and El Salvador, was online Wednesday, Feb. 16 at 1 p.m. discussing the Clinton administration's proposal to send $1.6 billion in aid to Colombia to cEnglish
Country(s): 
Colombia
Author(s): 
Publisher / Source: 
Tag(s): 

Pages