Colombia's big comeback
How the country went from being the cocaine capital of the world to a Latin American success story.
Farmer Seraf铆n Guzm谩n shows cacao pods he is harvesting in Loro Uno, Colombia. He replaced his illegal coca plantation with different legal crops with the help of a crop-substitution program run by the Colombian government.
Alfredo Sosa/海角大神
Valle del Guamuez, Colombia
Cradling in his hands cacao pods as red as scarlet macaws, Seraf铆n Guzm谩n bends down to work the Colombian earth that has defined his life since he was a boy 鈥 producing both searing tragedy and now, he hopes, a bright future. Farmers like him stand at the heart of a story that has transformed Colombia from the world鈥檚 cocaine capital to one of Latin America鈥檚 great success stories.
A decade ago, Mr. Guzm谩n grew coca, the basic ingredient of cocaine, on his 200-acre spread. These days the farmer in Putumayo, a jungle region of southern Colombia bordering Ecuador, shows off flourishing rows of corn, avocados, bananas, and peppercorn plants. But it鈥檚 the squat trees laden with cacao, the basic ingredient in chocolate, that offer the most hope he has for a secure future 鈥 and that the country鈥檚 five decades of guerrilla war is over.
鈥淭here is security now. I can grow my crops and try to improve with something new like cacao in tranquility,鈥 says the young farmer in knee-high rubber boots and a beaked cap.聽
Orphaned as a boy after both his parents were murdered in what Colombians simply call 鈥渢he conflict,鈥 Guzm谩n later became one of Colombia鈥檚 millions of internally displaced people. When he decided a few years ago it was safe enough to return to his farm, Guzm谩n was ready to move beyond coca plants. He found there were now government programs to help him do that. He planted 6,000 cacao trees. 鈥淚 grew up in the coca culture; it was easy and brought a lot of money into this poor area, but it brought with it too much pain,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hings really have changed for the better.鈥
Guzm谩n鈥檚 shift in fortunes is emblematic of Colombia鈥檚 dramatic turnaround. Fifteen years ago, the country was considered by many a failed state. It was awash in the world鈥檚 worst violence, mired in the continent鈥檚 oldest guerrilla war that had cost nearly a quarter-million Colombian lives, with weak institutions that reached only parts of the country and were prone to the control and corruption of drug cartels or right-wing paramilitary groups. When it became clear that the presidential election of 1994 was riddled with drug money, Colombia was written off by much of the world as a dysfunctional narco-state.
But now as the country moves tantalizingly close to putting an end to its long war 鈥 the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, agreed last fall to reach a final peace accord by March 23 鈥 Colombia is a very different place. Killings, kidnappings, and disappearances are all down sharply: Murders, which totaled 26,250 in 2001, fell by more than half to 12,750 in 2014. Bombings, field battles, and massacres are no longer daily front-page fare. With security reestablished in many places, notably cities such as the capital, Bogot谩, and the Millennial-cool Medell铆n, private investment is flooding in and the middle class has expanded.聽
Perhaps most important, the central government is no longer absent from whole sections of the country, and no longer leaving a vacuum to be filled by crime gangs and other malfeasant actors.聽
While this progress is largely a result of Colombians鈥 own efforts, it was accomplished with the assistance of a partnership with the United States. And it is this collaboration, dubbed Plan Colombia at its inception in 2000 under then-President Bill Clinton, that now stands out as a success of US foreign policy, a rare case of American nation-building that worked. Other such efforts launched in subsequent years, such as those in Afghanistan and Iraq, are widely considered failures and have turned off much of official Washington to the efficacy of big state-building programs.
Given the gridlocked Washington of today, where foreign-policy initiatives are just as politically contested as domestic issues, it鈥檚 worth noting that Plan Colombia has evolved over 15 years with unwavering support from both Democratic and Republican administrations.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been a success because it鈥檚 been bipartisan,鈥 says Daniel Restrepo, who served for six years as President Obama鈥檚 principal adviser on Latin America before joining the Center for American Progress, a think tank in Washington.
But to say that Plan Colombia worked is not to suggest that it accomplished everything it set out to do. It was initially conceived largely as an anti-narcotics collaboration, and that part of the plan was hardly a rousing success. Colombia鈥檚 drug trade was splintered but far from destroyed, while the drug cartels鈥 logistical control of the trade simply shifted to Mexico. And coca production, which was reduced for a time largely through a controversial US-supported aerial eradication program, has surged back in some regions in recent years.
Human rights advocates fault the plan for focusing on security and concentrating spending on military hardware: Plan Colombia has left the Colombian armed forces with the second-largest fleet of Black Hawk helicopters in the world after the US.聽
Still, the initiative has transformed millions of lives and helped bring state institutions 鈥 a professionalized National Police force, judicial services, and social programs such as rural development 鈥 to large swaths of formerly lawless territory. It is helping people like Guzm谩n support the world鈥檚 taste for chocolate instead of its desire for cocaine.
On a wall across the plaza from Casa de Nari帽o, Colombia鈥檚 presidential palace in Bogot谩, graffiti scrawled in black spray paint declares, 鈥淪in pan para el pobre, no hay paz para el rico鈥 鈥 鈥淲ithout bread for the poor, there is no peace for the rich.鈥 The phrase might sound like a slogan from the 鈥淲e Are the 99 Percent鈥 movement in the US.聽
But in Colombia the graffiti is an apt reflection of the country鈥檚 long war, a conflict launched in the mid-1960s with an ideology of delivering political power, justice, and economic equity to rural farmers (campesinos) through the use of force. That ideology was tainted as leftist guerrillas like the members of FARC increasingly turned to Colombia鈥檚 booming drug trade in the 1990s to finance their survival. And in recent years as the conflict has receded to the country鈥檚 vast rural areas, many Colombians have been tempted to believe that the conflict hardly mattered anymore. Declining rates of violence and sustained economic growth have left the unresolved war less and less relevant.
But other Colombians, among them some of the country鈥檚 leaders, knew that, to paraphrase the graffiti, there would be no peace, no fulfillment of the country鈥檚 potential, if poor rural regions were left behind as modern, urban Colombia moved forward. To these leaders, the path to peace starts at least with extending the security and institutions of the state to every region of the country.聽
To the extent that Plan Colombia has done that, it has played a crucial role in jump-starting Colombia鈥檚 progress.
Inside Casa de Nari帽o, Sergio Jaramillo, Colombia鈥檚 high commissioner for peace and one of the chief government negotiators at ongoing peace negotiations with the FARC in Havana, is running late. There鈥檚 a roundtable with other officials on 鈥渢he future of a country in peace.鈥 Then there鈥檚 the matter of a recent controversial rally featuring FARC leaders where weapons were provocatively displayed 鈥 a violation of the ground rules for the peace talks.聽
But the commissioner, who speaks in the lofty phrases of the Oxford-educated philologist that he is, takes a moment to sit down at his desk, which is strewn with papers and contains a bowl of candies that are white like Picasso鈥檚 doves of peace. What his years of experience have demonstrated to him, he says, is that state-building, or what he calls 鈥渢he extension of the state鈥檚 institutional presence,鈥 is key to creating peace and prosperity. Furthermore, he praises Plan Colombia for helping, despite its faults, in the effort to revive Colombia.
鈥淚 am not one of those who believes that Colombia in 2000 was a failed state. It wasn鈥檛 going to completely crumble,鈥 Mr. Jaramillo says. 鈥淏ut there were large swaths of the country that looked like a failed state, where it certainly was an absent state. And so for me the most important question in all this is how to strengthen institutions on the ground, so they can provide order and help to manage the normal complexities of life.鈥
Calling Plan Colombia 鈥渁 model of cooperation that is probably the most mature program of development assistance the US has ever put forward,鈥 Jaramillo says the strength of the program was in assisting and advising the Colombians 鈥 in essence providing the seed money for a national rebuilding project 鈥 but not doing it for them.
Plan Colombia was 鈥渂uilt on the basis of the home country taking on most of the responsibility,鈥 the former vice minister of defense says. 鈥淭he US was wise in not trying to fight the other man鈥檚 war.鈥 He considers the US-Colombia partnership a model of nation-building. The two countries 鈥渨ere talking about an assistance strategy with a state-building element long before people were talking about nation-building in Afghanistan and Iraq,鈥 he says.
Other experts in Bogot谩 say that if Plan Colombia succeeded, it did so almost despite itself.聽
鈥淧lan Colombia was a total failure in its primary objective, which was the drug interdiction aspect,鈥 says Sergio Uribe, a specialist in law enforcement at Universidad del Rosario in Bogot谩 and a longtime consultant on governance and organized crime in both Washington and Colombia. 鈥淚f anything, drug production under Plan Colombia has grown, and particularly in recent years,鈥 he says. But he quickly adds that its secondary objective, which was primarily to professionalize the military and the police and to create a viable and truly national judicial system, 鈥渉ad an unprogrammed effect. By forcing the government to spend money on the plan鈥檚 priorities as a requirement for keeping the assistance coming,鈥 Mr. Uribe says, 鈥渋t helped the country pull itself up by the bootstraps and build a functional state 鈥 something that until Plan Colombia we did not have.鈥澛
One example: Before Plan Colombia, a fifth-grade education was sufficient to join the National Police. But now the minimal education for a police recruit is a high school diploma. Under former President 脕lvaro Uribe, the country also committed to putting at least 30 police officers in each of its 1,105 municipalities 鈥 a huge extension of the state鈥檚 presence over what it was in the 1990s.
On the floor of the Ocati fruit-packing plant an hour鈥檚 drive north of Bogot谩, women in smocks and hairnets sort through large bins of 鈥渦chuvas鈥 or 鈥済olden berries,鈥 tart, marble-sized fruit winning the hearts of chefs around the world.聽
The plant hums with activity as the workers cull and pack sweet-scented fruits into stacks of colorful boxes. As part of their work, they strip the uchuvas of their distinctive paperlike shells. Some of the berries will be sold domestically, but a growing share is destined for foreign markets: The greenest berries are culled for finicky Germans, and the firmest are set aside to undergo a 10-day anti-fruit-fly quarantine to win the right to enter the US.
As a tropical fruit wholesaler, Ocati is a beneficiary of the global boom in people鈥檚 quest for natural products and new tastes. The company, founded in 1988, has started selling dragon fruit to Hong Kong and guanabana to Dubai, United Arab Emirates. And these days buyers can source the cornucopia of fruits the company offers from all of Colombia鈥檚 regions and climate zones 鈥 something that was impossible just a few years ago.聽
鈥淚n recent years we鈥檝e been able to grow and expand our offering of fruit varieties because we鈥檝e been able to get to regions of the country that before were off limits,鈥 says Wilson Am茅zquita, a plant operations chief at Ocati鈥檚 packinghouse in Chia, a town in the valley north of Bogot谩.聽
To Mr. Am茅zquita鈥檚 way of thinking, the 15-year partnership between Colombia and the US is paying off. With less violence has come more jobs, growing salaries, and a return of foreign investment 鈥 which rose from $2 billion in 2000 to $16 billion last year. 鈥淲ith Plan Colombia there is more security for more of the country, and that has changed life for many Colombians, but it has also broken the uncertainty of foreign investors,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he more foreign investment there is, the more competitive and quality-oriented Colombian companies have to be 鈥 and that process of improvement has allowed companies like ours to export and take a little piece of the global cake that is the world economy.鈥 聽
Colombia鈥檚 improved security climate is felt even more acutely by the women sorting and packing fruit on the ground floor. Mostly single heads of household, the women chat easily about what a safer and less violent community has meant for them. 鈥淏efore you couldn鈥檛 leave here at 4 or 5 in the afternoon without fear of being robbed on the way home, and most of us are mothers and we all had so many worries about the dangers our children faced every day,鈥 says Dorelvi Guerrero, a mother of three and Ocati employee for 23 years who is a floor supervisor. 鈥淏ut now security is better. That is reassuring for us. But I believe it also allows companies in the area to add more jobs, which helps everybody.鈥
Ms. Guerrero, who will soon complete her high school education and begin building a new house through company programs, sees another benefit of working for a firm sending Colombian fruit to foreign markets. 鈥淲hen you think that a lot of this is going to Europe,鈥 she says, looking over the bins of small yellow globes, 鈥渋t makes you feel part of the world.鈥 聽
Not far from Guzman鈥檚 farm in southern Putumayo, the small town of El Placer sags sadly under the weight of years of violence and the indelible memory of a horrendous massacre. Many houses and small businesses on the main street are abandoned and overgrown, as a peak population of several thousand in the years of the coca boom has dwindled to less than 800. 聽
Tall weeds and jungle vines creep inexorably to claim the walls that witnessed the town鈥檚 darkest moment 17 years ago. These days about the only sounds one hears are the shouts of police officers playing a pickup soccer match with some of El Placer鈥檚 few adolescent boys.
Two decades ago Putumayo was the No. 1 region for coca production in Colombia. The lucrative, illicit crop brought unimagined earnings to small-farm operators such as Guzm谩n and attracted campesinos from neighboring poor regions looking to cash in on the bonanza. They settled in places like El Placer. But violence flared as the FARC and paramilitary groups battled for control of the coca market: Thousands were murdered or disappeared, sexual violence against women became commonplace, and nearly 150,000 people were displaced from Putumayo in the decade after 2000.
At the abandoned elementary school a half block from a relatively new arrival to El Placer鈥檚 main street 鈥 a police station 鈥 the small Museum of the War records the town鈥檚 tragic history and chronicles the events of Nov. 7, 1999. On that day several dozen paramilitary fighters arrived in the town they believed was sympathetic to the FARC. The Army failed to arrive in time to stop the shooting 鈥 out of complicity, most locals insist, with the local paramilitary force. The violence left 11 villagers dead. But during the years of the coca wars about 1,500 civilians were killed in and around El Placer.聽
At the one-room museum, a glossy timeline of Putumayo鈥檚 war years published by international human rights groups hangs on the outside wall. The year 2000, the launch date of Plan Colombia, is marked by an American flag overlaid with a skull and crossbones. Unlike the widely positive image of the US-Colombia collaboration in Bogot谩, places like El Placer hold a darker view of it. They see the joint initiative as one of death and destruction 鈥 both because of the large-scale aerial eradication program the US introduced, and because of close US cooperation with an Army that was linked with the feared paramilitaries.
鈥淧lan Colombia was a negative for this area because the emphasis was on eradication, and while that may have reduced the coca it also damaged people鈥檚 health and left large tracts of land empty and unproductive,鈥 says Luis Fernando Palacios, the young Green Party mayor of the Valle del Guamuez municipality that includes El Placer. 鈥淣obody wants the return of coca, but we think there are better ways to ensure that doesn鈥檛 happen again.鈥
Others fault Plan Colombia for being too heavy on military spending, particularly at the outset, and for serving US purposes 鈥 a desire to reduce cocaine production 鈥 in ways that were counterproductive for Colombia. 鈥淭here were a lot of different agendas on the US policy side, and they ended up working at cross purposes,鈥 says Virginia Bouvier, a Colombia expert at the United States Institute of Peace in Washington. 鈥淭he emphasis was on fumigation [eradication of coca], but that led to a lot of displacement of people that went counter to the socioeconomic goals of the plan.鈥
Another stain on the joint effort was recurring examples of the US collaboration inciting human rights abuses instead of reducing them. 鈥淭here was some evidence that the brigades receiving the most US money were the ones that ended up being hit with accusations of the worst [human rights] violations,鈥 says Dr. Bouvier.聽
But her core criticism is that Plan Colombia needed to put more weight on features such as rural economic development. And she is hopeful that, with peace on Colombia鈥檚 horizon, that shift could soon take place. 鈥淚 think Peace Colombia could be a much more successful policy,鈥 she says.
In Putumayo, Mayor Palacios echoes those words. He speaks excitedly of a new program, Integral Presence of the State in Municipalities, which aims to boost the presence of institutions in places such as Valle del Guamuez.聽
鈥淭his is a pilot project for the post-conflict鈥 era, 鈥渂ut this is something that has to begin this year and demonstrate results to people,鈥 he says. 鈥淥therwise the farmers will return to coca, and nobody wants that.鈥
A few miles of bumpy dirt road from where Palacios speaks, Blanca Lilia Yb谩帽ez fusses over the peppercorn plants that wind up gangling trees. Ms. Yb谩帽ez and her husband, Jes煤s Alebio Portillo, show off the nascent bunches of tiny green peppercorns they hope will grow in plentiful numbers and help them overcome a painful past.
鈥淲e grew coca here before, but it didn鈥檛 make us rich like people think,鈥 Yb谩帽ez says. 鈥淥n the contrary.鈥 She starts to tell her family鈥檚 story but, overcome, stops to wipe her eyes and regain composure. 鈥淭he violence kept getting worse, but we felt we had nowhere to turn,鈥 she says. A cousin was killed, then her pregnant daughter鈥檚 husband. Then in 2000, Ramiro, the couple鈥檚 15-year-old 鈥渁dopted son鈥 and laborer on their six-acre farm, was abducted by the paramilitaries and murdered. The parents fled, becoming one more family in the legions of Colombia鈥檚 displaced.
But in December 2014 Blanca and Jes煤s got word that Putumayo had changed. The government was assuring people they could return and live in safety. There were new programs run by state agencies, with technical assistance from the US, to help families regain legal ownership of lost farms and learn how to substitute new crops for coca. The couple came home 鈥 though without their five children, who remain too frightened to return just yet.
鈥淲e got our land back. We got money to plant a new crop and for fertilizer to help the plants grow, and we get technical advice on growing something that is new for us,鈥 Mr. Portillo says holding a peppercorn bunch in one hand. 鈥淎nd I can say, we live in peace.鈥