This sort of thing cannot be allowed to happen. You are right, but some fights are worth the risk.Kmarion wrote:
We are already bleeding.ATG wrote:
Maybe this is exactly what the world needs.Kmarion wrote:
I seriously hope so. The world doesn't need this right now.
FARC are terrorist. Marxist. Extreme radical leftist with guns.
Chavez is actually backing these guys. This is intolerable. It doesn't matter who is elected as the next U.S. president. If Hugo backs FARC in this kind of way there will be war. Bad, big bloody war. China and Russia and Iran have been setting this up as they badly want America to be bled dry somewhere, like the Soviets were in Afghanistan.
I have been following the exploits of FARC for about ten years. The are ultimately anarchists.
FARC cannot be allowed to become a leader of nations. Cocaine would be their currency and we would be facing coked-out 13 year old soldiers.
Activities; Bombings, murder, mortar attacks, narcotrafficking, kidnapping, extortion, hijacking, as well as guerrilla and conventional military action against Colombian political, military, and economic targets. In March 1999, the FARC executed three US Indian rights activists on Venezuelan territory after it kidnapped them in Colombia. In February 2003, the FARC captured and continues to hold three US contractors and killed one other American and a Colombian when their plane crashed in Florencia. Foreign citizens often are targets of FARC kidnapping for ransom. The FARC has well-documented ties to the full range of narcotics trafficking activities, including taxation, cultivation, and distribution.
The FARC, perhaps the last leftist guerrilla army in a hemisphere where they were once iconic, used to have international legitimacy and sympathy in its fight against Colombia's epic inequality; but that was before it became widely branded as a "narco-guerrilla" group. Perhaps panicked by its dark fortunes of late, the FARC has been trying in recent months to reverse its mafioso image by releasing some of its higher-profile hostages — but not the three U.S. defense contractors it abducted in 2003 after their plane crashed in southern Colombia. Those men — Keith Stansell, Thomas Howes and Marc Gonsalves — completed five years in FARC captivity last month.
Last edited by ATG (2008-03-02 15:24:25)