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As the Bush administration has continued "Plan Colombia" (the US military aid to Colombia under the masquerade of fighting the drug war) they have often touted the progress in getting rid of the paramiltary right-wing death squads there (who are still around) to defend the plan against those in Congress who want to see the military aid come to an end.
This is what that progress looks like:
Funded in part by the Bush administration, a six-year military offensive has helped the government here wrest back territory once controlled by guerrillas and kill hundreds of rebels in recent months, including two top commanders of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC.
But under intense pressure from Colombian military commanders to register combat kills, the army has in recent years also increasingly been killing poor farmers and passing them off as rebels slain in combat, government officials and human rights groups say. The tactic has touched off a fierce debate in the Defense Ministry between tradition-bound generals who favor an aggressive campaign that centers on body counts and reformers who say the army needs to develop other yardsticks to measure battlefield success.
The killings, carried out by combat units under the orders of regional commanders, have always been a problem in the shadowy, 44-year-old conflict here -- one that pits the army against a peasant-based rebel movement.
But with the recent demobilization of thousands of paramilitary fighters, many of whom operated death squads to wipe out rebels, army killings of civilians have grown markedly since 2004, according to rights groups, U.N. investigators and the government's internal affairs agency. The spike has come during a military buildup that has seen the armed forces nearly double to 270,000 members in the last six years to become the second-largest military in Latin America.
So now the atrocities are directly attributed to the Colombian government, instead a not-so-subtle blood laundering system in which the military mearly made sure that the paramilitaries could carry out their grim operations.