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sabotaged these negotiations (just prior to the 12/2/07 constitutional referendum in Venezuela), by firing Chavez as negotiator, using a lame excuse, just as Chavez made progress on "proof of life." Uribe's government ARRESTED the 3 FARC negotiators while they were in transit to Caracas with the "proof of life" documentation, and then tried to take credit for obtaining the "proof of life" but were immediately contradicted by the hostages' families, and many others, including the Pres. of France, who credited Chavez and asked him to continue.
I suspect that there was even worse sabotage planned--murders, assassinations--and when that plot got foiled, Uribe, Donald Rumsfeld and the Bushites got pissed, tried to salvage some P.R. points by making it look like Chavez's fault, and of course abandoned the hostages, whom they never gave a fuck for anyway(just pawns in their ugly fascist games). Rumsfeld published an op-ed in the WaPo 12/1/07, basically declaring war on Venezuela, dissing Chavez for this negotiation with FARC, and OMITTING the fact that Uribe invited Chavez to negotiate, in the first place. The timing and content of Rumsfeld's tirade tells us what was likely going on with all this.
So, there are likely some serious security issues around release of these hostages. That's probably the reason for the delay. You have the Bush Junta wanting it to go badly--and more than likely feverishly spying and trying to insert covert operatives into the situation. You have the rightwing paramilitaries in Colombia (and in Venezuelan border areas), already stirring up trouble and ready to stir up more in cahoots with the violent rightwing political forces in Venezuela and Bolivia, and the corrupt, fascist Uribe government itself and its military--fat with billions of U.S. tax dollars filtered through Bushite fingers, for whom FARC is a meal ticket to yet more booty from Washington.
A dicey situation, to say the least--and fraught with danger for people of good will. On the other hand, there are a lot of government leaders in South America who are allies of the Chavez government--Argentina, for instance, whose new president, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, pledged Argentina's help in the hostages release in her inaugural speech a few days ago, and others, like Evo Morales in Bolivia, Rafael Correa in Ecuador and Lula da Silva in Brazil, as well the support, help and hope for the hostage release by the government of France and others. Living in the U.S. under the Bush Junta, we forget that there are good leaders elsewhere, and we also don't realize how many Bushite plots have been foiled--in South America, in particular, by these new leftist leaders having each other's backs.
I hope and pray that all goes well--and that this first hostage release will lead to others, and to the end of the 30-year civil war in Colombia, and the end of the U.S. war on the poor in South America.
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