It is my interpretation, yes, but based on what they did say. Not sure if these are the same exact declarations but here are some references.
Uribe's latest views on the subject, in July of this year (2010), had him repeating his apologies but reiterating that the attack was necessary.
http://www.hoy.com.ec/noticias-ecuador/uribe-admite-que-bombardeo-contra-farc-en-ecuador-no-era-lo-ideal-420672.htmlThe bulk of his statements during the Rio Group summit back in 2008 were also along similar lines.
http://web.presidencia.gov.co/sp/2008/marzo/07/03072008.htmlSantos said during a televised debate that the was proud of authorizing the attack along with Uribe, but he also said that it would be irresponsible to comment about the hypothetical scenario of bombing a FARC camp in Venezuela. Since the first part of first statement obviously created an uproar, he came out the next day and then explicitly said that he wouldn't repeat such an attack.
http://www.elespectador.com/noticias/politica/articulo199116-santos-aclaro-chavez-no-volveria-bombardear-un-vecino-atacar-farchttp://www.semana.com/noticias-elecciones-2010/candidatos-repetirian-ataque-farc-territorio-extranjero/137798.aspxhttp://www.telesurtv.net/noticias/secciones/nota/70876-NN/uribe-rechazo-declaraciones-del-presidente-chavez-sobre-juan-manuel-santos/I suppose having a full transcript of all relevant delarations would be preferable, but right now it would be for the best to move on the other points.
I'm not sure about your analogy myself, but at least I can see what you're trying to say.
Still...for one thing, the attack on the FARC camp in Ecuador was authorized by both Santos and Uribe, not just one or the other. Both of them are convinced, to this day, that it was necessary and they were responsible for the decision-making process along with the rest of the military high command (plus whatever role the U.S. played).
What's more...while I certainly didn't agree with that bombing raid myself, I don't share your optimism / idealism about the actual prospects of a negotiated peace as a result of the talks between Raúl Reyes and other international personalities. The basic point of those negotiations was to arrange conditions for the release of hostages, yes, but such efforts aren't necessarily going to be causally linked to a successful peace. It's simply a possible starting point since the relevant complications are, to say the least, far more numerous.
In fact, of all of those...I think Hugo Chávez's mediation back in 2007 was probably more likely to produce such results -in the long run and only after dealing with many other obstacles- than whatever gestures the remaining European contacts, whose main purpose was to release Ingrid Betancourt more than anything else, were arranging at the time of the bombing. In other words, it's a bit hard to speculate about what could or couldn't have happened without that attack but a certain dose of pragmatism is preferable in my opinion, as opposed to making it seem like everything would have been alright if only Raúl Reyes was still among the living today. I'm not a fan of bombing people in their sleep or of violating another nation's sovereignty in order to do so (although, strictly speaking, FARC was also violating Ecuador's borders since I don't believe the establishment of said camp had any diplomatic immunity or official authorization...ironically, perhaps if Correa had really been in cahoots with Reyes a formal permit could have made things easier in the grand scheme of things), but the matter has a fair amount of variables and unknowns.
The laptops...I feel like it should be possible to write an entire book about the scandal, many years down the line when it stops being a matter subject to the whims of current affairs, since I would say it's clear they have been misused, misrepresented and manipulated -making then suspect and with very little judicial value as evidence- but not necessarily "magical" in the dismissive sense. Suffice to say that I consider them half-truths, which are probably more dangerous than absolute lies or fabrications.
As for the horrors of La Macarena and, more broadly, the false positives scandal...I would say that both of them correspond to a culture of structural abuse and impunity that has been part of the Colombian Armed Forces for at least two decades, conceptually speaking, and, in the current context, involve the Uribe administration's policies taken as a whole rather than those of any of his six (!) Defense Ministers, of which Santos was the fourth. It's a bit macabre to go back and read old human rights reports but, suffice to say, I would argue this is required in order to approach the underlying nature of the problem.
The same thing goes for the cumulative total of displaced persons (5 MILLION, yes, if you add up all displacement since 1985 and leave it at that without really keeping up with what does or doesn't happen to old IDPs decades later), of which about half occurred during the Uribe administration but, just as well, it is a far more complex problem than what it sounds like on the surface and yet no less disgraceful.
I'm not going to claim that Santos is some kind of saint compared to Uribe, since he is undoubtedly someone who is proportionally responsible for much of what happened during his three year term as Defense Minister, but I trust you're aware of the fact that their personal backgrounds and those of their families are extremely different. Long before Uribe came to power, people knew that the guy's record was ugly as sin. It even disgusts me to go over the full details, so I'll spare us the effort and just call him a vindictive rural landowner closely linked to narco-trafficking and paramilitarism. That still doesn't make him inhuman, of course, but since the worst excesses of Colombia's violence have taken place in Medellín and the countryside I think the point is self-evident.
In the case of Santos, the worst thing you could have said about the guy a decade ago is that he was an urban oligarch from a historically wealthy family and that he conspired against Ernesto Samper by exploiting the government's crisis as a platform for a potential peace agreement and, naturally, his own political ambitions. It's almost like night and day, in a certain sense, so speculating about their respective trails and how they covered them might be stretching things a bit since their environments and interests aren't interchangeable, let alone their attitudes and upbringing if that matters. In this case, my position is essentially one of waiting and seeing rather than hyping or bashing Santos right now.
I suppose this conversation could go on forever, for any number of reasons, but it's time to wrap things up on my end. I don't consider the scenario you've described as impossible, not at all, but I ultimately think it's unlikely or at least open to debate. What is more likely then? I'm not entirely sure, to be perfectly frank, given the complexity of the situation and the existence of unknown and random factors alike (including human decisions and willpower since, if you forgive the cartoony imagery, not even the Pentagon is made up of unfeeling robots) that may or may not benefit the plans or intentions of those who would, in fact, engage in the kind of operations you're worried about. There is, after all, more than one way of accomplishing the same goals and war isn't always the only possible outcome.