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CounterPunch
February
14, 2003
Did the FARC Bring It Down?
US
Military Plane Crashes in Colombia
By MARIA ENGQVIST
A US spy plane carrying four Americans and a Colombian
crashed Thursday in southern Colombia. Two bodies were spotted
at the site, Colombian officials told reporters, but the three
survivor might have been captured by leftist rebels.
The US plane crashed in an area considered
to be a stronghold of the FARC rebel army after loosing radio
contact with the US military base at Tres Esquinas around 9.00
AM.
US officials scrambled rescue teams to
the sweltering plains of the region after the crash, but an unconfirmed
report from the Colombian military said rebels had captured the
survivors and announced, "We have them! We have them!"
in an intercepted radio transmission.
If the survivors were indeed captured,
it would be the first time that US soldiers are captured alive
by Colombia's leftist guerrillas.
A similar US spy plane crashed in the
mountains of Nariño department in July 1999 while conducting
an intelligence operation against FARC guerrillas. Five US Army
personnel and two Colombians were killed on that occasion.
Since 1997 a total of twelve US citizens--soldiers,
mercenaries and special agents--have been killed while fighting
in Colombia's civil war on behalf of the governments of Bogota
and Washington.
Maria Engqvist
lives in Stockholm. She writes on Colombia for AnnCol.
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