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Amy Goodman
NationofChange / Op-Ed
Published: Thursday 19 April 2012
President Barack Obama spent three days in Colombia, longer than any other president, but his trip was marred by a prostitution scandal involving the U.S. military and Secret Service.

Obama’s Policies: The Real Scandal in Cartagena

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President Barack Obama’s re-election campaign launched its first Spanish-language ads this week, just after returning from the Summit of the Americas. He spent three days in Colombia, longer than any president in U.S. history. The trip was marred, however, by a prostitution scandal involving the U.S. military and Secret Service. Gen. Martin Dempsey, chair of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said, “We let the boss down, because nobody’s talking about what went on in Colombia other than this incident.” Dempsey is right. It also served as a metaphor for the U.S government’s ongoing treatment of Latin America.

The scandal reportedly involves 11 members of the U.S. Secret Service and five members of the U.S. Army Special Forces, who allegedly met prostitutes at one or more bars in Cartagena and took up to 20 of the women back to their hotel, some of whom may have been minors. This all deserves thorough investigation, but so do the policy positions that Obama promoted while in Cartagena.

First, the war on drugs. Obama stated at the summit, “I, personally, and my administration’s position is that legalization is not the answer.” Ethan Nadelmann, founder and executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, told me that, despite Obama’s predictable line, this summit showed “the transformation of the regional and global dialogue around drug policy. ... This is the first you’ve had a president saying that we’re willing to look at the possibility that U.S. drug policies are doing more harm than good in some parts of the world.” He credits the growing consensus across the political spectrum in Latin America, from key former presidents like Vicente Fox of Mexico, who supports legalization of drugs, to current leaders like Mexico’s Felipe Calderon, who cited the rapacious demand for drugs in the U.S. as the core of the problem.

Nadelmann went on: “You have the funny situation of Evo Morales, the leftist leader of Bolivia, former head of the coca growers’ union, lecturing the United States about—essentially, sounding like Milton Friedman—that ‘How can you expect us to reduce the supply when there is a demand?’ So there’s the beginning of a change here. I don’t think it’s going to be possible to put this genie back in the bottle.”

Then there is trade. Obama and Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos also announced that the U.S.-Colombian Free Trade Agreement would take full force May 15. Colombian and U.S. labor leaders decried the move, since Colombia is the worst country on Earth for trade unionists. Labor organizers are regularly murdered in Colombia, with at least 34 killed in the past year and a half. When Obama was first running for president, he promised to oppose the Colombia FTA, “because the violence against unions in Colombia would make a mockery of the very labor protections that we have insisted be included in these kinds of agreements.” That year, 54 Colombian trade unionists were killed. AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka said the announcement “is deeply disappointing and troubling.” Republicans, on the other hand, are offering grudging praise to Obama for pushing the FTA.

On Cuba, Obama took the globally unpopular position of defending the U.S. embargo. Even at home, polls show that a strong majority of the American people and businesses support an end to the embargo. The U.S. also succeeded, once again, in banning Cuba from the summit, prompting Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa to boycott the meeting this year.

Responding to overall U.S. intransigence, other Western Hemisphere countries are organizing themselves. Greg Grandin, professor of Latin American history at New York University, told me: “Latin Americans themselves are creating these bodies that are excluding the United States, that are deepening integration, political and economic integration. This seems to be a venue in which they come together in order to criticize Washington, quite effectively.”

Grandin compared Obama’s Latin America policies to those of his predecessors: “The two main pillars of U.S. foreign policy—increasing neoliberalism and increasing militarism around drugs—continue. They feed off of each other and have created a crisis in that corridor, running from Colombia through Central America to Mexico. That’s been a complete disaster, and there’s no change.”

It will take more than a prostitution scandal to cover that up.

© 2011 Amy Goodman
Distributed by King Features Syndicate



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ABOUT Amy Goodman

Amy Goodman is the host of "Democracy Now!," a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 900 stations in North America. She is the author of "Breaking the Sound Barrier," recently released in paperback and now a New York Times best-seller.

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15 comments on "Obama’s Policies: The Real Scandal in Cartagena"

drjonz

April 21, 2012 12:54pm

Amy,Sure hope you and Nadelmann are right about the opening. Can't figure why Americans are so afraid of legalizing drugs: less drug wars here and abroad, shift of close to billion dollars from the illegal economy into the legal one where it gets taxed, and jobs for thousands of doctors who would be the gatekeepers. If prostitution can get wiped out in Nevada by legalizing and monitoring by government and doctors where's the worry coming from

Arachne646

April 23, 2012 5:16pm

Even the opponents of legalization have to address the question--at the beginning of his term, Obama only had to laugh.The only really big remaining cheerleader of the "War on Drugs" is the one who started it--the USA. The consensus of the rest of the world is that prohibition has not worked--especially since the biggest cheerleader, overseas bully, and warden worldwide is also the biggest consumer, and rising. There are certainly other countries that have death penalties for drug trafficking, and the former Soviet Union countries are accelerating their HIV/AIDS epidemic by prison-type "drug counselling" for addicts, but overall the US is #1 in the world (both per capita and in absolute terms) when it comes to imprisoning its citizens.

RobertMStahl

April 19, 2012 4:02pm

Does anyone remember Indira Singh and why the drug cartels have 'disappeared' her? She was about the brightest star going, showing just how to prosecute with nothing but court documents, the drug cartels. Now, she is gone. And what about Gary Null's program from many years back, Deconstructing the Myth of AIDS? Wouldn't you want your doctor to know what he was a vector for?

carolknapp

April 19, 2012 1:48pm

When will partisans realize that both parties are controlled by the 10 Central Banksters and their puppets on the Federal Reserve Board? Why else would his administration be riddled with Goldman-Sachs whores?

Obama's administration is not Communist (though that's his ideology), it is global Fascism, i.e. "public-private partnerships". The "Z" in NAZI stood for "socialism"....national socialism.

Ron Paul is the only candidate that tells the truth, has identified the REAL villains, and is not bought and paid for. All you leftists (and most on the right, too) refuse to learn the lessons of history. Giving the government too much power is BAD. Period. It doesn't matter if it's just government (like the Soviet Union) or government controlled by BIG corporations and the elite.

George Washington said "beware the enemy within" and warned us not to "get involved with dangerous foreign entanglements". NAFTA and the other faux "free trade" agreements are anything BUT "free trade".

It all gives me a headache!
Carol Knapp

Arachne646

April 23, 2012 5:02pm

Ron Paul was and still is quite happy to see racist theocracy cover the US as long as it is State by State. He has no problem with autocratic government, or banning harmless herbs or beliefs, just so long as it is done constitutionally, in accordance with States' Rights.

Just because the Nazi's had socialism in their name does not mean they were in the least socialist. Facism is extremely militaristic. Modern socialism is, in general, as suspicious of the military as it is of any other structure of traditional society as religion, business and trade, or government. Democratic socialist parties are found in most democratic countries today, and most American allies have had them in power, if not nationally, then in district or town elections.

BozoAdult

April 20, 2012 2:05am

Obama's a communist? You're an idiot. He is exactly the opposite of a communist, dumb ass. He is an employee of the largest banks -hardly a communist.

This is why you Ron Paul supporters get no traction -you're uninformed and you show it.

JayDee

April 19, 2012 12:33pm

"Republicans, on the other hand, are offering grudging praise to Obama for pushing the FTA."

Well, duh. Republicans choosing profit over humanity or morality? Like the sun rising in the morning ...

darkeyes17

April 19, 2012 12:00pm

It is not democrat vs republican vs. libertarian vs any other party. It doesn't matter who the candidates are. Doesn't matter who we elect. They all become, sooner or later, mere puppets to the powers that really run the world. As long as these huge corporations, old money families run things, nothing will change.

jorgecaneda

April 19, 2012 11:29am

http://www.forcolombia.org/bases

anono

April 19, 2012 10:54am

Obama is just a chocolate covered G W Bush doing what he's told. THere may be a slight IQ difference between the two, but other than that they're just one in the same, puppets.

Norman Allen

April 19, 2012 10:22am

Columbia is the poster child of what happens when our taxpayers money is spent on propping the .0005%types over there (as we did with PINOSHIT in Argentina after Allende). It has become one of the most repressive systems in the Americas, more like Batista rule than a legitimate government. But then one may ask: where are legitimate governments that rule to benefit the majority of their people? Corporations rule, governments do their dirty work and the taxpayers pay for it with their blood and money.

jorgecaneda

April 19, 2012 11:23am

Colombia is now the US stronghold in Latin America. The US was kicked out of Ecuador by Correa, who by the way is a genius.
The so cold red gorilla is also a genius, though an "untouchable".
https://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/08/07-6
The President is the commander in chief, his Imperial Highness.

All of you out there, there a no democrats or republicans. We are no longer a republic, we are an Empire. The political system is just for show. Long live OWS,

jorgecaneda

April 19, 2012 11:15am

Chile, not Argentina.

Curtis Smay

April 19, 2012 10:22am

Obama is no , good democrat . If he was he would not have been in Columbia at all. No democrat has any business in Columbia. I believe Obama is a blue Dog Democrat and he is doing more harm than good. We need a better Nominee.

BozoAdult

April 20, 2012 1:57am

I suspect all the outrage against Obama we see from "the right" is nothing more than a smoke screen. They do this to distract us while they actually have had "their man" in place all along. They employed a similar strategy during the Clinton years.

I hate to say this as a life long Democrat and former Obama supporter.

This leaves us with nowhere to go.