Nearly a week after Colombia's cross-border raid against an encampment of the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) guerrilla movement in neighboring Ecuador, Latin America continues to confront its worst regional diplomatic and military crisis in decades. The US government and mass media have weighed in with unsolicited judgments and advice, attributing the tense standoff between Colombia, Ecuador and Venezuela to the threat of terrorism to Colombia, the complicity in terrorism on the part of Venezuela and overheated animosities between the respective heads of state of these three countries.
State Department spokesman Tom Casey declared that "it's important to recognize that the events that took place were, in fact, a response to the presence of terrorists." Similarly, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino affirmed that Colombia "was defending itself against terrorism."
This official reaction extends to Colombia-Washington's principal client state in South America and the recipient of some $600 million annually in American military aid-the mantle of the Bush Doctrine, which holds that in the "global war on terrorism" such niceties as respect for sovereign borders and international law no longer apply.