From the Los Angeles Times
Colombia hostage rescue by deception
Colombian forces, with U.S. help, employed a
ruse once thought outlandish to free 15 hostages.
By Chris Kraul
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
July 4, 2008
BOGOTA, COLOMBIA —
A fake humanitarian organization was created, complete with a special
logo and a website. Bogus messages circulated through the jungle on
tiny computer drives. Commandos aboard a helicopter posed as a doctor,
a nurse, news reporters and cameramen.
For several weeks Colombian armed forces constructed a fake universe,
and with help from U.S. intelligence and equipment, managed to fool the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia insurgent group into giving up
15 hostages Wednesday, including former senator and presidential
candidate Ingrid Betancourt and three U.S. defense contractors.
New information emerged Thursday that may explain how the rebels were
tricked into gathering the hostages at one remote jungle location and
putting them aboard a helicopter that supposedly was headed for a
special meeting with the new FARC commander, Alfonso Cano.
Many details remain unknown, but the deception apparently depended on
the rebels having a degree of comfort with outside helicopters and
personnel who had entered secret locations without posing any threat.
Colombian and U.S. officials say there was no reason for the rebel
commander guarding the hostages to disbelieve the "orders" that seemed
to come from his superiors.
So daring was the plan hatched by two Colombian colonels that when
they brought it to commanders in April, Defense Minister Juan Manuel
Santos exclaimed, "Are these people crazy?"
The risks were high: one U.S. official gave it only a 50% chance of
success.
Had the operation failed, the United States was prepared to participate
in a "Plan B," which would have sent, within 15 minutes, 2,000
Colombian troops and U.S. advisors aboard 39 helicopters to within half
a mile of the site.
The Colombian military chief of staff, Gen. Freddy Padilla said
Thursday, "On the morning of the operation, I prayed to the memory of
my mother, to whom I have never asked anything, to grant success and
for there not to be anyone killed."
Padilla said the rescue plan succeeded because Colombian army
intelligence agents had infiltrated the inner circle of both the FARC's
governing secretariat as well as the rebel unit led by Gerardo Aguilar
Ramirez, alias Cesar, who was in charge of guarding the high-value
hostages.
The rescue was planned and executed by the Colombians, and
benefited from equipment, intelligence and years of training from the
United States government. About 100 full time employees at the U.S.
Embassy here have been working on freeing the hostages from the United
States -- Marc Gonsalves, Thomas Howes and Keith Stansell -- since
February 2003. They were taken captive after their drug surveillance
plane crash-landed in the jungle. A fourth colleague was killed.
U.S. help included surveillance cameras that were placed along rivers
the rebels were known to traverse. The U.S. also provided satellite
imagery and the technology that helped the Colombians locate the
rebels. The decision to go ahead with the mission went all the way to
President Bush, who in recent days gave his approval, a U.S. government
source said.
"We have been training, equipping and embedding people in preparation
for a rescue operation for 5 1/2 years," U.S. Ambassador William
Brownfield said in an interview Thursday.
At the embassy, euphoria prevailed and the lobby that had long
featured photos of the three hostages now had celebratory champagne
bottles and beer cans.
According to recent rebel deserters, the FARC command has become
increasingly isolated as its radio, cellphone and satellite phone
communications have been compromised by listening equipment provided by
the U.S., Padilla said.
"Because of the rebels' command and control problems, they have
had to resort to medieval communication methods such as human
couriers," he said.
Having undercover agents in place in the FARC command made it
possible to use pen drives and floppy disks to send bogus messages to
the leadership. Those fake messages ultimately fooled Cesar into
putting the hostages aboard the helicopter Wednesday.
Cesar also was duped into aggregating three separate groups of
hostages and then transporting them to La Paz, a six-week trip 110
miles northeast of where they were being held near the Apaporis River
in southeastern Guaviare state.
The rebels apparently thought that they and the hostages were
being taken to a meeting with the new FARC commander, who took over
from founder Pedro Antonio Marin, alias Manuel Marulanda, who died in
March.
A phony organization called the International Humanitarian Group
was in charge of the helicopter, which bore its logo. Colombian and
U.S. intelligence officials even created a fake website in case rebel
commanders checked.
Betancourt told reporters Wednesday that she was infuriated when she
saw the chopper and its crew, some of whom were wearing Che Guevara
T-shirts, because she thought the hostages were going to be used for
some publicity stunt.
She and the other hostages were also upset about being handcuffed,
which Padilla said was a precaution to prevent the hostages from trying
to hijack the helicopter that would prove to be their salvation.
Once airborne at 2,500 feet, the eight Colombian commandos who were on
board the chopper in various guises, including news reporter,
cameraman, doctor and nurse, overcame and disarmed Cesar and another
FARC commander.
One U.S. official said that great care was taken to make the rented
Russian-made MI-17 helicopter and its crew resemble those that
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez sent with Red Cross officials to the
area in January and February to recover six FARC hostages.
To put the rebels' minds at ease, two commandos posed as video
reporters much like the Telesur team that Chavez sent to record the
earlier releases.
Colombia almost launched a rescue operation in February after the three
Americans were seen bathing in the Apaporis River. But before an
operation could be launched, the hostages and their captors slipped
into the jungle.
That rescue plan did not involve a ruse but a rapid deployment
"humanitarian cordon" that was to have been airlifted to encircle the
rebel camp.
A rescue plan moved back to the front burner in May after Colombian
authorities again located the hostages in southeast Guaviare, based on
intelligence gleaned from FARC deserters and army officer Jhon Frank
Pinchao, a former hostage who escaped the FARC in May 2007.
The two colonels who devised the "bottom up" plan will be decorated,
Padilla said. He declined to disclose their identities.
"I never dreamed this could happen," the general said, "which is not to
say I didn't want it to."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times