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Reporter's Notebook: Al Giordano

Yes, Colombia's Uribe Is a Narco

This story erupted more than two weeks ago - when the Narco News School of Authentic Journalism was assembling in Bolivia - but it deserves a mention and a link here on The Narcosphere.

After all, it was two years ago that Narco News exposed then-candidate for president in Colombia, Alvaro Uribe, as a narco-candidate. Uribe won the presidency, and the Commercial Media gave the now narco-president and friend of the Bush administration a free ride.

Newsweek reporter Joe Contreras recently got hold of a declassified U.S. Department of Defense memo that confirms the same... Newsweek reported:

In September 1991 the U.S. Department of Defense compiled a list of individuals believed to be associated with Colombia's notorious Medellin drug cartel. There are 106 names on the newly declassified intelligence document, and they read like a who's who of thugs, assassins, midlevel traffickers and crooked attorneys. The cartel's ruthless kingpin, Pablo Escobar, was prominent on the list, of course, along with the former Panamanian dictator Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega. But the real head turner is item No. 82, which reads as follows:

"Alvaro Uribe Velez—a Colombian politician and senator dedicated to collaboration with the Medellin cartel at high government levels. Uribe was linked to a business involved in narcotics activities in the U.S.... Uribe has worked for the Medellin cartel and is a close personal friend of Pablo Escobar Gaviria."

The Pentagon report portrays Uribe in a light sharply at variance with his current image as Washington's main ally in the U.S.-financed war on drugs in South America. But in those days, he was among dozens of Colombian pols who openly opposed the extradition of their drug-trafficking countrymen. Uribe has since changed his views—and, in fact, his government has sent scores of drug traffickers to the United States for prosecution since he took office....

Read the whole thing. This story is still developing.

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The whole declassified document

Here's the link to GWU's National Security Archive, the outfit that unearthed the document in question.

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Reporters' Notebooks