Brilliant rescue attempt is successful. What could've ended disastrously if any of the police/rescue team didn't play their role correctly ended up just marvelously.
A great job of infiltration and subterfuge on law enforcement resulted in rescuing people who have been hostages for YEARS and making dangerous rebels (who are funded by drug money) look pretty stupid. Maybe aren't stupid but they were hoodwinked this time.
My thoughts are bit torn between shouting Hurrah! for the success of this mission and concern for future hostages and any attempted rescues. Done once I highly doubt that they'll be able to do this again. It could make future negotiations and rescue attempts very difficult. Real life news crews could be in danger of suspicion and so on. This is not to lay blame or critiquing the methods of the LEA's in Columbia just that it gives thought to hundreds of other kidnapped victims throughout that country and future hostages. The war there isn't over and it is a war zone just done quietly enough that the rest of the world declined to take critical note.
Still a great effort and I bow to them all.
Without a shot fired or even that dramatic hollywoodized tense moment this video shows that even real life is a lot better.Rescue video shows duped rebels, elated hostages
(full story here) http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080705/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/colombia_hostages
By IAN JAMES, Associated Press Writer Sat Jul 5, 6:04 AM ET
BOGOTA, Colombia - Colombian military intelligence agents posing as aid workers and a media crew flew to the jungle aboard a white helicopter, staging a mock humanitarian mission that rebels were told would ferry their hostages to another camp for talks on a prisoner swap.
The would-be envoys had honed their accents in acting lessons: Italian, Arab, Caribbean Spanish, and Australian English "identical to Crocodile Dundee," Colombian Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos said Friday as he explained how the military duped the rebels into turning over 15 hostages.
Santos said military intelligence agents had infiltrated the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, so that guerrillas believed the hostages were being moved on the orders of top rebel leader Alfonso Cano for negotiations on a prisoner exchange. To play their roles, some soldiers wore Che Guevara T-shirts.
Video filmed during the rescue shows the hostages filing grim-faced toward the helicopter in a grassy clearing fringed with a coca field, then embracing and weeping with joy after they are aloft and realize they are free.
A great job of infiltration and subterfuge on law enforcement resulted in rescuing people who have been hostages for YEARS and making dangerous rebels (who are funded by drug money) look pretty stupid. Maybe aren't stupid but they were hoodwinked this time.
My thoughts are bit torn between shouting Hurrah! for the success of this mission and concern for future hostages and any attempted rescues. Done once I highly doubt that they'll be able to do this again. It could make future negotiations and rescue attempts very difficult. Real life news crews could be in danger of suspicion and so on. This is not to lay blame or critiquing the methods of the LEA's in Columbia just that it gives thought to hundreds of other kidnapped victims throughout that country and future hostages. The war there isn't over and it is a war zone just done quietly enough that the rest of the world declined to take critical note.
Still a great effort and I bow to them all.