Quote Originally Posted by John T. Fishel View Post
The term paramilitary (and paramilitaries) covers a multitude of sins. First, all police forces but especially those with a SWAT capability are paramilitaries. In fact, the term was created to refer to forces like the French Gendarmerie and Italian Carbinieri.Second, the term refers to forces created by or sanctioned by the government, typically militias such as were the mainstay of the US military until the civil war. Good, relatively modern examples fro Latin America are theRondas Campesinas in Peru, the Defensa Civil in el Salvador, and the PACs in guatemala. A less benign variant is a paramilitary like ORDEN in pre-1979 el Salvador and similarly the Turbas Divinas in Sandinista Nicaragua. Finally, we come to groups like the AUC in Colombia whch were neither created by nor officially sanctioned by the government although they did often cooperate with the CO Army against the FARC.

My understanding of the demobilization of the AUC is that it was largely successful with respect to those paramilitaries that accepted the leadership of the AUC. However, a number of the "member" groups did not accept the authority of the AUC leadership and refused to disband, although, again, my understanding is that it was a minority within the AUC. Please note my qualified language in this paragraph as i am less sure of its accuracy compared to my first paragraph.

Cheers

JohnT
Thank your for the information! I am really quite new to the topic and just getting started reading/informing myself. The term paramilitary itself is indeed quite ambiguous, and that is an issue when researching this topic. And like you said, the AUC was never really created by the government. However, in the past, the Colombian government allowed these paramilitary groups to be formed by landlords to protect them from being kidnapped by rebels. These groups became so strong however, that the government seemed unable to halt their growth.

Regarding your part about the demobilization process: I agree with most points. I think that the AUC could never be considered a formal, well-developed organization capable of uniting all paramilitary groups in one front. Interests and goals of paramilitary groups were too varied for that I think. According to sources like HRW, the emergence of new/changed paramilitary groups after the demobilization was predictable, because the government failed to dismantle AUC criminal networks and their financial and political support. The government also failed to demobilize paramilitaries, because a lot of the people in the demobilization process were not paramilitaries at all, but civilians forced to go to these ceremonies and be 'demobilized' while not being part of a paramilitary group at all.

The government had a great chance of demobilizing the paramilitaries but failed to do so in my opinion.