BOGOTÁ (AFP) – Indigenous volunteers working alongside the army were a winning combination in the rescue of four children lost in the jungle for 40 days, but Colombian commandos, among the most seasoned in the world, also played a key role.
“It was a successful amalgam of indigenous knowledge and military art,” General Pedro Sanchez, who led the search operations, said on Sunday.
Suntanned and direct, Sanchez is the head of the Colombian armed forces’ Joint Special Operations Command (CCOES).
It was his Special Forces men who took part in the gruelling daily marches through the hostile Caqueta jungle, where a plane carrying the children crashed on May 1. Three adults, including the children’s mother, were killed in the crash.
For Sanchez’s commandos, “it was a different mission” from fighting against the many armed groups operating in Colombia.
“We always save and protect lives, including during our combat missions,” Sanchez said of efforts to rescue the children, aged between one and 13.
The Colombian military has been criticised for summary executions committed during the long internal conflict that has drained the country, as well as its collusion with far-right paramilitaries and the complicity of some of its officers with drug traffickers.
In this mission, though, “failing or giving up was not an option”, Sanchez said. His men, the most highly trained in the Colombian army, had accomplished “the impossible”, he added.
‘HONOUR GUARD’
The CCOES is the Colombian equivalent of the United States (US) Special Operations Command, which contains the famous Green Berets and Delta Force.
Its motto is ‘Union, Integrity, Victory’, and in its videos it claims to be the ‘honour guard of Colombia’.
Created in 2007, the CCOES brings together elite elements from the army, air force and navy, and works in close cooperation with its North American ally.
According to media reports, it comprises about 3,000 men, with three main components – land, urban and sea – as well as an air support element.
Their primary mission is “the planning and execution of special operations inside and outside national territory against terrorist groups, high-value targets and organised crime”, a Colombian military source told AFP.
The CCOES took part in the capture in October 2021 of “Otoniel”, the leader of the Clan del Golfo, Colombia’s largest drug cartel.
Trained in nursing as well as search and rescue, “they were tasked with this mission in the Amazon, not only because of the difficult geographical conditions and the difficulty of access, but also because FARC guerrilla dissidents operate in this region”, the source added, referring to what was once Latin America’s most feared guerrilla group.
There are other special forces units within the Colombian military, such as the marine commandos, the COPES police special operations command and the police’s fearsome ‘Jungle Commandos’. Colombian police operate under the authority of the Ministry of Defence.
TOO RISKY? TOO BRUTAL?
These soldiers, particularly the “Jungle Commandos”, are “among the best elite units in the world”, according to a foreign expert who regularly works with them.
“They volunteer for the most dangerous missions. They lead ascetic lives, don’t get bonuses, and can spend several months in the forest. It’s extremely tough,” the source told AFP.
“To be a commando in the jungle in Colombia is to be sure that you’re going to experience fire at very close range, and often outnumbered… it’s very risky.”
They are motivated by patriotism and the pride of belonging to an elite unit, the expert said.
“They eat little, they drink little, they sleep little, all with high exposure to insects, snakes and bugs of all kinds.”
“Tactically, the environment and the adversary prevent them from having the slightest comfort… They live almost permanently wet in very degraded conditions so as not to make any noise when in contact with their adversary,” the expert added.