Colombia's Incursion into Ecuadorian Territory: Justified Hot Pursuit or Pugnacious Error?
31 Pages Posted: 13 Mar 2008
Date Written: March 10, 2008
Abstract
On March 1, 2008, Colombian military forces launched a cross-border raid into Ecuador to attack a jungle encampment occupied by high ranking members of the Colombian guerrilla army known as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). The specific target of the air attack was Luis Edgar Devia Silva, aka Raul Reyes, the FARC's number two in command and one of Latin America's longest enduring guerrilla leaders. Reyes and several cohorts were killed. The Colombian forces retrieved Reyes' body and forensic evidence, including his laptop computer, and retreated back across the frontier.
The raid sparked a regional crisis that resulted in Ecuadorian and Venezuelan military mobilizations along their borders with Colombia. Colombia justified the incursion into Ecuadorian territory as an operation of "hot pursuit," an international legal doctrine that allows a nation to give chase across an international frontier in order to capture a rebel force attempting to escape to safe haven in a neighboring country. The justification quickly unraveled, however, when evidence of the actual attack indicated that those in the FARC camp were in bed sleeping at the time of the airstrike on the site, and that the force that went into Colombia on the ground was conducting clean-up rather than an offensive operation.
Although the crisis was resolved two weeks later at a Latin American summit, issues remain over the application of international law doctrines such as hot pursuit, preemptive and anticipatory self defense, and use of the Bush Doctrine by other nations for purposes of crossing into another country's territory to pursue combatants involved in an internal armed conflict. This article examines the international law issues surrounding Colombia's actions and its justifications in the face of harsh international reactions.
Keywords: hot pursuit, Bush Doctrine, preemtive self-defense, Colombia, Ecuador
JEL Classification: K33, K39, K42
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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Colombia’s Incursion into Ecuadorian Territory: Justified Hot Pursuit or Pugnacious Error?