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Even to experts, Colombia is one of the most confusing countries in
the Americas. Its democratic tradition is among the richest and
most long-standing in the hemisphere, with only eleven years of
military rule during its 200 some years of independence. Except for
the United States and Canada, Colombia has had the highest growth
rate in the Americas over the last 75 years. It is widely seen as
having some of the continent's best universities and deep
intellectual traditions along with a dazzling array of fine and
industrial arts and now globally-popular tropical music. But
despite these admirable achievements, Colombia has also experienced
what its Nobel laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez once called "a
biblical holocaust" of human savagery. Along with the scourge of
politically-motivated assassinations (averaging 30 per day in the
1990s) have been drug-related massacres, widespread disappearances,
rapes and kidnappings, and even the signature defilement of murder
victims. The relentless dynamics of the illegal drug industry
raises a puzzling question: how did Colombia capture and control
that enormously-lucrative industry and then leverage its status as
America's No. 1 drug supplier into a $7 billion military
partnership with the world's superpower? The answer to that
question is something everyone needs to know. To unravel the
enigma, Richard D. Mahoney links historical legacies with key
periods in the post-World War II era and then sets forth
overarching cultural features-land violence, the Church, race, the
Spanish language, and magical culture-that run through Colombia's
history, distinguish its national experience, and fuel its
unquenchable creativity.
Even to experts, Colombia is one of the most confusing countries in
the Americas. Its democratic tradition is among the richest and
most long-standing in the hemisphere, with only eleven years of
military rule during its 200 some years of independence. Except for
the United States and Canada, Colombia has had the highest growth
rate in the Americas over the last 75 years. It is widely seen as
having some of the continent's best universities and deep
intellectual traditions along with a dazzling array of fine and
industrial arts and now globally-popular tropical music. But
despite these admirable achievements, Colombia has also experienced
what its Nobel laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez once called "a
biblical holocaust" of human savagery. Along with the scourge of
politically-motivated assassinations (averaging 30 per day in the
1990s) have been drug-related massacres, widespread disappearances,
rapes and kidnappings, and even the signature defilement of murder
victims. The relentless dynamics of the illegal drug industry
raises a puzzling question: how did Colombia capture and control
that enormously-lucrative industry and then leverage its status as
America's No. 1 drug supplier into a $7 billion military
partnership with the world's superpower? The answer to that
question is something everyone needs to know. To unravel the
enigma, Richard D. Mahoney links historical legacies with key
periods in the post-World War II era and then sets forth
overarching cultural features-land violence, the Church, race, the
Spanish language, and magical culture-that run through Colombia's
history, distinguish its national experience, and fuel its
unquenchable creativity.
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