Tear Down the Mountain
Wretchard over at the Belmont Club draws an interesting analogy between the hunt for Columbian druglord Pablo Escobar and the hunt for Saddam and (hopefully) bin Laden. Our efforts to nab Escobar through traditional law enforcement methods were stymied by the thoroughly whipped Columbian government. Using Columbian intermediaries was equally futile. Then:
the Americans had a flash of inspiration. Since they could not get to Escobar because he stood atop a "mountain" of corrupt retainers, including many in the Colombian military, they would "tear down the mountain".
They retasked intelligence to build up a map of Escobar's empire: the lawyers he used, the identities of his key lieutenants, the location of his family, the names of his key enforcers. Armed with this information it is suggested, but it was never proved, that the US facilitated the formation of a paramilitary group called "Los Pepes" (Perseguidos por Pablo Escobar) which embarked on a program of tearing down the mountain. Escobar's retainers were killed at the clip of a half a dozen a day. His palatial villas were torched. His lawyers were liquidated until in desperation, some not only publicly resigned but took to living the life of beachcombers in isolated areas, the better to stay out of the line of fire. Burned out of every home, Escobar's family eventually sought quarters under Colombian government protection. Their phones were tapped. They attempted to flee to Germany, only to be turned back due to US diplomatic pressure, upon landing, and returned to their wired guesthouse in Colombia, spending nearly three days in an airplane. Eventually, Escobar, who once lived in villas with artificial lakes, serviced by harems of prostitutes and surrounded by hundreds of bodyguards, was reduced to camping out in mountain cabins with a village laundress for company. He was shuttled around, towards the end by a loyal bodyguard in a taxicab (presaging Saddam's fate), cornered at last in a small townhouse and summarily executed on its roof.
These methods worked again with Saddam, and administration officials seem ever more confident that the net is closing on bin Laden as well. For those who still think that traditional law enforcement methods are sufficient to fight the war on terror, this is one more slap to the head.
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The "good" half of me says
The "good" half of me says that steadfastly lawful questing after bad guys wins the day.
The "practical and wanting-to-survive" half of me says you're right. No holds barred, as long as it's directed at the right people.