On November 30, 2021, the Biden administration announced that it would remove the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) from the Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTO) and Specially Designated Global Terrorists (SDGT) lists,Footnote 1 reversing designations originally imposed in 1997 and 2001 in the midst of conflict in Colombia.Footnote 2 The revocation of the designations occurred five years after the 2016 Peace Accord between the Colombian government and the FARC, pursuant to which “the FARC formally dissolved and disarmed.”Footnote 3 However, while delisting the FARC, the State Department announced that it would designate as FTOs and SDGTs two FARC splinter groups and their leaders who have “refused to demobilize” and continue to “engage[] in terrorist activity.”Footnote 4
The group now known as the FARC “trace[s] its roots to Colombia's armed peasant self-defense groups that emerged in the 1940s and 1950s,” and it was officially formed in 1964 as “a group dedicated to rural insurgency and intent on overturning what it perceived as Colombia's systemic social inequality.”Footnote 5 The FARC grew in power, using revenues from the drug trade to fund its activities, which included “bombings, mortar attacks, murders, kidnapping for ransom, extortion, and hijackings.”Footnote 6 By the 1990s, Colombia's “internal armed conflict was supercharged by profits from illicit crops, primarily cocaine,” and other businesses like “human trafficking and illicit resource extraction, such as logging and gold mining.”Footnote 7 The FARC reached the height of its power in the late 1990s and early 2000s when it controlled roughly forty percent of Colombia's territory and had “an estimated 16,000–20,000 fighters.”Footnote 8 In 1999 alone, “[m]ore than 3,000 kidnappings were carried out in Colombia,” and the “homicide rate rose to nearly 60 deaths per 100,000 inhabitants,” sparking protests in Colombia against the FARC.Footnote 9
The FARC's brutality and involvement in the drug trade prompted action by the United States, including designating FARC as a terrorist group. In 1996, Congress passed the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, which delegated to the secretary of state the power to designate groups as FTOs.Footnote 10 The FARC was among the first thirty groups designated on October 8, 1997.Footnote 11 Inclusion on the FTO list renders a group “subject to financial and immigration sanctions, potentially including the blocking of assets, the prosecution of supporters who provide funds, refusal of visas, and deportation of members.”Footnote 12 On October 31, 2001, the United States also designated the FARC as an SDGT.Footnote 13 Days after the 9/11 attacks, President Bush established the SDGT list via Executive Order 13,224, citing the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) and the National Emergencies Act, among other authorities, to block the property of and prohibit transactions with designated individuals and entities engaged in terrorism.Footnote 14
Following several years of negotiation, the Colombian government and the FARC negotiated and signed a Peace Accord in 2016 that signaled the formal dissolution of the FARC.Footnote 15 The agreement ended a fifty-eight-year armed conflict that by 2012 had resulted in the deaths of an estimated 220,000 Colombians, “80% of [whom] were unarmed civilians.”Footnote 16 Among other provisions, the Accord provided “for demobilization of the guerrilla fighters and surrender of weapons, and amnesty for those who had not committed crimes against humanity or other serious offenses and who acknowledged their activities and apologized to victims.”Footnote 17 It further assured former fighters of “reintegration assistance,” as well as the “establish[ment of] a new political party, with guaranteed seats in the country's Congress.”Footnote 18
At the request of Colombia and the FARC, the UN Security Council established “a political mission of unarmed international observers, responsible for the monitoring and verification of the laying down of arms, and a part of the tripartite mechanism [to] monitor and verify the definitive bilateral ceasefire.”Footnote 19 In 2017, the UN mission confirmed the FARC's demobilization and the collection of its weapons.Footnote 20
On November 30, 2021, the State Department revoked the FARC's designation as an FTO and SDGT but designated two splinter groups and their leaders who refuse to demobilize.Footnote 21 Pursuant to a statutory requirement that the secretary of state review entities on the FTO list every five years,Footnote 22 the State Department determined that the FARC should be removed from the lists, explaining:
Following a 2016 Peace Accord with the Colombian government, the FARC formally dissolved and disarmed. It no longer exists as a unified organization that engages in terrorism or terrorist activity or has the capability or intent to do so.
The decision to revoke the designation does not change the posture with regards to any charges or potential charges in the United States against former leaders of the FARC, including for narcotrafficking, nor does it remove the stain of the decision by Colombia's Special Jurisdiction of Peace, which found their actions to be crimes against humanity.Footnote 23
The State Department highlighted that delisting the FARC “will facilitate the ability of the United States to better support implementation of the 2016 accord, including by working with demobilized combatants.”Footnote 24 In particular, delisting the FARC removes the threat of prosecution under U.S. material support to terrorism statutes that had chilled interactions with former FARC combatants.Footnote 25 Reports indicate that “[l]awyers for U.S. officials in Colombia ha[d] applied a strict interpretation of ‘material support,’ even occasionally prohibiting U.S. Embassy or USAID staffers from buying a cup of coffee for a member of Comunes, the rebranded ex-FARC political party.”Footnote 26 Moreover, participation by former FARC combatants and their families in economic development programs, like the initiative to replace coca leaf with legal crops, “blocked U.S. support while the FARC was listed as a ‘terrorist.’”Footnote 27
Simultaneous with removing the FARC's designations, the State Department announced that it was designating the FARC-EP and Segunda Marquetalia as FTOs and SDGTs and designating four of the groups’ leaders as SDGTs.Footnote 28 The State Department explained that the designations are:
directed at those who refused to demobilize and those who are engaged in terrorist activity. In August 2019, former FARC commanders, including Luciano Marin Arango, alias Ivan Marquez, created Segunda Marquetalia after abandoning the 2016 Peace Accord. Since then, Segunda Marquetalia has engaged in terrorist activity and is responsible for the killings of former FARC members and community leaders. Segunda Marquetalia has also engaged in mass destruction, assassination, hostage-taking, including the kidnapping and holding for ransom of government employees. Segunda Marquetalia is also responsible for the attempted killings of political leaders. . . .
[FARC-EP] is responsible for the vast majority of the armed attacks attributed to FARC dissident elements since 2019. FARC-EP has also been responsible for the killing of political candidates and former FARC members, and the kidnapping of a political operative.Footnote 29
The FARC and the 2016 Peace Accord are polarizing issues in Colombia, and Colombian political leaders have had divergent responses to the U.S. delisting decision. Former Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, who served from 2010 to 2018, won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2016 for championing the peace process with the FARC and concluded the Peace Accord.Footnote 30 Officials from the Santos administration had pressed U.S. officials to drop the terrorist designation.Footnote 31 Sergio Jaramillo, “the Santos administration's architect of the peace talks,” referred to the U.S. delisting of the FARC as a “low-cost thing to do” that “sends the signal to the FARC, ‘it has been five years, you've done your bit, behaved properly, and we're delisting you.’”Footnote 32 Conversely, current Colombian President Iván Duque has historically taken a more critical stance toward ex-combatants.Footnote 33 In response to the delisting, Duque said that while his administration understands and respects the U.S. move, it would have “preferred another decision” and wants to focus on confronting dissidents moving forward.Footnote 34 Vice President Marta Lucía Ramírez issued a statement assuring the public that the FARC would not be forgiven for its past crimes or terrorism.Footnote 35
The delisting also drew criticism from some Republicans in Congress, most notably Florida lawmakers who have a sizeable number of Colombian Americans in their constituent base. Senators Marco Rubio (R-FL) and Rick Scott (R-FL) sent a letter to President Biden stating that the decision is “counterproductive” to the goal of a “peaceful and prosperous Colombia” and “emboldens and enables those FARC members who reject any and all attempts at peace.”Footnote 36 Rep. María Elvira Salazar (R-FL) called the delisting decision a “slap in the face for the Colombian people,”Footnote 37 and along with Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX), she introduced a bill entitled the No Foreign Adversaries Residing in Our Communities Act (No FARC Act) to restrict admission of former FARC members into the United States.Footnote 38