BOGOTA, Colombia, July 2, 2008

3 U.S. Hostages, Colombian Pol Are Rescued

Americans Held By Leftist Rebels Since 2003 Freed In Bold Rescue; 12 Other Hostages Also Liberated

    • Former hostage Ingrid Betancourt, right, embraces her mother Yolanda Pulecio upon arrival to a military base in Bogota after being rescued from six years of captivity, Wednesday, July 2, 2008.

      Former hostage Ingrid Betancourt, right, embraces her mother Yolanda Pulecio upon arrival to a military base in Bogota after being rescued from six years of captivity, Wednesday, July 2, 2008.  (AP Photo/William Fernando Martinez)

    • The commander of Colombia's Army, Gen. Mario Montoya, right, embraces former hostage Ingrid Betancourt as Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos stands behind after Betancourt's arrival to a military base in Bogota after being rescued from six years of captivity, Wednesday, July 2, 2008.

      The commander of Colombia's Army, Gen. Mario Montoya, right, embraces former hostage Ingrid Betancourt as Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos stands behind after Betancourt's arrival to a military base in Bogota after being rescued from six years of captivity, Wednesday, July 2, 2008.  (AP Photo/William Fernando Martinez)

    • Clockwise from upper left: Ingrid Betancourt, Keith Stansell, Marc Gonsalves, Thomas Howes.

      Clockwise from upper left: Ingrid Betancourt, Keith Stansell, Marc Gonsalves, Thomas Howes.  (CBS/ AP)

    • In this file picture released Friday, Sept. 12, 2003, foreground from left, Keith Stansell, Marc Gonsalves and Tom Howes - three U.S. military contractors captured by FARC rebels seven months earlier - sit inside a shack in an undisclosed place in southern Colombia, Friday, July 25, 2003 guarded by rebels.

      In this file picture released Friday, Sept. 12, 2003, foreground from left, Keith Stansell, Marc Gonsalves and Tom Howes - three U.S. military contractors captured by FARC rebels seven months earlier - sit inside a shack in an undisclosed place in southern Colombia, Friday, July 25, 2003 guarded by rebels.  (AP Photo/Jorge Enrique Botero)

    • Ingrid Betancourt gives guerrilla leaders her campaign literature (2002 photo)

      Ingrid Betancourt gives guerrilla leaders her campaign literature (2002 photo)  (AP)

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  • Play CBS Video Video U.S. Hostages Rescued

    Three American hostages and a Colombian politician were rescued after being held in Colombia for five years by a guerilla organization with ties to the illegal drug trade. David Martin reports.

  • Video Proof Of Life

    "CBS News RAW": Police have shown video of three American security contractors and a former Colombian presidential candidate who have been held by Colombian rebels since 2003.

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(CBS/AP)  Colombian spies tricked leftist rebels into handing over kidnapped presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt and three U.S. military contractors Wednesday in a daring helicopter rescue so successful that not a single shot was fired.

"This was primarily a Colombian operation," one U.S. official told CBS News correspondent Bob Orr. "They did all of the heavy lifting and deserve the lion's share of the credit."

Betancourt, who was seized on the campaign trail six long years ago, appeared thin but surprisingly healthy as she strode down the stairs of a military plane in Bogota and held her mother in a long embrace. She said she still aspires to the presidency.

"God, this is a miracle," Betancourt said. "Such a perfect operation is unprecedented."

CBS News national security correspondent David Martin reports that the American hostages - Marc Gonsalves, Thomas Howes and Keith Stansell - are being taken by the military to Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas, where they are expected to arrive late Wednesday night.

They had been the longest-held American hostages in the world.

Eleven Colombian police and soldiers were also freed in the rescue, the most serious blow ever dealt to the 44-year-old Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, which considered the four hostages their most valuable bargaining chips. The FARC is already reeling from the deaths of key commanders and the loss of much of the territory it once held.

Santos said military intelligence agents infiltrated the guerrilla ranks and led the local commander in charge of the hostages, alias Cesar, to believe they were going to take them to Alfonso Cano, the guerrillas' supreme leader.

The hostages, who had been divided in three groups, were taken to a rendezvous where two disguised MI-17 helicopters piloted by Colombian military agents were waiting. Betancourt said her hands and feet were bound, which she called "humiliating."

The pilots, she said, were posing as members of a relief organization, but "they were dressed like clowns," wearing Che Guevara shirts, so she assumed they were rebels.

But when they were airborne, she looked behind her and saw Cesar, who had treated her so cruelly for so many years, lying on the floor blindfolded.

"The chief of the operation said, `We're the national army. You're free,"' she said. "The helicopter almost fell from the sky because we were jumping up and down, yelling, crying, hugging one another. We couldn't believe it."

The operation, Santos said, "will go into history for its audacity and effectiveness."

"We wanted to have it happen as it did today," added armed forces chief Gen. Freddy Padilla. "Without a single shot. Without anyone wounded. Absolutely safe and sound, without a scratch."

Although officials said everyone directly involved in the rescue were Colombians, U.S. Ambassador William Brownfield said there was "close cooperation" from the Americans that included "exchange of intelligence" as well as "exchange of equipment, training advice and experiences of other operations. I will not enter into details."

Santos said Cesar and another rebel on board would face justice. The other rebel captors retreated into the jungle, he said, and the army let them escape "in hopes that they will free the rest of the hostages," believed to number about 700.

At a Bogota ceremony with top military commanders, the freed hostages walked up to a microphone one by one, identified themselves by name and rank, and thanked their rescuers. Some had been held for a dozen years, captured when rebels overran military outposts.

Last to speak was the French-Colombian Betancourt, who wore military fatigues and a floppy camouflage hat as she hugged her mother, Yolanda Pulecio, and her husband, Juan Carlos LeCompte. She removed her hat to reveal intricately braided dark hair, with plaits framing her face and a white flower.

Breaking into tears, Betancourt appealed to the FARC to release the remaining hostages and make peace.

She thanked Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, against whom she was running when she was kidnapped, and said he "has been a very good president."

However, she said, "I continue to aspire to serve Colombia as president."

For now, she added, "I'm just one more soldier."

In Paris, her son Lorenzo Delloye-Betancourt called her release "the most beautiful news of my life." He and other relatives were flying to Colombia to join her.

The Americans appeared healthy in a video shown on Colombian television, though Brownfield, who met with them at a provincial military base, said two of the three - he didn't specify which - were suffering from the jungle malady leishmaniasis and "looking forward to modern medical treatment."

Gonsalves' father George was mowing the yard of his Hebron, Connecticut, home when an excited neighbor relayed the news he had seen on television: "I didn't know how to stop my lawnmower. I was shocked. I couldn't believe it."

"We're still teary-eyed and not quite have our wits about us," said Stansell's stepmother Lynne in Miami.

And Howes' niece in Massachusetts, Amanda Howes, says the rescue "redefines the word miracle."

Santos renewed the government's offer to negotiate with the reeling rebel movement, who many believe is nearing the end of its four-decade fight. Battlefield losses and widespread desertions have cut rebel numbers in half to about 9,000 as the United States has poured billions of dollars in military aid into Colombia.

In March, historic leader Manuel Marulanda died of a reported heart attack, and two other top commanders were killed. The rest are hunkered down in remote jungle and mountain hideouts, unable to communicate effectively, their income from ransom kidnappings and the cocaine trade depleted by intense military operations.

Santos said Colombia had infiltrated the rebels' seven-man ruling secretariat, but did not elaborate.

"The government reiterates to them that if they want to enter into serious negotiations in good faith, we are offering a dignified peace," Santos said.

U.S. President George Bush congratulated President Uribe by phone Wednesday afternoon, calling him a "strong leader," reports CBS News White House correspondent Mark Knoller. Uribe thanked Bush for his support and confidence in Colombia's government.

Rescue of the hostages gives Bush more ammunition in trying to get Congress to approve a free trade agreement with Colombia, reports Knoller. He says Uribe deserves U.S. support in fighting terror groups in his country such as FARC.

The rescue came as U.S. presidential candidate John McCain was visiting Colombia. McCain told the press on a flight from Colombia to Mexico that he was informed Tuesday night by Uribe that the rescue of the hostages was imminent, reports CBS News correspondent John Bentley.

"It's a very high-risk operation," he said. "I congratulate President Uribe, the military and the nation of Colombia." His rival, Barack Obama, issued a statement congratulating Uribe as well.

Betancourt, 46, was abducted in February 2002. The Americans were captured a year later when their drug surveillance plane went down in rebel-held jungle. In the five years since, their families had received only two "proof of life" videos, the latest in November.

That tape also showed the first images since 2003 of Betancourt. Along with letters and reports from other hostages, they showed a once-vibrant, confident woman slowly succumbing to Hepatitis B, tropical skin diseases and depression. One former hostage said Betancourt was kept chained to a tree after trying to escape.



©MMVIII, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Add a Comment See all 65 Comments
by brianbwb-2009 July 3, 2008 6:21 AM EDT
"That''''''''s great for these three American military contractors - now hopefully we will all be rescued from the Leftist Obamas." Posted by bobmarisol

At least a prostitute gets paid to suck, here you are giving it up to the neocons for free, if not cheap.
Reply to this comment
by whitecat151 July 3, 2008 3:49 AM EDT
Grats!!! Yay!!! Outstanding!!! Way to go!!! Superb!!! Wonderful!!! Amazing!!!

Thanks a million for all who were rescued, and praise be unto the Supreme Being That Some Choose To Call God!!!

Nice job USA!! WTFG!!!


Best Regards,

WC
Reply to this comment
by lindh4 July 3, 2008 3:11 AM EDT
It is magnificent wonderful to see Frau Betancourt release. As Presidente, the new %u201CEva%u201D would help the US maintain strict control of the dangerous working class and ignorant peasants in Columbia and other South American countries. Without such control, the rewards of capitalism would be severely diminished.

Reply to this comment
by patriot12436 July 3, 2008 2:42 AM EDT
zerato
I may disagree with your opinions but i agree about the insults, most are made at a grade school level.
Reply to this comment
by patriot12436 July 3, 2008 2:41 AM EDT
toolmangler
I have always said the difference between a hero and a traitor was dependent upon who won the war, and the perspective in which it is written.
Reply to this comment
by l8c6 July 3, 2008 2:38 AM EDT
That''''s great for these three American military contractors - now hopefully we will all be rescued from the Leftist Obamas.

Posted by bobmarisol


What a profoundly ignorant divisive imbecile. The global corporate media representing global right wing capitalists never spoon feeds fools like you the stories of right wing dictators who reck havoc and terror onto poor villagers in 3rd world countries as they take their land and God knows your kind are too fuggin'' lazy and bigoted to search for the truth.

Reply to this comment
by patriot12436 July 3, 2008 2:29 AM EDT
I think this should go down in history as one of the greatest military victories. This was fantastic planning and achieving a goal, without anyone getting hurt. Brilliant to say the least.
Reply to this comment
by patriot12436 July 3, 2008 2:28 AM EDT
zoe2006
Admit it, you just want to see McCain crash again.
Reply to this comment
by sidvicious76 July 3, 2008 2:14 AM EDT
Thank you, Columbia.
Reply to this comment
by human-being-2009 July 3, 2008 2:12 AM EDT
It''s time the U.S started learning some tactics from the third world on how to go about solving some problems. 7 years of total failure, not a good record at all for Bush/cheney.
Reply to this comment
by pensacola88 July 3, 2008 2:09 AM EDT
This should place the critics of Colombia''s government into dormancy.
Reply to this comment
by agt-r July 3, 2008 1:55 AM EDT
Well, I''m so glad that they were all rescued! What a wonderful blessing. President Uribe has been tough on the FARC and all terrorists since he took the presidency of Colombia and has done a great job. After over 40 years of violence un such a beautiful country, rich in soil, minerals, and nature, the people realized being tough is the only way to deal with thugs, and they have supported their president 100%. There''s a lesson there for us. All the spoiled people in this country do is follow the lead of the opposition party and blame all their problems on the president. It''s not easy making decisions and sometimes they do not produce the outcome expected. This one yielded wonderful results and I''m so happy for the families of our three American citizens and the rest of the colombians who had been imprisioned, some for over 12 years. Good for President Uribe and his Army!
Reply to this comment
by ubrew12 July 3, 2008 1:08 AM EDT
This is a good day
Reply to this comment
by gce65 July 3, 2008 1:05 AM EDT
I think the official story is the 3 contractors were working for Northrop-Grumman and just happened to be flying a single engine plane way down in southern Colombia when their engine quit.

Put through the govt bs filter, that really means: they were probably CIA or DEA or former spooks. There are plenty of other simple businessmen who have been kidnapped and set free after their company paid a ransom. But we all know the US govt doesn''t do that, right? wink-wink!
Reply to this comment
by bobmarisol July 3, 2008 12:56 AM EDT
That''s great for these three American military contractors - now hopefully we will all be rescued from the Leftist Obamas.
Reply to this comment
by gce65 July 3, 2008 12:55 AM EDT
"This was primarily a Colombian operation..."???

You bet the US was in on this!

It''s also strange the story has changed little by little as the news day has progressed. We''ll probably never get the true version of events. Remember Jessica Lynch? Remember Pat Tillman? This will probably end up as a made-for-TV movie and no doubt John McCain or his people will try to imply some connection to the rescue. Very suspicious timing, that he would just coincidentally be down there on his 4th of July weekend.
Reply to this comment
by toolmangler-2009 July 2, 2008 11:58 PM EDT
Only the most evil or cynical person would even try to find anything negative in this story.
Posted by jerr111 at 08:49 PM : Jul 02, 2008



I am neither, I just call it the way I see it. I am very glad the people are back safely. But they are just the tip of the ''iceberg'' in this game of politics. there are over 700 still missing, where is their rescue?
Reply to this comment
by toolmangler-2009 July 2, 2008 11:46 PM EDT
The only difference between Terrorists and freedom fighters is P.O.V. (point of view)
Reply to this comment
by starleo146 July 2, 2008 11:43 PM EDT
Go mangle your tool, jerkwad.
Posted by DemWatcher

Temper, temper demwatcher you can be a McBush fan without acting like him can''t you? Count to 10
Reply to this comment
by toolmangler-2009 July 2, 2008 11:38 PM EDT
DemWatcher Is trying to hurt my feelings, LOL He needs to grow up first, Kids aren''t supposed disrespect their elders.
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