Formation The National Liberation Army was founded in 1964, by
Fabio Vásquez Castaño and other Colombian rebels trained in
Cuba. The group included "urban intellectuals" influenced by
Che Guevara and
Fidel Castro. In the 1970s, after suffering military defeat and internal crises, the ELN was commanded by the Spanish priest Father
Manuel Pérez Martínez (1943–98), alias
El Cura Pérez, who shared leadership with Nicolás Rodríguez Bautista, alias "Gabino".
El Cura Pérez presided over the National Liberation Army as one of its most recognized figures until he died of
hepatitis B in 1998. He was instrumental in establishing the ideology of the ELN, a composite of Cuban revolutionary theory and liberation theology that proposes the establishment in Colombia of a
Christian and communist regime to resolve the socioeconomic problems of chronic
political corruption,
poverty, and the exclusion of most Colombians from their country's government. The ELN guerrillas survived the heavy fighting in the
Colombian National Army's Operation Anorí (1973–74), and then reconstituted their forces, with partial assistance from the Colombian Government of President
Alfonso López Michelsen (1974–78), who allowed the ELN to break from and escape encirclement by the Colombian army. López Michelsen helped the ELN in the hope of initiating peace negotiations with them in order to end the civil war. After this, the ELN resumed financing its military operations by means of
kidnap for
ransom, the
extortion of money from Colombian and foreign
petroleum companies and the
taxation of the private
illegal drug trade of Colombia. The ELN did not participate in the peace negotiations conducted between the Colombian government of President
Andrés Pastrana Arango (1998–2002) and FARC, yet did participate in an exploratory conference about possibly participating in peace negotiations. A Colombian government initiative towards granting the ELN a
demilitarized zone in the southern region of the
Bolívar Department was thwarted by
right-wing political pressure from the
United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) whose
paramilitary mercenaries conduct anti-guerrilla operations in that part of the department. Peace talks began in 2022, but in August 2024 the Colombian government announced an end to a six-month ceasefire, as the ELN had returned to its practice of kidnapping civilians for ransom.
First peace discussions: 2002–2017 Early contacts Previous contacts continued during the early days of the
Álvaro Uribe Vélez government but eventually were severed, neither party being fully trusting of the other. Only in mid-2004 did the ELN and the government began to make a series of moves that, with the announced mediation of the
Vicente Fox government of
Mexico, lead to another round of exploratory talks. On 24 July 2004 the ELN apparently abducted
Misael Vacca Ramírez, the
Roman Catholic Bishop of Yopal, though their reasons were not clarified. The kidnappers said that Ramírez would be released with a message, but "
Francisco Galán", a senior jailed ELN commander who has often acted as an intermediary between the government and the ELN's high command, said he did not know whether the group was responsible. The Bishop was subsequently released by ELN members, in good health, on 27 July, after his kidnapping had been condemned by
Amnesty International and
Pope John Paul II, among others. As far as is publicly known, he did not have any message to announce on behalf of the ELN. Eventually, the ELN questioned Mexico's participation in the talks, arguing that it did not have confidence in the actions of a government which voted against
Fidel Castro's Cuba during a
United Nations vote. This led the Mexican government to end its participation.
Exploratory talks in Cuba In December 2005, the ELN and the Colombian government began a new round of exploratory talks in Havana, Cuba, with the presence of the ELN's military commander "
Antonio García", as well as "Francisco Galán" and "Ramiro Vargas". This was considered the direct result of three months of previous consultations with representatives of different sectors of public society through the figure of a "House of Peace" (
Casa de Paz in Spanish). Representatives from
Norway,
Spain and
Switzerland joined both parties at the talks as observers. The talks ended by 22 December and both parties agreed to meet again in January 2006. After a series of preliminary meetings, the next round of talks was later rescheduled for early-mid February. During the February talks, which moved at a slow pace, the government decided to formally suspend capture orders for "Antonio García" and "Ramiro Vargas", recognizing them as negotiators and, implicitly, as political actors. The move was also joined by the creation of what was termed an alternative and complementary mechanism that could be used to deal with difficult issues and matters that concerned both parties, outside the main negotiating table. A formal negotiation process has yet to begin. On 23 March, the ELN freed a Colombian soldier that it had kidnapped on 25 February, delivering him to the
Red Cross, saying that it was a unilateral sign of good will. The ELN's "Antonio García" expected to visit Cuba from 17 to 28 April, participating in different meetings with representatives of several political, economic and social sectors. The third round of the exploratory talks would have originally taken place in La Habana, Cuba from 2 to 12 May. The third round of talks was later moved to take place from 25 to 28 April. Both parties reiterated their respect for the content and spirit of all previous agreements, and that they would continue working towards the design of a future peace process. The Colombian government and the ELN intend to study documents previously elaborated during the "House of Peace" stage, as well as documents from other participants and observers. Both parties expected to meet again after Colombia's 28 May presidential elections. On 30 August 2007 the ELN said that in the statement the dialogues in Havana ended without agreement because of "two different conceptions of peace and methods to get to it".
Restored negotiations Colombian President
Álvaro Uribe invited ELN spokesman "Francisco Galán" for new talks about peace on 3 April 2008. In March 2016 the resumption of peace talks between the parties were announced, but were put on hold until the release of all hostages still kept by the ELN. On 4 September 2017, the ELN and President
Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia announced a truce to begin on 1 October and to last at least until 12 January 2018. From 25 to 29 May the group had a ceasefire so that "those who want to vote can do so peacefully" during the
2018 Colombian presidential election. The ELN said it "reserve[s] the right to defend [themselves] in case of an attack" by security forces or other armed groups.
Continued conflict: 2017–2022 2019 Bogotá car bombing On 17 January 2019, the ELN performed a car bombing at the
General Santander National Police Academy in
Bogotá, Colombia. The truck detonated and killed 21 people, including the perpetrator, and injured 68 others. It was the deadliest attack on the Colombian capital since the
2003 El Nogal Club bombing and the first attack on the capital since the
2017 Centro Andino bombing. The ELN accepted responsibility for the attack and justified it as a response to the bombings made by the Colombian government during the unilateral ceasefire. As a result of the bombing, President
Iván Duque Márquez announced on 18 January that peace dialogue between the Government of Colombia and the ELN was officially suspended. Duque also demanded that Cuba extradite the ten ELN leaders that found refuge on the island nation during peace talks and the reactivation of their
Interpol Red Notices, and criticized
Venezuela for providing refuge for the ELN on the Colombia-Venezuela border. In response to the request, Cuba's Foreign Minister announced that Cuba would abide by the protocols of ongoing negotiations between both parties.
2019 Venezuelan protests The
Redes Foundation denounced in the Colombian Public Ministry that armed groups made up of National Liberation Army members and FARC dissidents, supported by the
Bolivarian National Police and FAES officials, murdered two Venezuelan protesters, Eduardo José Marrero and Luigi Ángel Guerrero, during a protest in the frontier city of
San Cristóbal, in
Táchira state. Other protesters were injured during the shooting.
2020 ceasefire over coronavirus In March 2020, the National Liberation Army (ELN) declared a unilateral one-month ceasefire during the outbreak of the
COVID-19 pandemic, to start on 1 April. General Luis Fernando Navarro asserted on 5 January 2021 that the ELN lost 700 members through targeted attacks in 2020, and that it still had 2,500 armed combatants.
Second peace negotiations: 2022–2025 Revival of peace talks On 21 November 2022, after the
election of
Gustavo Petro breathed new life into the peace process, delegates of the ELN and the new
Colombian government met in Venezuela to resume the peace talks that faltered in January 2019, after the Bogotá car bombing. The negotiations continued into the first week of December 2022, with representatives of the ELN and the Colombian government meeting for the continuation of peace talks in
El Ávila National Park in
Caracas. On the occasion, ELN chief negotiator Pablo Beltrán stated that Colombians have to work towards reconciliation and recreate a new nation in peace and equity and in a similar spirit Danilo Rueda, the High Commissioner for Peace in Colombia, stated that peace is not only a question of laying down arms, but a process linked to the need for change. After Mexico agreed to be an official guarantor to the peace process, it was chosen as the host country for the second round of talks, expected to begin in January 2023. With the addition of Mexico, along with Cuba,
Chile, Norway and Venezuela, there are now five guarantor countries to the peace process. Prior to the restart of peace talks, the influential ELN-commander Antonio Garcia criticised the approach of the Colombian government, stating that "the peace process cannot be used as an 'umbrella' for other issues". The former commander of the ELN, Carlos Velandia, dismissed this stance as posturing ahead of the next round of talks, which commenced on time in Mexico City, opining that the ELN wants to negotiate its own accord and not be lumped in with other groups. In 17 January 2025 the Colombian government suspended peace talks yet again after a massacre carried out in Tibú due to
continuous gunfights with FARC-EP dissidents which resulted in around 50 civilians killed.
Continuation of conflict: 2025-present Attack by the United States On 17 October 2025, the U.S.
Department of Defense carried out a strike on an alleged ELN drug vessel, killing three as a part of the
2025 United States strikes on Venezuelan boats and the
2025 United States naval deployment in the Caribbean.
Call for a ‘national accord’ On 9th January 2026, a statement posted on ELN's
X(formerly twitter) account said that after elections in Colombia this year, the group would like to work with the nation’s new government to design agreements aimed at defeating poverty, protecting ecosystems and “overcoming” the drug trade in rural areas. The statement was made after reports of the Colombian government and the UN planning to jointly conduct operations against the ELN. On 20th January 2026 in a published video ELN's head
Antonio Garcia proposed an independent commission to investigate the group’s alleged links to the drug trade, while affirming that while the rebels impose a tax on cocaine traders, they do not run any drug trafficking routes or cocaine labs. In a message on Sunday on the 15th of February President
Gustavo Petro accepted the proposal, while adding that the agency that verifies the rebel’s claims should be “scientific and independent of governments” and should deliver its findings to the
United Nations. He also urged the rebels to back efforts to replace coca crops in the northeastern Catatumbo region. Next week on the 23rd of February 2026, also on Monday, the ELN declared a unilateral ceasefire ahead of
next month’s high-stakes congressional elections. The upcoming elections have had already been marked by violence. ==Ideology==