Pubdate: Sat, 05 Feb 2000 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2000 Houston Chronicle Contact: Viewpoints Editor, P.O. Box 4260 Houston, Texas 77210-4260 Fax: (713) 220-3575 Website: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Page: 23A Author: John Otis U.S. BLACK HAWKS UP, FLYING IN COLOMBIA'S WAR ON DRUGS NEIVA, Colombia -- As a crop-duster darted between mountain peaks in search of bright red poppy fields Friday, three U.S.-supplied Black Hawk helicopters hovered nearby, their guns trained on the tree line. Lethal new weapons in Colombia's war on drugs, the choppers were sent to this South American nation in November as part of a U.S. military aid package. The helicopters ran their first anti-narcotics mission on Friday. "With these Black Hawks, the drug traffickers will tremble," said Gen. Rosso Jose Serrano, chief of Colombia's national police force. Three more Black Hawks are scheduled to arrive from the United States in March. In the meantime, the U.S. Congress is debating President Clinton's two-year, $1.6 billion aid proposal for Colombia that includes 30 additional Black Hawks and 32 upgraded "Super-Huey" choppers. Officials in both Washington and Bogota acknowledge that the need for sophisticated aircraft reflects the growing dangers in Colombia's controversial, five-year effort to eradicate opium poppies and coca leaves, the raw materials for heroin and cocaine. Attacks against spray planes and escort choppers have jumped dramatically in the past year. As police pilots swoop low over the narcotics crops, they often draw fire from traffickers as well as Marxist guerrillas, who fund their 36-year-old war against the government, in part, with drug-protection money. Equipped with 50-caliber machine guns and infrared sensors to spot the enemy on the ground, the Black Hawks provide a menacing escort for the unarmed crop-dusters. Unlike Colombia's aging fleet of Vietnam War-era Huey helicopters, the Black Hawks can fly at altitudes of up to 20,000 feet. That makes them more effective during raids on opium poppies, which grow high in the Andes Mountains of western Colombia. "I think air power will mean the difference in the war," said Colombian Defense Minister Luis Fernando Ramirez. In the last month, drug traffickers have shot at police pilots with rocket-propelled grenades on eight occasions, Ramirez said during an interview in Neiva, the capital of Huila state, which is infested with poppies. "We're seeing more and more attacks from the ground when the planes come in to fumigate," he said. Since the mid-1990s, dozens of pilots and helicopter crew members have been killed. "These operations are very difficult," said Serrano, the Colombian police chief. "It's suicidal." It's also unclear whether the fumigation strategy works. Last year, police fumigated 20,000 acres of poppies and 106,000 acres of coca. Yet farmers often replanted the crops almost immediately. As a result, Colombia produced 6.5 metric tons of heroin and 435 metric tons of cocaine in 1999. The South American country remains the United States' principle source for both drugs, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. By contrast, Ramirez said, a new policy by the Colombian air force to interdict drug aircraft has paid off. In the past two years, 36 drug flights have been forced down, and six planes have been shot out of the sky, he said. Ramirez likes the Colombian policy, because it focuses on high-level drug traffickers rather than poor farmers, who often grow drug crops just to survive "It's less confrontational with local farmers and directly hurts the wholesaler," Ramirez said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea