Pubdate: Tue, 12 Dec 2000
Source: Christian Science Monitor (US)
Copyright: 2000 The Christian Science Publishing Society.
Contact:  One Norway Street, Boston, MA 02115
Fax: (617) 450-2031
Website: http://www.csmonitor.com/
Forum: http://www.csmonitor.com/atcsmonitor/vox/p-vox.html
Author: Howard LaFranchi

THE NEWEST FRONT IN THE LATIN-US DRUG WAR

Second Of Three Us-trained Battalions Graduated Friday.

PUERTO ASIS, COLOMBIA

Welcome to Putumayo, ground zero in the US-Colombia drug war.

On Friday, the second of three Colombian Army battalions graduated from an 
intensive training course, led by US Green Berets, here and is now ready 
for action. This weekend, more than 700 peasants kicked off a 
crop-substitution project in the region.

Just five years ago, aerial maps showed only sparse patches of bushy coca 
plants growing in this river-laced jungle region in southern Colombia. Then 
came what campesinos here call la bonanza, or the coca boom.

Today, with more than 150,000 acres of coca plants spreading over once-lush 
rain forest, Putumayo - a province roughly the size of Massachusetts - is 
the coca-growing capital of the world, supplying about 40 percent of 
cocaine sold in the US.

The boom in coca, the raw material for producing cocaine, has provided 
thousands of poor farmers with a cash crop, but it has also made for a 
lawless and violent province. As coca was squeezed out of Peru and Bolivia 
over the past decade, it oozed into Putumayo; the market demanded it be 
produced somewhere else. This vast territory outside government control, 
with ideal growing conditions and thousands of subsistence farmers 
desperate to eke out a living, was a natural expansion site.

Over the past decade, Putumayo fell under the de facto control of 
Colombia's largest guerrilla organization, the Colombian Revolutionary 
Armed Forces (FARC). The FARC have built up an estimated $500 million 
annual income in the drug trade alone by "taxing" traffickers for 
protecting their fields, labs, and landing strips. Colombia's right-wing 
paramilitary organizations have moved in too, seeking their share of the 
drug trade but ratcheting up the violence.

The combination of these elements - the coca boom, the government's long 
absence, the guerrilla involvement - explain why Putumayo is set to become 
the focus of an escalation in the US-Colombia antinarcotics drive.

US-trained battalions will take part in coca-elimination, both through 
manual eradication and large-scale aerial spraying. They'll try to 
dismantle cocaine labs and stanch the outflow of drugs. They're likely to 
confront guerrillas, and that prospect has fed a heated debate over US 
involvement in Colombia's 40-year internal war.

What is Plan Colombia?

The Colombian government's Plan Colombia is a $7.5 billion program designed 
to eradicate half of Putumayo's coca in five years and give southern 
Colombia the economic alternatives and institutions it needs to wean itself 
from the coca elixir. The United States has approved $1.3 billion over the 
next two years as its share of the plan.

Critics zero in on the fact that most of the US contribution is for 
military hardware and training - including 60 Blackhawk and Huey 
helicopters. US officials emphasize that, while the hardware is expensive 
and thus looks dominant in the aid package, the US will also be pouring 
more than $200 million into coca substitution and alternative development 
programs, as well as into projects like strengthening local justice systems.

Misgivings about the plan have made it slow for the European Union to join 
up. But in October, the Europeans - who are receiving growing quantities of 
Colombian cocaine in their cities - approved about $750-million in aid.

Who are the key players?

CIVILIANS: Subsistence farmers and others depending directly on the coca 
crop are an estimated 50 percent of the population. In recent weeks, 
several Putumayo mayors have been executed.

REVOLUTIONARY ARMED FORCES OF COLOMBIA (FARC): Colombia's principal leftist 
guerrilla group, which controls most of Putumayo and 40 percent of the 
country. The FARC makes most of its money through the coca trade; funds are 
also raised through kidnapping. Friday, they just ended what they called an 
"armed strike" in Putumayo, which had put a stranglehold on the region by 
prohibiting the transportation and entry of food and supplies. 15,000-strong.

PARAMILITARIES: Right-wing groups loosely allied as the United Self-Defense 
Groups of Colombia (AUC) which are supported by powerful landlords and drug 
dealers in a turf war against the Marxist rebels. Accusations circulate 
that, as the Colombian Army has cleaned up its human rights record, they 
have left much of their "dirty work" in the hands of the AUC. 5,000-7,000 
strong.

COLOMBIAN ARMY: Patrols Putumayo's largest cities, including Puerto Asis. 
Their actions against FARC guerrillas in Putumayo have, until now, been 
limited by the government's desire for peace talks with the FARC. As part 
of Plan Colombia, some 1,800 troops are being trained by US Green Berets to 
fight the drug trade.
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MAP posted-by: Terry F