Pubdate: Fri, 09 Dec 2005 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2005 The Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117 Author; C. J. Schexnayder Note: C.J. Schexnayder is a freelance writer based in Lima, Peru. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John) COLOMBIAN DRUG WAR MIRED IN DOUBT Officials Say Crucial U.S. Aid Stems Trafficking; Critics Question Results BOGOTA, Colombia - The aircraft never stop flying over the coca fields in Colombia. Associated Press Colombian President Alvaro Uribe has been able to use U.S. aid to bolster security forces fighting the drug war. "We fly every day," said Col. Yamlik Moreno with the Colombia National Police's anti-drug division. "We have to be constantly alert because the drug trafficking never stops, and we have to be there to combat it." Since 2000, the U.S. has poured more than $6 billion into Latin America to fund anti-drug efforts, and the lion's share of that has gone to "Plan Colombia," the South American country's six-year anti-drug strategy. Officials in Colombia say the aid is crucial for keeping tabs on the drug trade as well as the leftist guerrilla groups that rely on it for their existence. "It is essential for what we do. Without the funding from other countries, we would have to reduce our operations by 90 percent," Col. Moreno said. "The drug traffickers don't have this problem. They have money, and they will keep trying to make more." Plan Colombia is slated to expire at the end of the year. But while both President Bush and Colombian President Alvaro Uribe have pledged to follow up with a similar anti-drug effort, there are growing concerns in both countries that the tangible results have been lacking in light of the expenditure. Those concerns are reflected in a recently completed report by the Government Accounting Office that is sharply critical of assessments - - particularly those from the office of U.S. drug czar John Walters - that the U.S. is winning the war on drugs. But Bush administration officials remain confident that there will be a successor to Plan Colombia that will be supported by the U.S. "The fear that this funding is going to end is not well placed," Mr. Walters said. Plan Colombia Plan Colombia was drawn up in the late 1990s by the government of former President Andres Pastrana in Colombia with the support of the Clinton administration. The plan prioritized aerial spraying to destroy coca crops and military operations against traffickers. It has cost almost $3.5 billion. According to the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, in the six years since Plan Colombia began, coca cultivation in Colombia has been more than halved to 80,000 hectares, or about 197,700 acres, and cocaine production fell more than 45 percent to 149 metric tons last year. Critics say the numbers are illusory since the cultivation figures have not adequately measured the amount of drugs each hectare produces and the production totals are highly uncertain. Moreover, there has been very little change in the demand for the drug on U.S. streets over that same time period. "These anti-drug policies have failed to address the real causes, the real structural reasons that Colombia produces drugs," said Francisco Thoumi, an economist at Rosario University in Bogota who has studied the drug situation in his country for more than three decades. "They confront the problem in a short-term limited way, and there is no reason to believe that will change with a new version of Plan Colombia." Growing Criticism Next week, the Government Accountability Office will release a highly critical report of the administration's efforts to assess tangible results from the U.S. efforts to stem the drug trade in Latin America. "While we want to keep a multipronged approach with our efforts in Central and South America, we need to ensure that the money that is being provided, for both military and nonmilitary efforts, is being used effectively," said Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, who requested the review. "Basically, it [the GAO report] is saying it is very difficult to prove the policies are affecting the overall drug trade. " The 52-page report says that the annual cocaine flow assessment is not useful for assessing performance of anti-drug initiatives and that efforts to track illicit drug use in the U.S. are fundamentally limited. It also found serious problems with the data for assessing interdiction operations and domestic drug use. The report also advises policymakers to prepare for a reduction in anti-drug funding because of the military commitment in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as the expected expenditures by the Department for Homeland Security in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Officials in Mr. Walter's office played down the findings of the report, saying that the data from their office is the best available and that many of the criticisms derive from the very nature of the subject under study. "Making sense of this information is a difficult challenge," said David Murray, a special assistant to Mr. Walters. "We are trying to make sense of a business whose very core element is hiding from plain view." Colombia's Future Mr. Uribe, who took office in August 2002, has announced that he will run for re-election next year, and most observers believe he will win. Recent polls show his approval rating remains above 75 percent. A key to his popularity has been the success of efforts to increase the number of security personnel fighting guerrillas, paramilitaries and drug traffickers. That policy has been credited with the dramatic drop in homicides and kidnappings in the country, but it depends heavily on U.S. financial support said economist Juan Carlos Echeverry with the University of the Andes in Bogota. Military spending under Mr. Uribe has increased to historic levels - approximately 4.5 percent of the country's GDP last year - and most of that has gone to increasing the military ranks. "The funds from abroad, particularly the equipment from the United States, has allowed the administration to focus on that one aspect," Mr. Echeverry said. While that strategy has done a great deal to improve Mr. Uribe's political situation, it has done little to resolve the lingering problem of the narcotics trade, Mr. Thoumi said. "Colombia has not had a consistent policy for dealing with the drug situation," he said. "There is no policy coordination. It is basically whatever the president does in connection with the United States." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman