Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Contact:  213-237-4712
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Pubdate: Mon, 10 Aug 1998
Author: Juanita Darling, Times Staff Writer

NEW COLOMBIAN LEADER FACING POLICY CONFLICT

Latin America: Pastrana vows to seek better U.S. ties, but he also   wants
peace with rebels who depend on drug trade.

BOGOTA, Colombia--U.S. officials have warmly welcomed new Colombian
President Andres Pastrana as a replacement for the drug money-tainted
administration of Ernesto Samper.

Still, just days into his term, Pastrana appears to be facing a conflict
between two of his major campaign promises: improving relations with the
United States and negotiating peace with Marxist guerrillas largely
financed by cocaine and heroin production.

The first showdown may well be over the prickly issue of eradicating opium
poppies, the source of heroin, and coca, the bushes used to produce
cocaine.

In meetings with the rebels before taking office, Pastrana said he would be
willing to consider withdrawing government troops from areas of rebel
influence--up to half the country. That would, in effect, end U.S.-backed
programs that dust drug crops with herbicides.

But hours before attending Pastrana's inauguration Friday, Gen. Barry R.
McCaffrey, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control
Policy, said: "Eradication is the central aspect of U.S. counter-drug
thinking. We have to stop the production of opium; coca; methamphetamines
in the United States [and] hydroponic marijuana in the United States. Drug
production is clearly a central element to our strategy that can't be taken
off the table."

Colombian analysts skeptical of the new administration had foreseen the
likelihood of a conflict even as Pastrana met with President Clinton a week
ago.

Roberto Posada, a columnist at the respected newspaper El Tiempo, said the
presidential meeting was "an indication of a better formal relationship. It
does not mean the U.S. is going to loosen up on its demands in relation to
drugs." Ultimately, those are demands that Colombia cannot meet, he said,
explaining, "It is impossible to get rid of the drug business while there
is still a demand." McCaffrey expressed frustration with Colombia's lack of
progress in stemming the flow of illegal drugs.

"Last year, there was over $100 million in U.S. support for Colombia," he
said. "It was the dominant [recipient] of U.S. counter-drug aid on the face
of the Earth. And in the last two year years, we have watched Colombia
become the No. 1 grower . . . of coca and . . . more than 60% of the heroin
seizures last year in the United States were of Colombian heroin." Further,
he said, drug production is closely linked to the rebels, who "tax"
narco-crops grown in areas under their control. "It has given them such an
enormous source of wealth that, arguably, their firepower, their pay
scales, their intelligence service are more sophisticated than that of the
forces that guard this democracy.

And that's a problem." Peter Romero, assistant secretary of State for
inter-American affairs, who was also in Colombia for the inauguration,
acknowledged that military defeat of the rebels is not likely "at least for
six or seven years." Nevertheless, last week's pre-inaugural guerrilla
attacks--which devastated a major anti-narcotics base and left a death toll
that continues to mount as wounded die and more bodies are found in the
dense jungle--undercut U.S. enthusiasm for peace talks.

"There's an emerging credibility gap that the guerrillas have," said
Romero. "They are talking about peace . . . and then they go out and launch
attacks throughout the whole country. Several hundred boys, essentially,
are killed so that they can say they control certain parts of this country.
It doesn't coincide with what they are saying publicly."

That hard line contrasted sharply with the conciliatory comments toward the
rebels made during the inaugural ceremony by Pastrana and Fabio Valencia
Cossio, president of Colombia's Congress, several of whose members are
currently in guerrilla hands.

"The persistence of war in Colombia reflects in large part the inability of
our political system to interpret the nation's wants and to bring about the
changes that will open the doors to a new country," said Valencia Cossio.
"Peace can be near." In a similar vein, Pastrana noted: "Historically, our
nation has based its identity on a homogeneousness that excluded [many
groups]. . . . Developments, particularly current ones, show us that those
who are excluded tend to demand with great violence the recognition of
their existence and their right to participate." Significantly, while
McCaffrey's lapel bore a black ribbon of mourning for the police and
soldiers killed in last week's rebel attacks, Pastrana and Valencia Cossio
wore green ribbons--a symbol of support for peace.

Copyright 1998 Los Angeles Times.

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Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)