Pubdate: August 8, 1999
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 1999 Los Angeles Times.
Contact:  (213) 237-4712
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/
Author: Juanita Darling, Times Staff Writer

U.S. IS LOSING WAR ON DRUGS IN COLOMBIA

BOGOTA, Colombia--In the last two years, U.S. anti-narcotics aid to
Colombia has tripled. But even as Washington has dispatched dollars
and soldiers to the drug war, Colombian cocaine cultivation has soared
50%. And authorities in Colombia and the U.S. project that it will
increase by that much again in the next two years.

Colombia--now the world leader in the cultivation of coca, the raw
material for cocaine--is producing more potent plants on more acres
than ever before, anti-narcotics officials say. Further, heroin
production hasn't shrunk at all, because drug producers increase
cultivation as fast as helicopters eradicate established poppy fields.

So while the U.S. commitment to Colombia has climbed, illegal drugs
have been a growth industry here. As a result, narcotics are flooding
U.S. and European streets--and Colombia's leftist guerrillas and
right-wing private armies are getting stronger, thanks to ties to drug
traffickers.

On Tuesday, Undersecretary of State Thomas R. Pickering, America's
highest-ranking career diplomat, is scheduled to visit President
Andres Pastrana to ask how this could have happened.

While Pastrana is expected to ask for yet more help, analysts worry
that increased U.S. involvement in the drug war could actually be
self-defeating, as the record of the recent past might indicate.

"At the end of the day, the United States does not care if we all kill
each other," said Alejo Vargas, vice rector of the National University
of Colombia in Bogota. "What matters to them is that we get rid of the
drug crops..

But crop-eradication efforts have become outmoded. For instance, crop
substitution programs are still directed at peasant farmers with a few
acres of coca, even though intelligence sources believe that most coca
is grown on plantations.

Thus, U.S. money becomes an alternative to making needed changes. For
example, military security expert Alfredo Rangel noted: "More
helicopters and more logistics do not produce results unless they are
linked to a change in the way that the [Colombian] army confronts the
guerrillas. . . . They do not take the guerrillas seriously as
strategists..

Instead, the army dismisses the rebels as narco-terrorists, in the
same way it used to call them bandits, he said. While the army repeats
past mistakes, the rebels get richer and more powerful.

Although the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, the
nation's oldest and largest rebel force, has for years "taxed" illegal
drug production in territory under its control, now the No. 2
insurgent force, the National Liberation Army, or ELN, has entered the
business, according to U.S. and Colombian officials. Right-wing
private armies, known as self-defense forces, also are increasingly
involved in the drug trade, officials say.

"What we are seeing is highly dangerous," said a Colombian
intelligence official.

End to Civil War Might Halt Drug Flow

In the long term, the consensus is that, to stop the flow of
narcotics, Colombia must negotiate an end to its long-running civil
war. That war has gone on for 35 years, and the rebels are now
estimated at 25,000 fighters divided among three guerrilla groups and
a number of right-wing private armies. Although the Clinton
administration does not assist the Colombian soldiers combating the
guerrillas, there are about 200 U.S. troops advising the Colombian
government on counter narcotics programs, thus undercutting a major
source of revenue for the rebels.

Still, after the collapse of nascent peace negotiations July 30, the
only immediate solution that officials are proposing to stem the
growth of cocaine and heroin production is more U.S. money and
cooperation in the drug war, which is becoming nearly
indistinguishable from the civil war.

Aid possibilities for Colombia have grown since late February, when
the U.S. State Department certified this country--for the first time
in three years--as a fully cooperating partner in the war against
drugs. Without certification, the United States was limited to
providing only aid directly linked to the war against drugs and some
training under a program that is supposed to benefit mainly the U.S.
soldiers who participate. Certification allows Washington to offer any
aid it wishes.

Further restricting aid, however, another law forbids helping or
training any military or police units with poor human rights records.
That includes all of the Colombian army except two existing battalions
and a third, special anti-narcotics battalion slated to finish
training by the end of this year. Thus, most U.S. aid has gone to the
Colombian national police.

U.S. aid has soared from $85.7 million in 1997 to $289 million this
year. In July, Colombia's new defense minister asked U.S. authorities
for $500 million in anti-narcotics funds next year.

"How long will it be before we hear the old refrain that our
credibility and investment to date requires ever-more-deepening
involvement?" asked George R. Vickers, executive director of the
Washington Office on Latin America, a think tank.

Indeed, U.S. drug czar Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey already has proposed an
additional $600 million to help Colombia fight drugs.

"The guerrillas are growing at an alarming rate because of drug
trafficking," said Gen. Fernando Tapias, commander of the Colombian
armed forces. "We need U.S. intelligence technology and logistics,"
such as helicopters and high-speed boats.

He pointed out that the rebels have outmatched the army in arms and
communications.

"The head of the FARC has a [satellite] phone," Tapias said. "I have
to climb to the top of a mountain and try to get a radio signal..

Colombian officials insist that they need more sophisticated equipment
to combat illegal drugs.

"We need to increase the area of fumigation and the amount of
fumigation," the Colombian intelligence official said. "We reduced
production 75% in the Guaviare [where U.S. civilian pilots conduct
intensive aerial spraying of coca plants], but that was offset by
growth in Putumayo, Meta and Caqueta," provinces that are out of range
of the fumigation planes.

Indeed, production from those provinces has more than offset
reductions in Bolivian and Peruvian coca. In 1996, Colombia produced
less than one-third of the Andean coca crop; now it accounts for more
than half.

The number of acres under cultivation increased from 150,528 in 1996
to 228,032 in 1998, according to U.S. government reports.

Colombian anti-drug officials say production has shifted from
subsistence farmers who grew a few acres of coca in Guaviare to
plantations owned by former cattle ranchers who live mainly in
Villavicencio, a town in the fertile eastern plains. Nevertheless, the
Colombian government's crop substitution strategy still focuses on
small farmers.

Besides the increase in acreage, Colombian law enforcement teams have
found that a more potent type of coca is now being grown in Putumayo.
"It's a variety that produces a greater quantity of alkaloids than
other species, so it can produce more cocaine," said another Colombian
intelligence official.

Potent New Plant May Raise Production

Colombians are not sure whether the new plant, believed to have been
imported from Peru, has spread to other regions. "The increase in this
type of illicit crop is pretty recent, and the results are still being
studied," said the second intelligence official.

Nevertheless, in February, a U.S. government report on Colombia
predicted that just by growing in existing coca fields, the new plant
could increase Colombia's cocaine production from 165 tons in 1998 to
195 to 250 tons over the next two years. Those calculations do not
take into account further possible increases from more efficient
laboratories or expansion of coca fields.

And new coca fields appear to be blooming. In addition to the
increased planting in the south, U.S. satellites have sighted new
crops of illegal drugs farther north, in the San Lucas Mountains and
Norte de Santander, near the Venezuelan border. Both areas are under
the control of the ELN, which until now has been a minor player in
drug crop production.

"We have another significant guerrilla group involved in using cocaine
as a revenue source," said a U.S. official. "Both areas are
significant--[more than 2,500 acres] each..

Besides cocaine, the Colombian intelligence official said he expects
to see a significant increase in heroin production if the ELN steps up
its participation in the drug trade. The type of mountainous terrain
that the ELN controls is more suited to opium poppies than to coca, he
said.

"This is going to give them more financial capacity," said the first
intelligence official. "This is dangerous because the ELN works a lot
better with the people than the FARC does. We are really going to have
a peasant insurrection.

"They have traditionally denied any ties to drug traffickers, but
lately, they have been attacked so strongly by the paramilitaries that
they are willing to take any financing they can get..

The paramilitary self-defense forces also are increasingly relying on
drug money for financing, U.S. and Colombian officials agree.

Officials believe that their ties with drug traffickers go back to the
days when the late Pablo Escobar was head of the Medellin drug cartel
earlier this decade. The self-defense forces deny those links, but in
the last three months, Colombian officials have found 12 cocaine
laboratories in the northern region under paramilitary control, the
intelligence official said.

Faced with these three well-armed, well-financed fighting forces,
Colombian military officials insist that they need more U.S. help.

"Otherwise," Tapias said, "what we are doing is barber's work: just
trimming the hair that will grow back."
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