Pubdate: Wed, 12 Jan 2000 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2000 San Jose Mercury News Contact: 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190 Fax: (408) 271-3792 Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: FRANK DAVIES U.S. READIES HUGE AID PACKAGE FOR COLOMBIA $1.3 billion to provide training, equipment for anti-drug fight BY FRANK DAVIES Mercury News Washington Bureau WASHINGTON -- The Clinton administration Tuesday announced a massive infusion of aid to Colombia, totaling $1.3 billion during the next two years, to cripple drug production and smuggling, and shore up a government besieged by guerrilla attacks and economic woes. ``Strengthening stability and democracy in Colombia, and fighting the drug trade there, is in our fundamental national interest,'' President Clinton said. ``We must and we will intensify this vital work.'' At a White House briefing, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and drug czar Barry McCaffrey described the aid package as a ``good mix'' of military, security and economic assistance. They also defended it as a necessary part of the U.S. drug war. ``This will not just benefit the 36 million people of Colombia, but American children,'' McCaffrey said. ``We are experiencing an explosion of cocaine and heroin from Colombia flowing to the 4.1 million Americans addicted to drugs.'' The biggest component in the aid proposal would help the Colombian military and national police take aim at narco-traffickers and guerrilla groups that control about 40 percent of the country, especially in the south. Coca production in that region has almost doubled in the past two years. About $600 million in the next two years would help train and equip two more anti-drug military units to join a battalion that is about to begin operations. The aid package includes 30 Black Hawk helicopters and 18 more Huey copters for the units. Albright said the assistance is aimed at combating drug traffickers, not insurgents -- a difficult distinction in a messy civil conflict in which they often work together. ``This is not a counterinsurgency program,'' Albright said. ``This is a counternarcotics program.'' Republican leaders on Capitol Hill have accused the administration of foot-dragging in preparing the aid package, which was requested by Colombian officials last summer. Two GOP senators, Paul Coverdell of Georgia and Mike DeWine of Ohio, proposed their own aid plan in the fall. But those two senators were generally supportive Tuesday. ``I finally welcome the White House plan to provide timely and needed assistance,'' DeWine said. ``There is simply too much at stake not to take action.'' Administration officials said the aid plan was worked out in detail with President Andres Pastrana, whose $7.5 billion Plan Colombia seeks significant help from the United States, European nations and international agencies. They also said Tuesday's announcement may give Pastrana more leverage in his efforts to negotiate with guerrilla groups. McCaffrey emphasized the importance of aid to Colombian farmers to wean them off coca production. Such programs, along with crop eradication, have scored major successes in Bolivia and Peru, but also pushed more of the drug production into southern Colombia. Colombia already receives about $150 million a year in U.S.aid, ranking behind only Israel and Egypt as an aid recipient. But U.S. officials said the big boost in aid would not lead to an increase in U.S. forces stationed in Colombia. There are about 130 U.S. military and security personnel in Colombia, with many of them involved in training programs. Several organizations that monitor human rights warned Tuesday that the Clinton proposal was too heavily weighted toward military and security aid, citing links between the Colombian military and paramilitary groups that have committed massacres. ``U.S. military aid to Colombia is tantamount to underwriting the Colombian `dirty war,' '' said Carlos Salinas of Amnesty International. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck