Pubdate: Sat, 15 Jan 2000 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 2000 Associated Press Author: George Gedda, Associated Press Editor's Note: This article appeared on Globe.com accessable at the following http://www.boston.com/dailynews/015/world/US_training_Colombians_for_ant:.shtml The headline is exactly as published. US TRAINING COLOMBIANS FOR ANTI-DRUG STRUGGLE PRODUCTION TO COCA LEAF PRODUCTION; LEAD PROSPECTS UNCERTAIN CARTAGENA, Colombia (AP) A key ingredient of the Clinton administration's program to defeat Colombian drug traffickers is U.S. help in training up to 3,000 military personnel and 500 police officers before the end of the year, American officials say. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright exchanged views on the U.S. program with Colombian President Andres Pastrana on Friday night and planned another meeting today. Albright arrived here Friday, three days after the administration announced a two-year, $1.6 billion program to assist in the anti-drug fight and help Colombia in other ways. Officials who accompanied Albright here from Washington told reporters the first 950 recruits for an anti-narcotics battalion should be ready for duty by the end of this month, along with 200 police. An additional two battalions are expected to be ready by the end of the year, said the officials, speaking on condition of anonymity. All told, the U.S. training effort will involve 500 Colombian police as well. According to the plan, the battalions will provide security while police arrest narcotics traders, carry out crop eradication and dismantle drug-processing laboratories. Pastrana was the host of a dinner for Albright in this port city Friday night that also was attended by Nobel Prize-winning Colombian author Gabriel Garcia Marquez. According to some estimates, Colombia's production of coca leaf, the raw material for cocaine, rose 140 percent between 1989 and 1998 when it reached more than 80,000 tons. There was no opium poppy production in Colombia a decade ago, but now the country has become a major grower, with a reported output of 61 tons in 1998. With Pastrana at her side before the dinner, Albright was asked whether Colombia can turn the tide on narcotics production given its poor record over the past decade. She noted that ambitious programs by Bolivia and Peru have achieved major successes in recent years, and she said Colombia should be able to do the same. ''But it clearly takes hard work and determination,'' she said. Albright said she was very impressed by the plan Pastrana unveiled four months ago to deal not only with drug traffickers but also with Colombia's long-running civil war and its declining economy. Colombia's war has gone on for 35 years and has claimed 30,000 lives. Pastrana took office 17 months ago declaring that peace was his highest priority. But negotiations to end the war have progressed slowly. The latest round of talks began Thursday. One reason for the exploding cocaine production is an alliance between drug traffickers and the main guerrilla movement, known by their Spanish initials, FARC. The guerrillas control about one-third of the nation, earning huge payoffs from protecting traffickers' operations and taxing peasants who grow illegal drug crops. Other key player are rightist paramilitary units that often work in cooperation with the Colombian Army. A senior U.S. official said the paramilitaries are responsible for most of the human rights violations in the conflict. Albright planned to travel to Panama from Colombia this afternoon. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson