Pubdate: Tue, 29 Aug 2000 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2000 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611-4066 Website: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Forum: http://www.chicagotribune.com/interact/boards/ Author: Laurie Goering COLOMBIA, U.S. READY TO LAUNCH DRUG WAR Critics Fear for Region's Stability LA HORMIGA, Colombia Deep in the hills of southern Colombia, coca grows everywhere. The leafy bushes blanket the deforested hillsides, reaching right up to the only road that passes through this no-man's land, disputed by leftist guerrillas, right-wing paramilitaries and Colombia's army. This lawless region is the heartland of Colombian cocaine production and it will be ground zero in the U.S.-financed $1.3 billion war on drugs in Colombia. Supporters of the plan--including President Clinton, who will visit the coastal city of Cartagena on Wednesday to emphasize his commitment--say forced eradication of coca and direct confrontation with Colombia's powerful narcotraffickers is the surest way to stop cocaine from reaching U.S. streets and to bring peace to this nation riven by political violence. "It's very hard to imagine democracy surviving over the long term in Colombia unless there can be both some reversal of the grip of the drug traffickers and peace with the insurgents," said Samuel "Sandy" Berger, Clinton's national security adviser, who hopes the U.S.-backed offensive will drive Colombia's Marxist guerrillas to peace talks. Opponents argue that by sending as many as 500 U.S. military advisers into Colombia to fight a guerrilla war that they say can't be won, the United States risks slipping into another Vietnam, and inadvertently spreading Colombia's ugly drug violence to Venezuela, Ecuador and the Brazilian Amazon. "The governments of Colombia and the United States are blind and they are going to start a war here," warned Manuel Alzate, the mayor of Puerto Asis, a jungle town at the heart of Colombia's coca zone, in the southern provinces of Putumayo and Caqueta. "Americans are going to be in planes, in training centers. They will be in the war," he warned. For much of the past decade, Colombia has slowly descended into a drug- induced hell. After the nation's infamous Medellin and Cali drug cartels were broken, once-foundering left-wing guerrillas moved into the power vacuum, seizing control of many coca-growing areas and extorting protection money from remaining drug traffickers. Over time, the guerrillas--and the brutal paramilitary "self-defense" forces that have been created to combat them--have grown rich, well- armed and increasingly powerful, profiting from drugs, kidnappings and extortion. Today guerrilla and paramilitary groups effectively control almost 40 percent of Colombia, and coca production has exploded to more than 300,000 acres as plantations in Bolivia and Peru have been eradicated. Half of the world's cocaine now comes from the jungle plantations of Putumayo and Caqueta provinces. As the rebels gained strength, Colombia's notoriously weak military proved no match, and efforts by President Andres Pastrana to lure the rebels to peace talks largely have failed. Today, as rich Colombians flee and investors shun the troubled nation, now counted as one of the most violent in the world, Colombia has fallen into its worst recession in 70 years. Unemployment hovers at 20 percent, and most Colombians feel their nation, which has suffered 35,000 political killings in a decade, is sliding toward ruin. Now, with U.S. backing, Colombia is about to try a frontal attack on its problems. Under Plan Colombia, a program drawn up with U.S. advice, the United States over the next two years will spend $800 million to supply training and about 60 Black Hawk and Huey attack helicopters to two Colombian army battalions charged with helping police fumigate coca and destroy drug labs in Putumayo and Caqueta provinces. The plan includes U.S., Colombian and European funding to help farmers establish alternative crops and to promote development in rural areas. The goal is to cut Colombia's coca production in half in six years, something officials hope will effectively hamstring 15,000 rebels. "The idea is to create greater costs for the guerrillas," said Ernesto Borda, a political scientist at Bogota's Javeriana Catholic University. "If we attack coca, we attack the income of all these illegal groups. That could really create pressure for peace." "If we cut narcotrafficking, the guerrillas and the paramilitaries would be much weaker," added Luis Fernando Ramirez, Colombia's defense minister. "It's the way to solve our worst problems." While fumigation efforts may take up to a year to get fully under way, they almost certainly will start at places such as La Hormiga, a town of tin-roofed homes deep in guerrilla territory where coca grows in back yards, behind the nearby Santa Teresa community center, amid stands of bananas and yucca. Political murders occur every day here. A city councilman died last week when unidentified assassins invaded his home. The region's mayor, Nelson Astaiza, thinks hard before saying what he feels about the coming anti-drug effort. "I'm not sure how the other actors in the conflict are going to react," he says finally, a reference to the guerrillas who have made clear their opposition to coca eradication. What he knows for sure, he said, is that the coming war "is going to be very hard on people. Fumigation will be a social problem." A short drive outside of La Hormiga, Pedro Ariza, 40, a farmer in black rubber workboots, tends 7 acres of coca bushes on mortgaged land he bought six months ago. He is a typical coca grower, a peasant farmer trying to find some way to support his wife and two young daughters. Before coming to La Hormiga, he farmed coffee in the rich Cauca Valley, north of Cali, but was forced out when a virus destroyed his fields. He would like to grow something other than coca. But with bananas or yucca or passion fruit, he said, "you can't make it since there aren't cooperatives to buy it. What we lack is stable markets." Coca, on the other hand, draws a steady stream of buyers who pull up in front of his wood stilt shack and hand over $900 per kilo of cocaine base, which he processes in a little lab in a ravine out back. That pays for food for his family, and the fertilizers and pesticides he needs. If the fumigators come, he said, he'll have to move on again, probably to start more remote coca fields deeper in the Amazonian rain forest, further from the reach of fumigation planes. "I don't know politics. I'm just a producer," he said, hiking a muddy path among his hillsides thick with light green coca leaves. "But if they fumigate here we'd have to move because otherwise we'd go hungry." Even supporters of Plan Colombia concede that up to 40,000 peasant farmers could be displaced by the fumigation effort, with many likely to congregate as homeless refugees in the region's cities or move deeper into the rain forest, prompting new deforestation. Because Colombia's main coca zone lies on its borders with Ecuador, Peru and Brazil, refugee coca farmers may well spill across national boundaries, followed by the guerrillas that profit from their crops, a major worry for Colombia's neighbors. Brazil, in particular, is already beefing up border patrols in the Amazon and continues to express deep reservations about Plan Colombia. "If they fumigate in La Hormiga, the growers will move to small plots in the jungle where fumigation is impossible. All Amazonia will be coca within a few years," warned Alzate, the Puerto Asis mayor. "How many acres of rain forest are we going to lose to this battle?" What Alzate and others in Colombia's south would prefer to see is U.S. money going to fund crop substitution programs and basic development, an area of U.S. aid that has undergone dramatic cuts in recent years throughout the world. If remote and underdeveloped provinces like Putumayo and Caqueta had money to improve roads and infrastructure, build factories for products such as palm hearts, pay technical agriculture advisers and create export markets for their new crops, farmers could be persuaded to abandon coca without war, he and a host of human-rights officials in Colombia argue. At the base of Colombia's guerrilla and drug problem, they say, is enduring poverty and a lack of development that leaves peasant farmers little option but to grow coca. The upcoming eradication campaign, they say, will do nothing to address that problem. "What people really want is stability and there is no stability with coca," said Aldemar del Cristo, a mayoral assistant in La Hormiga. "Buy our yucca, our corn. Sign a contract with us. That will give us security. "If you had children and no job," he noted, "you'd be growing coca too." The problem with alternative crop programs, said Gonzalo de Francisco, the government's lead adviser on social programs within Plan Colombia, is that much of the jungle soil in Caqueta and Putumayo isn't suited for long-term crop production, and the guerrillas who control the region aren't likely to allow farmers to pull up coca and plant alternatives, even if that's what the farmers prefer. That leaves fumigation as the only real option, Colombian officials say. U.S. funding for the effort is coming despite deep concerns about human- rights violations by Colombia's military, which has been linked to massacres and has continuing ties to paramilitary groups, rights officials charge. Clinton last week overrode those concerns, saying sending the money to Colombia was a matter of national security, and that Pastrana's government had taken steps to improve the army's human-rights record. Jose Miguel Vivano, the head of Human Rights Watch/Americas, called the decision a clear case of rights issues being subordinated to anti-drug policies. Now the worst elements of the Colombian military "will feel some sense of endorsement by the gringos, and that is extremely dangerous," he said. Equally worrying to many Americans is the possibility that sending U.S. funds and advisers to Colombia could ultimately lead to deeper involvement in what many see as an unwinnable guerrilla war. U.S. officials deny that could happen and say training Colombians and pushing the guerrillas to a peace accord--not winning a war against them--is their goal in Colombia. "There is no plan, and there is no proposal, and there is no idea of committing American forces in Colombia to do anything but ... provide training," insisted Thomas Pickering, U.S. undersecretary of state for political affairs, at a recent Washington briefing. Just how bad things have gotten in Colombia is evident in the itinerary for Clinton's visit Wednesday. The U.S. president, the first to visit Colombia in nearly a decade, will stay only five hours. He will not venture to the relatively insecure capital of Bogota, remaining instead in the Caribbean vacation city of Cartagena with his entourage. - --- MAP posted-by: John Chase