Pubdate: Thu, 31 Aug 2000 Source: International Herald-Tribune (France) Copyright: International Herald Tribune 2000 Contact: 181, Avenue Charles de Gaulle, 92521 Neuilly Cedex, France Fax: (33) 1 41 43 93 38 Website: http://www.iht.com/ Author: Karen DeYoung, Washington Post Service CLINTON GIVES A BOOST TO COLOMBIA DRUG WAR He Leads A Large U.S. Delegation On Visit CARTAGENA, Colombia - President Bill Clinton arrived here Wednesday along with a large delegation of U.S. cabinet and congressional officials designed to demonstrate strong bipartisan support for President Andres Pastrana and his battle with Colombia's drug traffickers and 40-year-old guerrilla war. Having returned to Washington only the day before from a four-day African tour, a tieless and jacketless Mr. Clinton appeared weary as he stepped off Air Force One and into coastal Cartagena's wilting heat with his daughter, Chelsea, on his arm. Virtually the entire Colombian government came from Bogota to meet Mr. Clinton and the heads of his White House staff along with Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, and Attorney General Janet Reno and an 11-member congressional delegation headed by the House speaker, Dennis Hastert, Republican of Illinois. With his wife, defense minister and armed forces chief at his side, Mr. Pastrana, in a short-sleeved pink shirt and sunglasses, greeted the president. The emphasis in both delegations was on informality as an indication of the closeness of the bilateral relationship, and in recognition of the temperature of 32 degrees centigrade (90 degrees Fahrenheit) or higher. Cartagena has been blanketed by security this week. The city's 500-strong force has been supplemented by 1,000 additional police officers, while Mr. Pastrana's personal security force and several thousand Colombian soldiers and sailors have been patrolling offshore, overhead with helicopters and through the narrow, winding streets of this 16th-century Spanish city. Although Cartagena was calm, numerous bombings were recorded overnight in Colombia's other major cities, with responsibility claimed by the two major leftist guerrilla groups, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and the National Liberation Army. Both have denounced Mr. Clinton's visit and the aid program he has brought. Most of the aid comes in the form of military equipment and training to augment Colombian army and police force efforts to eradicate coca and poppy production in the south of the country. The guerrillas, who derive much of their income from taxing drug traffickers whose fields and cocaine and heroin labs they protect, have accused the United States of interfering in their decades-long war against the government and of launching a military intervention they charge will lead to "Vietnamization" in Colombia. Mr. Clinton and his delegation planned to spend eight hours on the ground. After arrival ceremonies at the Cartagena airport, the U.S. and Colombian delegations headed toward Cartagena's port, where a local business coalition has undergone a long and largely successful fight against contraband. After a brief, walk through the central city, the U.S. delegation was scheduled to return home Wednesday night. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens