Pubdate: Sun, 03 Sep 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: Jared Kotler, Associated Press

PLANE CRASH KILLS SEVEN AMID CLASH IN COLOMBIA

PEREIRA, Colombia -- A U.S.-made Colombian warplane crashed Saturday amid 
heavy fighting between leftist rebels and government forces, killing seven 
airmen, the military said.

In addition, at least eight government soldiers and 12 rebels died in the 
ground combat at a communications complex on Mount Montezuma, 155 miles 
west of the capital, Bogota. The clash was the bloodiest since President 
Clinton visited Colombia on Wednesday to support President Andres 
Pastrana's fight against drug traffickers and leftist rebels who protect 
drug crops.

The AC-47 Vietnam-era gunship outfitted with .50-caliber machine guns 
crashed into an 11,200-foot-high mountain at about 5 a.m. as it returned to 
base from the fighting, the Colombian air force said in a communique. There 
were no survivors, and all those aboard were Colombian, the air force said.

Air Force Gen. Jairo Garc(acu)a insisted the plane was not shot down. He 
said poor visibility may have been a factor, because the crash happened 
before dawn in cloudy weather.

The plane, of a type that was used by U.S. forces during the Vietnam War 
and nicknamed "Puff the Magic Dragon,'' had been providing fire support for 
the ground troops.

The Pentagon had equipped the plane with so-called forward-looking infrared 
sensors, or FLIRS, and night-vision goggles, said Gen. Hector Velasco, 
Colombia's air force chief. The pilots had been trained in night-flying 
either by U.S. military pilots or by other Colombian pilots who had 
received training from the Americans, Velasco told reporters.

The fighting began Friday afternoon at the communications complex, which 
controls cellular and other telephone links to much of western Colombia.

About 600 rebels of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia attacked 
about 50 government soldiers at the complex, said Gen. Fernando Tapias, 
commander in chief of Colombian military forces. The rebels were repelled 
by the government forces and reinforcements from the provincial capital, 
Pereira, military officials said.

Saturday, President Pastrana, Tapias and other military brass visited the 
communications complex aboard a U.S.-made Black Hawk helicopter. Tapias 
said government troops were still clashing with retreating rebels nearby.

Army helicopters ferried some of the rebel dead to a base in Pereira. Five 
rebel corpses -- four men and a woman -- were laid out on the grass under a 
huge sheet. The number of confirmed rebel dead stood at 12.

Tapias called the rebels' assault an "all-around failure" because they 
failed to capture the complex. Up to 50 rebels may have died, he said.

Five government soldiers based at the communications complex were killed in 
the fighting, said army Gen. Nestor Ramirez Mejia. In addition, battalion 
commander Lt. Col. Jorge Sanchez Rodriguez and two of his soldiers died 
when rebels ambushed them as they rushed to reinforce the complex, he said.

The rebel group, called by its Spanish acronym, FARC, has been fighting 
Colombia's government for some 36 years. The rebels control vast tracts of 
southern jungle, financing their insurgency by taxing peasants who grow 
drug crops and protecting drug traffickers.

Under a new $1.3 billion U.S. aid package, Washington is sending 60 combat 
helicopters to government security forces, and elite U.S. troops are 
training Colombian anti-narcotics army troops.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens