Pubdate: Mon, 04 Sep 2000 Source: U.S. News and World Report (US) Copyright: 2000 U.S. News & World Report Contact: 1050 Thomas Jefferson Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20007-3871 Fax: (202) 955-2685 Feedback: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/usinfo/infomain.htm Website: http://www.usnews.com/ Forum: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/forum.htm Author: Linda Robinson COLOMBIA'S MESSY, COMPLICATED WAR Clinton Green-Lights $1.3 Billion For Drug Fight TRES ESQUINAS, COLOMBIABrig. Gen. Mario Montoya indicates 10 blue circles on a map of Colombia's southern coca-growing region, each representing a unit of up to 250 insurgents. Then, he points to a small red dot in the middle: "We are here." It is from this red dotthe Tres Esquinas Army basethat Colombia is launching its ambitious antinarcotics campaign, with 3,000 soldiers being trained by U.S. Special Forces and supplied with $1 billion worth of U.S. helicopters and other equipment. Their initial targets are the drug labs and transport points used by cocaine traffickers. But Colombia's Marxist rebels are increasingly involved in the booming drug trade, and Montoya, who commands the southern Joint Task Force, expects his forces will encounter them in the fieldor here. Twice, sometimes three times a week, Montoya drills his men to repel a rebel attack. "The reaction must be as instantaneous as this," says one officer, as he slaps an imaginary mosquito on his forearm. The messy, complicated war in Colombia has heated up in recent weeks, as Marxist guerrillas and right-wing paramilitary groups battle for control of territory rich in gold as well as the coca and opium poppies that yield an estimated $550 million a year. President Clinton plans to fly to Colombia's Caribbean tourist city of Cartagena on August 30 to show support for Colombia's antidrug efforts. Military Abuses. Already, disputes are arising about when and where the U.S. aid can be used. While the United States' desire to combat narcotics prevailed over its fear of being dragged into a counterinsurgency role in Colombia's 35-year-old war, Congress imposed eight conditions to curb human-rights abuses. Because human-rights groups accuse the Colombian military of aiding the paramilitaries, Colombia is required to immediately return any U.S.-supplied helicopter found transporting right-wing militias. Other conditions include requiring soldiers accused of abuses to be tried in civilian, rather than military, courts. Colombian military chief Gen. Fernando Tapias rejects the portrait of an abusive Army, pointing out that the armed forces rank just after the Catholic church in respected institutions in Colombia. "Would the Colombian people be supporting us if we were committing atrocities?" he asks. The right-wing groups are responsible for many of the abuses, including 93 massacres in the first half of this year. Tapias says the Army pursues them as well as the leftist guerrillas. Still, the Army does appear to have allowed atrocities to occur. The Colombian attorney general's office is investigating some officers, including four generals, for ignoring appeals from towns under attack from paramilitary forces. Over many months, militias threatened residents of Puerto Alvira before 18 townspeople were mutilated, killed, and incinerated in May 1998. The same bands had slaughtered more than 30 people in nearby Mapiripan in June 1997, and a colonel has been charged in that massacre for allegedly allowing the right-wing forces to pass through the military base he commanded. Tapias concedes that some officers may have failed to answer calls for help and that former soldiers have joined up with the paramilitaries, which pay handsome salaries of $300 to $400 a month in a country where unemployment has just hit a record high of 20.4 percent. But the main problem, he insists, is that "we don't have the capacity to act." Colombia's military is woefully underequipped: It has only 17 helicopters to cover mountainous jungle terrain three and a half times the size of Vietnam, and only 55,000 combat soldiers to take on an estimated 29,500 right- and left-wing opponents, far short of the traditional counterinsurgency ratio of 10 to 1. The rebels have pushed west in recent weeks, attacking isolated police posts with homemade mortars that also killed nearby civilians. After 14 policemen held off 300 guerrillas in Roncesvalles for 27 hours, they ran out of ammunition and surrenderedonly to be executed by the rebels. Three U.S.-donated Blackhawk helicopters, used in police antinarcotics operations, sat a mere 20-minute flight away. Under the rules, U.S.-supplied heli-copters may be used on emergency missionswhich, by some definitions, occur almost every day in this war-torn land. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake