Pubdate: Tue, 26 Sep 2000 Source: Saint Paul Pioneer Press (MN) Copyright: 2000 St. Paul Pioneer Press Contact: 345 Cedar St., St. Paul, MN 55101 Website: http://www.pioneerplanet.com/ Forum: http://www.pioneerplanet.com/watercooler/ Author: Philip Terzian Note: Terzian is the associate editor of the Providence Journal (RI). He writes a column from Washington, DC. This column first appeared there and is archived at http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n1430/a07.html. U.S. DRUG ADDICTION RENDERS COLOMBIAN INTERVENTION USELESS In the 1980s, right-thinking people had a clever slogan at their disposal: "El Salvador is Spanish for Vietnam." What they meant was American efforts to halt the spread of communist tyranny in this hemisphere were doomed to quagmire status -- and, presumably, failure. They were wrong, as it turned out. But many of the same people who complained about Reagan-Bush administration policy in El Salvador and Nicaragua are now conducting Clinton administration policy in Colombia. And that policy, as the president made clear, is to use American troops to accomplish what the Colombian military has failed to do: reclaim the countryside from insurgent (communist) control, and in so doing, eradicate Colombia's lucrative coca and cocaine trade. This two-tiered approach -- soldiers winning the minds and hearts of peasants, agronomists persuading farmers to plant new crops -- has the endorsement of Congress, which has authorized a $7.5 billion plan to address the problem of drug trafficking in Colombia. It certainly has the blessing of the nation's drug czar, Gen. Barry McCaffrey, who frequently complains about the hemispheric drug pipeline. And in a passive sort of way, it has won the support of the nation's press, which knows that drugs are manifestly not a good thing, and Colombia is a country somewhere in South America. The idea that $7.5 billion (and counting) may be headed toward the rat hole has either not occurred to anyone, or is too painfully obvious to contemplate. For the Clinton plan makes little strategic sense. During the past three decades, the Colombian armed forces have been at war with Marxist rebels, and the scorecard is not encouraging: The coca-growing half of the country remains under communist control; the Colombian judiciary is (literally) under fire. The army has even allied itself with paramilitary death squads, who burn villages, crops and people -- all to no avail. The idea that squadrons of U.S. advisers, in uniform and out, will make a difference is as illusory today as it was when John Kennedy went to war in South Vietnam. Neither does the Clinton plan make economic sense. The farmers in rural Colombia who raise coca for the drug trade do so for two plausible reasons. First, they are ordered to grow such crops by communist rebels who would kill them if they refused. And second, if you were a starving Colombian farmer, what would you do: Switch to "alternative agricultural development," in the delicious American phrase, or raise a crop that sells in an ever-expanding market? The question answers itself. Which brings us to Colombia's president, Andres Pastrana. Halfway through his term, Pastrana is delighted that the United States has chosen to come to the rescue of a country divided by war, riven by the drug trade, and suffering from record unemployment. The idea that the world's surviving superpower is willing to send troops, and spend billions, would be comforting to any head of state in distress. Pastrana is an honorable man, and considers U.S. aid essential to Colombia's survival. But Pastrana is honest, as well as honorable, and he recognizes one truth Washington cannot face. "Colombia can put a stop to drugs here at some point," he says, "but if the demand continues, somebody else somewhere else in the world is going to produce them. What we are talking about is the most lucrative business in the world." There are perils in the short term. From an American standpoint, no military campaign against the Marxist rebels will succeed with halfway measures, and that means more troops, more money and an escalating U.S. involvement in Colombia. From a regional standpoint, if the rebels are seriously challenged, huge armies of refugees will pour into neighboring Ecuador, Peru and Brazil, and conflict could spread. In the long term, however, the Colombian problem will be solved here at home. This is not a question of whether the United States has the will or resources to help President Pastrana and his successors. It is a question of recognizing what drives the hemispheric drug trade -- domestic American demand for drugs -- and whether the disease is really worth this cure. America is not threatened by disorder in Colombia, but Colombia is suffering because of America. So long as there remains an appetite for drugs, a market will exist, and the laws of supply and demand will prevail. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck