Pubdate: Sat, 21 Oct 2000 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2000 Houston Chronicle Contact: Viewpoints Editor, P.O. Box 4260 Houston, Texas 77210-4260 Fax: (713) 220-3575 Website: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: John Otis OUTGUNNED REBELS DEVASTATE COLOMBIAN TROOPS President Says Peace Talks Will Continue Despite Attack BOGOTA, Colombia -- In a devastating blow to the Colombian military, 54 soldiers and police were killed during fierce combat with Marxist rebels in northern Colombia, government officials said Friday. Another 17 police officers were feared dead or taken prisoner. President Andres Pastrana expressed "profound sadness" at the bloodshed and called the victims heroes. But he also said that peace talks with the nation's largest guerrilla organization, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, would continue, despite its attack this week on Dabeiba, about 200 miles northwest of the capital of Bogota. Army troops on Friday regained control of the town. "Colombia will not be intimidated nor will it back down" in the face of the guerrilla attacks, Pastrana said Friday. "We will not give up on the dream of a better world just because of some machine-gun fire." Still, the loss of life on Wednesday and Thursday came as a startling setback for the Colombian army -- the worst since FARC rebels routed an elite counterinsurgency battalion in 1998, killing 63 troops and kidnapping 43. Among those killed this week were 18 army troops and four crew members aboard a U.S.-made Black Hawk helicopter gunship. The chopper crashed Thursday while ferrying reinforcements to Dabeiba. As many as 800 FARC guerrillas attacked the town Wednesday. The army initially called the crash an accident because of winds that slammed the helicopter's tail into the ground. But army chief Jorge Mora, while still not ruling out an accident, said that rebel fire may have disabled the pilot as he was trying to land. When army units in the area responded to the crash, 30 more soldiers were killed in clashes with the guerrillas, said Gen. Gabriel Contreras, commander of the army's 1st Division. In addition, two police officers were killed during the FARC's 40-hour siege of Dabeiba. The guerrillas attacked the town with grenades, rockets and homemade bombs, leveling the police station and severely damaging the town hall, a school and a cathedral. "It was horrible," Francisco Oquendo, the Roman Catholic priest in Dabeiba, told reporters. "They destroyed everything in one night -- the priest's residence, the church and much of the town itself." Dabeiba is located in northern Antioquia state near the Panamanian border, considered a strategic corridor for arms and drug trafficking. The army and illegal right-wing paramilitary organizations had pushed the FARC, which earns millions of dollars annually by taxing and protecting narcotics traffickers, out of the region in recent years. According to Contreras, this week's attack on Dabeiba was part of a guerrilla strategy to retake control of the zone. The fighting marked the third time that the FARC has attacked Dabeiba in the past two years. "We are in the midst of a war that makes no sense," Dabeiba Mayor Antonio Varela told Caracol Radio of Bogota. In recent days, the guerrillas also have attacked Bagado, 110 miles south of Dabeiba. More than a dozen police officers there have been reported missing. Farther south, FARC units continue to battle paramilitaries in the drug-producing state of Putumayo. Two weeks ago, the Colombian government began airlifting food and medicine to the state. The government began peace negotiations with the FARC nearly two years ago in an effort to end a 36-year civil war. Although the 130,000-troop Colombian army has improved its combat performance in the past two years, it is widely considered to be too small and poorly trained to defeat the FARC, which has as many as 17,000 fighters. Washington, however, is making a huge effort to prop up the Colombian army, which will receive the bulk of an $862 million U.S. aid package, approved by Congress last summer. The aid includes 60 new helicopters, including 18 Black Hawks, which cost up to $12 million each and are considered a key weapon in the war against guerrillas and drug traffickers. The helicopter that crashed on Thursday was one of 15 Black Hawks that the Colombian army had purchased earlier from the United States. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager