Pubdate: Wed, 23 Feb 2000 Source: Minneapolis Star-Tribune (MN) Copyright: 2000 Star Tribune Contact: 425 Portland Ave., Minneapolis MN 55488 Fax: 612-673-4359 Feedback: http://www.startribune.com/stonline/html/userguide/letform.html Website: http://www.startribune.com/ Forum: http://talk.startribune.com/cgi-bin/WebX.cgi Author: George Gedda / Associated Press Writer NO QUICK VICTORY SEEN IN DRUG WAR WASHINGTON (AP) -- With production of illicit narcotics rapidly expanding in Colombia, President Clinton' s plan to assist the country' s counterdrug program may not produce serious results for some time, a top U.S. official says. Thomas Pickering, the State Department' s third-ranking official, suggested Tuesday that the United States may have to be involved in Colombia beyond the two-year time frame for which Congress is being asked to provide $1.6 billion in assistance. " I think that we should begin to see some serious results in two to five years, " he said. " I think to know and believe that we will see serious results before then is to be too optimistic." Pickering, the undersecretary of state for political affairs, briefed reporters Tuesday on his recent swing though Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador and Brazil. The alternative to U.S. involvement in Colombia, he said, " is a greater and more rapid increase in production and transportation" of illicit narcotics. Colombia is in the throes of not only a war against narcotraffickers but also leftist guerrillas who support them. The American aid program is focused on counterdrug activities, but resources also are planned for democratic development, economic revival and protection of human rights. The fate of the administration' s request is uncertain on Capitol Hill. Hours before Pickering spoke, a new CIA estimate showed that opium poppy production was up 23 percent last year in Colombia. The CIA said last week that production of coca -- the raw material from which cocaine is made -- was up 20 percent. " If left unchecked, the rapid expansion of drug production in Colombia threatens to significantly increase the global supply of cocaine and heroin, " White House drug control chief Barry McCaffrey told the Senate Finance international trade subcommittee. Pickering, who has become the point man for the administration in Colombia, brings to the assignment his experience in El Salvador during the first half of the 1980s when the country was undergoing a civil war that featured the involvement of both the Soviet Union and Cuba on behalf of a leftist insurgency. Pickering knows that it is unrealistic to expect quick fixes in such situations. He noted that six years passed between the opening of the peace process in El Salvador and a final settlement. In Colombia, the situation is perhaps more complex because of the vast resources of the guerrillas as a result of their profitable ties with drug traffickers. He said it was difficult to predict how much more the United States should contribute to Colombia beyond the current two-year request that is before Congress. " My thinking is, and certainly the thinking within the government is, that we will need something above what has been for the past 10 years the normal amounts provided to Colombia, " Pickering said. After that, he said, " I expect that the struggle will go on, and I expect that we will continue to be in a position, as long as Colombia is able to lead the fight, to support them as long as others are prepared to help to support them." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk