Pubdate: Wed, 22 Mar 2000 Source: Herald, The (UK) Contact: http://www.theherald.co.uk/ Author: Ian Bruce OPED: COLOMBIA CONJURES GHOSTS OF VIETNAM To those old enough to remember how American involvement started in Vietnam, the commitment of US special forces' "advisers" to help the beleaguered Colombian army fight drug traffickers and Marxist guerrillas leaves an ominous sense of deja vu. The potential mission-creep factor is already sending a chill through the Pentagon's military hierarchy. As one officer put it yesterday: "We are understandably wary of becoming ensnared by the initiatives of politicians who have never had to hump a rifle and a 60lb pack through a jungle." The US has pledged an extra ?1bn in military aid to Colombia over the next two years. Most of it will be spent, ostensibly, on transforming three battalions of local volunteers into an "elite" counter-drug force, complete with 63 Black Hawk transport helicopters and Huey gunships. They will, however, then be used to help assault the inappropriately-named demilitarised zone held by FARC in the southern highlands. The largest of several private armies who control huge tracts of the country, the Marxist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia dominates a territory twice the size of Wales, and can field 17,000 well-armed and combat-experienced men and women to defend it. The FARC neither grows nor processes the coca leaf which represents the basic ingredient for cocaine. However, it holds administrative sway over the area which provides two-thirds of the world's supply and 80% of the illegal narcotic entering the US. In return for stamping out freelance kidnapping and intimidation - both Colombian participation sports - the organisation levies taxes on both growers and buyers, netting an average ?300m a year to fund its war against the government and rival right-wing paramilitaries to the north. All attempts to clear the FARC's jungle stronghold have ended in failure. The guerrillas are better armed and infinitely better motivated than the reluctant conscripts sent against them. The civilian population of the region also has no great love for a government going through the motions of trying to stamp out the coca trade which is their principal, and often only, income. Despite all US and United Nations programmes to persuade farmers, known as cocaleros, to switch crops to something less addictive, coca leaf remains the most profitable. A grower nets about 60p a kilo for leaf, twice what he can reap from coffee and three times as much as from bananas. Some have even diversified into poppy cultivation, the bottom rung of the heroin network currently dominated by Afghanistan and Pakistan. The opium derivative grown in the rarefied atmosphere of the Andes has a purity which gives it added value on the global market. The powerful right-wing AUC paramilitary group, which allegedly takes its orders from senior officers in the Colombian military, pledged earlier this week to scale back attacks on its left-wing rivals in return for political recognition. It not only controls coca fields, but also operates the factories which turn it into paste as the next stage before its refinement into "nose candy" for American addicts. There is some evidence to suggest that it buys immunity by paying kickbacks to the commanding officers of the units tasked with its elimination. President Andres Pastrana, who has tried desperately to bring the warring factions to peace negotiations since he took over the fragmented country in 1998, hopes to negotiate soon with the second-largest paramilitary organisation, the ELN. However, the FARC, which outnumbers the other two groups by more than three to one, accuses its rivals of "state-sponsored terrorism" and refuses to deal with them, apart from through the barrel of an assault rifle. More than 35,000 people have died in the four-sided conflict in the past 10 years. The US has sent General Barry McCaffrey, a Gulf War hero, to mastermind its drugs crusade. His other remit is to ensure that the money spent on military assistance does not end up boosting Colombian generals' retirement funds. McCaffrey is blunt about the challenge: "Colombia is a drug disaster," he said. His team consists of a small number of Green Berets advisers whose instructions are to avoid direct combat. They are there simply to train local troops in jungle warfare techniques. It looks like an impossible task. To curtail coca cultivation, the farmers have to be offered a better alternative. Lacking the funds for that form of bribery, the next best option is to target the buyers and distribution networks. But that requires the co-operation of military authorities whose hearts and wallets have not been won over. The danger then, despite all protestations to the contrary, is that a gung-ho administration in the White House might decide to commit US combat units to do the job the locals cannot handle. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg