Pubdate: Sun, 26 Mar 2000 Source: The American Press (LA) Contact: P.O. Box 2893, Lake Charles, LA 70602 Fax: (337) 494-4070 Website: http://www.americanpress.com/ COLOMBIAN DRUG EFFORT FAILING ON ALL COUNTS It appears that we haven't made up our mind about what to do about Colombia and its vast dope-producing industry. Until we do, we're liable to continue losing the battle against the drug cartels. More than 90 percent of the heroin that comes into this country comes through Mexico, and more than 90 percent of the heroin that enters Mexico comes from Colombia. Given those hard facts, it's difficult to comprehend the thinking of the Clinton administration in regard to Colombia. The White House has proposed a $1.6 billion package for Colombia that President Clinton said will not fix the problems of drug violence and corruption in that country but will bolster democracy there. The massive aid package will also support economic development and improve human rights in Colombia, the White House claims. ''It will make it better if the money's well spent, and it will dramatically strengthen and solidify the Colombian government in its struggle to preserve democracy, to preserve economic growth and preserve order in the country and be a good neighbor,'' Clinton said. The rest of the money would go directly into military aid for Colombia. The aid package is part of the budget plan the White House is presenting for fiscal 2001. While the proposed package appears to address a wide range of problems in Colombia, it isn't assured easy passage in Congress because it fails to point a clear plan for U.S. involvement in Colombian drug activities. Capitol Hill Republicans generally favor spending on counter-narcotics activities. The administration and Democratic lawmakers prefer spreading the money over a range of domestic programs, including treatment of addiction and focusing remaining funds into direct military assistance. We're promoting plans that are flawed. Interdiction -- intercepting illicit drug shipments before they reach Mexico or the United States -- has failed. Training and equipping special counter-narcotics battalions -- the package would buy 66 U.S. military helicopters for use by Colombian police in drug surveillance and eradication -- has failed. Funneling U.S. anti-narcotics money into Colombian police interdiction -- along with forced eradication of coca and opium crops -- has failed. Weaning Colombian farmers from producing narcotic plants -- the U.S. has spent millions but still can't match the money that drug lords will pay for the crops -- has failed. The Washington Office on Latin America, a human rights advocacy group, said the latest proposed package will worsen the crisis in Colombia, not contribute to its solution. ''More weapons and more soldiers have not, and cannot, defeat the source of illegal narcotics," a spokesman said. There are obvious -- and firm -- differences of opinion on the subject. Most of those opinions are based on past actions that haven't worked. Before Congress adopts any package for Colombia, lawmakers need to study failed programs of the past. Repeating a history of mistakes won't do. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck