Pubdate: Thu, 29 Jun 2000 Source: Guardian Weekly, The (UK) Copyright: Guardian Publications 1999 Contact: 75 Farringdon Road London U.K EC1M 3HQ Fax: 44-171-242-0985 Website: http://www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/GWeekly/ Page: 6 Author: Julian Borger US SIDESTEPS ITS DRUG PROBLEM WITH $1.3BN MILITARY FIX IN COLOMBIA Washington diary Julian Borger In Latin America last week is likely to be remembered as the week that the United States held its nose and plunged cheque-book first into Colombia's civil war under the emotive banner of an anti-drug crusade. The Senate voted to spend about $1 billion on mostly military assistance to the Colombian army. After talks with the even more gung-ho House of Representatives, this was raised to $1.3bn, making Colombia the third-biggest recipient of US aid in the world, after Israel and Egypt. The idea behind this open-ended commitment is to throw huge quantities of US military hardware and know-how into a short, sharp fix for the drug epidemic, theoretically enabling the Colombian army to clean out the vast coca plantations grown under the patronage and protection of insurgent armed forces controlling large areas of the country. All this sounds strikingly familiar. It is not the first time the generals have claimed to need just a few more helicopter gunships, another consignment of money, another handful of US advisers. The word "quagmire" has begun to surface in the corridors of Congress and in newspapers. Yet the aid package passed in an instinctively isolationist Congress with only a modest handful of dissenters. Perhaps the most surprising aspect of Plan Colombia (as this vast subsidy is grandly titled) is the faith it reflects in military solutions to intractable and complex social problems. The memories of Vietnam have clearly faded, as have the phantoms of Nicaragua and El Salvador. And it is not only in Washington that this belief reigns supreme. Next month the European Union states are due to chip in to Plan Colombia at the behest of the Colombian president, Andrés Pastrana, and are expected to match or better the US donation. So what are Plan Colombia's chances of reducing the number of drug addicts in the US or Europe, or making Colombia a less murderous place? Outside the offices of the US anti-drug czar, General Barry McCaffrey, and his European counterparts, the overwhelming consensus seems to be that it will do very little good, and probably a lot of harm. A recent study by the Rand Corporation, a US-based thinktank, concluded that each dollar spent on the treatment of addicts in the drug markets of Washington, London or Paris was as effective in containing the hard drug epidemic as $10 spent chasing the narco-traffickers in the jungle. The outgoing Colombian police chief, General Rosso José Serrano, a respected veteran who knows more than most about fighting drug lords, said before he retired this month: "We'd rather see drug consumption drop than get any of this aid." If demand for drugs could be curtailed, Serrano said, Colombia "could go back to what it once was, a place that grew coffee, where people worked hard and sweated for a paycheck". However, an attempt by Senator Paul Wellstone to divert $225m of the military aid bill to domestic substance abuse programmes was easily defeated last week by 89 votes to 11. The new money, equipment and trainers are supposed to help the army spray more herbicide from the air on the drug plantations, but it will inevitably poison all crops, including those non-drug staples that the farmers have been encouraged to grow by foreign aid programmes. Fumigation will also poison water, food and soil. Coca tends to be a resistant plant, and is sometimes the last crop standing after repeated spraying. The victims are likely to become willing guerrilla fighters or refugees. Ecuador has reportedly been warned to expect a flood of 25,000 Colombian refugees. There is also the question of who the new model Colombian army would be fighting. In Washington the enemy is portrayed as "narco-terrorists", but it is no secret that the primary targets will be the Farc (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) and the lesser known National Liberation Army (ELN) . Both are leftwing groups that control large zones of the countryside after temporary peace deals with President Pastrana. They tax all businesses in their region, so thrive on the cocaine producers, but they remain distinct from the industry that helps sustain them. Farc, the largest of the two groups with 17,000 guerrillas under arms, has been demanding fundamental land reform and income redistribution that is unacceptable to the political groups in Bogotá. Going to war with Farc will leave a heavy body count, but it is unlikely to do more than inconvenience the drug barons, who have shown their ability to shift production as circumstances dictate. Much of Colombia's cocaine is produced under the patronage of rightwing paramilitary groups sponsored by large landowners and the army, who are responsible for three-quarters of the country's human rights violations (according to US and Colombian estimates). Yet it is a safe bet that these paramilitaries will not be on the receiving end of any of the new US military hardware. The logic behind Plan Colombia is to be found in Washington more than in the coca fields of the Farc-run Putemayo region. In a US election year no one wants to be labelled soft on drugs. Addiction treatment centres can be portrayed as mere pandering to drug fiends, and do not embody the right kind of political machismo. The other driving force is cold cash and order books. The hottest debate behind the scenes in Congress has been whether to send 60 Huey helicopters, made by Textron, or 30 more expensive Black Hawk gunships, made by Sikorski. Lobbyists for both firms competed hard on Capitol Hill, as well they might as the helicopters will account for about $400 million of the total bill. This is likely to be the last issue settled in talks on Plan Colombia between the Senate and the House of Representatives. Whichever chopper is chosen, the result will almost certainly be escalation. A $1.3bn cheque buys a lot of fuel to add to the flames. It is unlikely to put them out. To do that, it may be necessary to spend some more money a little closer to home. - ---