Pubdate: Mon, 03 Jul 2000 Source: Akron Beacon-Journal (OH) Copyright: 2000 by the Beacon Journal Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.ohio.com/bj/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?abeacon RESCUE COLOMBIA? The Drug War Expands In The Wrong Direction Andres Pastrana understood the skittishness among many in Washington about investing more than $1 billion to fight drugs and guerrillas in Colombia. Memories of the entanglements in Nicaragua and El Salvador lingered. Wouldn't Colombia, fractured, corrupt and violent, promise worse? The Colombian president set about doing what any determined suitor would in the nation's capital. He launched a lobbying campaign. Dozens of visits to Washington. Trips for representatives and senators to his own country. In the end, he prevailed. The Senate and then the House approved a $1.3 billion package. President Clinton joined the cause long ago. How determined was Pastrana? Or desperate? Colombia has pledged to take extraordinary steps. Its military command has submitted the names of all 900 members of its new drug-fighting battalion to American officials for vetting. Washington wants to check for reports of human-rights violations or links to criminal activities. A significant portion of the aid will go for helicopters, deemed essential to jungle warfare. American officials will have the authority to review each mission. Latin American countries have long been jealous of their sovereignty, especially in their relations with the United States. In this case, Colombia is asking for help from the international community. All told, the Colombia Plan involves $7.5 billion aimed at political reform, crop substitution and counter-narcotics activities. European countries and international lenders also are putting up money. In theory, the plan has persuasive elements. Past efforts in Bolivia and Peru have driven much of the drug production to Colombia. The timing may be right for a stronger military effort aimed at the core of the drug industry that exists in the southern part of the country. Unfortunately, the realities of Colombia have proved daunting and little changed. If Pastrana represents an improvement over his predecessor, whose administration was linked to drug money, the armed forces remain under suspicion. They have a record of incompetence and brutality. Are they really prepared for a task they've neglected in the past? American officials have demanded that U.S. assistance be used exclusively to fight drugs. Others point out that practically speaking, the drug war can't be waged effectively without directly attacking guerrillas who control the countryside. Thus, the dilemma that Pastrana has work hard to ease in Washington: How deep will the American commitment become? The drug war hasn't exactly been ignored the past two decades. Small victories have been erased. Cocaine production has doubled the past five years, driven, in large part, by demand in the United States and elsewhere. The ruins of a Colombia ravaged by drugs present bleak prospects. They also pose a warning: Andres Pastrana will be back. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D