Source: Associated Press Copyright: 2000 Associated Press Pubdate: Tue, 05 Jun 2001 Author: George Gedda, Associated Press Writer U.S.: DRUG FLIGHTS HAVE INCREASED WASHINGTON (AP) - A top State Department official acknowledged Tuesday that U.S.-bound cocaine flights from Peru and Colombia have increased since a CIA program to track the flights was suspended in April. The suspension was ordered after a Peruvian military plane, in a case of mistaken identity, shot down an American missionary plane on April 20. Veronica Bowers, a 35-year-old missionary, and her 7-month-old adopted daughter, Charity, were killed. Her husband, his 6-year-old son and the pilot survived a crash landing. Peter Romero, assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, said, "I think we share the view that while we don't have the exact number of suspected flights, they (drug traffickers) are up and they are taking advantage of the stand-down." Romero spoke to reporters ahead of his retirement from the Foreign Service later this week. Otto Reich, a former ambassador to Venezuela, has been designated as Romero's successor but has not been confirmed. Lino Gutierrez, a career diplomat who has served as Romero's deputy, will replace Romero on an interim basis. The Bush administration had been silent on whether traffickers had stepped up cocaine deliveries following the suspension. But Colombian officials in Washington had said that illicit drug flights have increased since the suspension. Colombian Air Force Gen. Hector Fabio Velasco confirmed the trend publicly last month. Even in the absence of surveillance flights, he said, the Colombian Air Force has been able to intercept some cocaine planes. To compensate for the suspended U.S. help, Velasco said, the Colombian air force is intensifying cooperation with the air forces of Brazil and Venezuela, where many of the drug planes take off. Romero said a government-wide review of the surveillance flights is continuing. "We want to ensure there will be no repeat of this in the future," he said, referring to the attack on the missionary plane. Romero said the surveillance flights have been a key tool in the anti-drug war. "I really don't see any alternative."