Pubdate: Fri, 17 Aug 2001 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2001 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.herald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Juan O. Tamayo ANTI-DRUG PILOTS DECRY IMAGE OF LAWLESSNESS We're Not Rambos, Aerial Sprayers Say BOGOTA, Colombia -- Bob and Mark want everyone to know they're not the "Godless and Lawless Rambos" portrayed by the local press. They are simply American pilots who spray herbicides on Colombia's coca and opium poppy fields. They call themselves "aerial applicators," a term that may be technically correct but hardly suggests the occasional moments of sheer terror faced by pilots who glide 200 miles per hour at tree-top level while gunmen protecting illegal crops fire at them from below. "The adventure for me has worn off," said Mark, a four-year veteran of the spray campaign whose aircraft has been hit by gunfire seven times, including one attack in 1999 in which it received eight bullet impacts. It's just a job, insists Bob, who, like Mark, is employed by DynCorp Inc., a U.S. government contractor based in Virginia. They admit it may be a tad dangerous, but it's steady work and well paid -- "with the added value of having an effect on drugs." In Washington, critics are trying to limit the role of firms such as DynCorp in the war on drugs, saying they are proxies for the U.S. military in regions where American public opinion would not allow direct U.S. engagement. In Bogota, they are sometimes painted as wild guns-for-hire. A recent headline in the newsweekly Semana trumpeted: "MERCENARIES -- The Gringos who spray . . . are a band of Godless and Lawless Rambos." But in a rare meeting with reporters, four DynCorp employees portrayed themselves as average Americans, with wives, kids and grandkids, who watch TV, listen to music and play volleyball in between not-so- dangerous spray missions. No photos were allowed, and the men could only be identified by their first names under the rules for the interview, arranged by the U.S. Embassy to erase some of the mysteries and controversies surrounding DynCorp's work. Sporting longish hair, loose civilian clothes and some incipient pot bellies, Bob, Mark, helicopter pilot Thomas and Colombia program administrator Keith looked far from the stereotype of derring-do mercenaries. DynCorp has 335 employees in Colombia, half of them U.S. citizens, working under the spray contract with the State Department's International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Bureau, said Keith, 44, from Virginia. TWO WEEKS OFF AND ON But only 90-100 American pilots and mechanics are here at any one time, usually working two weeks on and two off with OV-10 twin engine spray aircraft. Most of the Americans come from commercial aviation rather than the U.S. military, Keith added. Bob, a 47-year-old father of three from Texas, and Mark, 44, a Southerner and father of one, spoke about the dangerous side of piloting their OV-10s almost as if it was not very important. Mark said armoring on the cabin and engine compartment protected him on the multiple occasions when his plane was hit, but smoke filled his cabin one time. After he landed safely, Mark said, he wondered "how much lead must have been in the air" to have been "tagged" eight times. Mark didn't tell his wife about the incident, but she read about it in an e-mail sent to Mark, "and we had a family discussion about it." He offered a weak smile and a so-be-it shrug. 12,000 HOURS Bob, with 12,000 flying hours under his belt and past work in DynCorp eradication programs throughout Latin America, said his plane had been hit twice in the past four years -- but noted that four friends had died in U.S. crashes in the same period. And he was once shot at in the United States -- by an angry farmer awakened from his early morning sleep by the spraying run. Five DynCorp pilots have died since 1995: three Americans killed in accidents, one Colombian shot down and killed and another Colombian who crashed. All pilots are issued pistols as part of their survival vests. Thomas, the "Huey" helicopter pilot with what seemed the most dangerous job - -- flying the search and rescue (SAR) chopper that lands and helps downed aircraft, if needed amid gunfire -- said he'd never been required to do that so far. Four other U.S. piloted helicopter gunships protect each mission, though the gunners are Colombian policemen. Instead of adventure, the pilots seemed attracted to Colombia by the steady paycheck, the security offered by the SAR crews and the chance to work with the cutting-edge satellite technology that guides their spray missions. In the United States, Bob said, aerial application is seasonal work, requiring the pilots to move around the country and work on contracts that offer no retirement or health benefits. Crashes grow more common toward the end of the day and the end of the season, as pressures mount to finish the job on time, and "we never know how much we're going to earn until the end of the year." Income for work in the United States ranges from $40,000 to $120,000 a year, Bob said. But with DynCorp they have steady employment, a SAR helicopter never more than 10 minutes away, retirement benefits and health insurance. Salaries have been reported to range from $90,000 to $110,000 per year. And the two weeks at home give him quality time with his family, said chopper pilot Thomas, 50, the only army veteran in the group, a father of three and grandfather of seven. "I really take offense at the term mercenary. We're here to perform a job . . . just applying a chemical to a crop," said Mark. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager