Pubdate: Sat, 01 Sep 2001 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2001 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: John Otis U.S. OFFICIAL VOICES SUPPORT FOR COLOMBIAN PEACE EFFORTS BOGOTA, Colombia -- A top State Department official on Friday expressed strong support for Colombia's floundering peace negotiations with leftist rebels and said that U.S. aid to the war-torn Andean nation would continue to focus on anti-drug efforts. "No country supports the peace process more than the United States," Marc Grossman, the undersecretary of state for political affairs, told a news conference at the end of a three-day visit to Colombia. The comments of Grossman, the State Department's third-highest ranking official, came amid growing speculation that Washington may get more involved in Colombia's 37-year-old war against Marxist guerrillas. The rebels control much of the countryside and earn millions of dollars annually from the illegal drug trade. Last week, Peter Rodman, the assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs, said that the Bush administration was "rethinking" its policy toward the South American nation. In recent days, U.S. officials have lambasted the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, the nation's largest rebel group, for kidnapping civilians, meeting with suspected members of the Irish Republican Army and abusing a guerrilla-controlled sanctuary in southern Colombia. What's more, the 21/2-year-old peace process between the Bogota government and the FARC is at a standstill. But Grossman insisted that his delegation was simply reviewing the U.S. aid program, a hand-me-down from the Clinton administration. He indicated that few substantial changes are in the works. The focus, he said, would remain on Plan Colombia, the Bogota government's blueprint to wipe out cocaine and heroin production, provide peasant drug farmers with crop-substitution programs and strengthen state institutions. Shortly before the news conference, a senior U.S. official ruled out the possibility of American support for a counterinsurgency war. "From my perspective, there is no 'rethinking,' " the official said. The U.S. delegation included Gen. Peter Pace, head of the U.S. Southern Command and Bush's nominee for vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and about two dozen other officials. Secretary of State Colin Powell plans to visit Colombia on Sept. 11-12. The Americans met with President Andres Pastrana, military leaders and human rights groups. They also toured bases in southern Colombia where U.S. Green Berets have been training thousands of Colombian soldiers for anti-drug raids. Last year, the U.S. Congress approved $1.3 billion in anti-narcotics aid for Colombia. The Bush administration has requested another $880 million for Andean nations next year, about half of which would be earmarked for Colombia, Grossman said. Much of the aid has been funneled to the military and police, and there is a growing perception here that Washington is more interested in supporting the war effort than the peace process. In fact, in the wake of several army victories on the battlefield, many Colombians are calling for an all-out military campaign against the FARC. U.N. special envoy Jan Egeland, who has been monitoring the peace negotiations, warned this week, however, that hard-line policies could backfire. "Those who criticize the search for peace should carefully consider the alternative," Egeland told a news conference in Bogota on Wednesday. "You cannot shoot your way to reconciliation." Grossman said the Bush administration supports the peace process but added that Washington will continue to denounce abuses by the FARC, which extorts businesses, blows up oil pipelines and kidnaps hundreds of civilians every year. He also defended the U.S.-backed policy of fumigating coca and opium poppies, the raw materials for cocaine and heroin, a cornerstone of the anti-drug effort. Opponents of the campaign claim that it simply forces peasants deeper into the wilderness, where they plant more drug crops. Thousands of rural families have complained that glyphosate, the herbicide used by police crop-dusters, causes diarrhea, nausea and skin irritations. Grossman said that glyphosate is being applied in a diluted form that is safe. "Our aerial eradication campaign is sensible, and it is well documented to be safe," Grossman said. "We are not ashamed of it. We are actually quite proud of it." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom