Pubdate: Mon, 24 Sep 2001 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2001 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Matt Moffett, Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal COLOMBIA'S GUERRILLA, DRUG WOES ARE HIGHLIGHTED BY ATTACKS ON U.S. In Columbia, no stranger to drug-related and political violence, the global alarm about terrorism comes when many Colombians and the U.S. government are already frustrated with Marxist guerrillas' reluctance to end the region's longest-running insurgency. The U.S. has committed $1.3 billion, along with military advisers and contract pilots, to fight drug trafficking in the region, as part of "Plan Colombia." The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC -- the region's largest guerrilla group, fielding an estimated 17,000 fighters -- finances operations through the cocaine trade and kidnapping. Myles Frechette, a former U.S. ambassador to Colombia, sees the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the U.S. cutting both ways in the 37-year-old Colombian conflict. "On the one hand, there's the traditional fear [Latin Americans have], when something big is going on, that they are going to be lost in the shuffle," he says. U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, who was visiting neighboring Peru at the time of the attacks, had to cancel a trip to Colombia to return home and manage the crisis. On the other hand, Mr. Frechette says, the attack has raised the hope of some Colombians "that since Colombia can't seem to resolve its problems, perhaps we'll come in and resolve them for them." There has been great reluctance in Washington toward a more direct U.S. role in Colombia's drug and guerrilla wars. But Mr. Frechette notes that the U.S. now may push harder for Colombian President Andres Pastrana, and the administration that succeeds him after next year's presidential elections, to begin producing results to end the conflict. President Pastrana has until early October to formally announce whether the government will extend an agreement allowing the FARC to control a swath of territory in southern Colombia the size of Switzerland. The so-called demilitarized zone was created nearly three years ago as an inducement for the rebels to come to the bargaining table. Mr. Pastrana has staunchly defended the extension of the territorial agreement with the rebels, even though "Colombians have been asking what, besides humiliation, have we got in return," says Russell Crandall, a Davidson College political scientist. Both the Colombian military and the U.S. point to ample proof that the guerrillas are using the demilitarized zone as a staging area for training and new missions. In August, three members of the Irish Republican Army were caught by Colombian security officials leaving the rebel zone. The Colombian government maintains that the IRA men were training FARC guerrillas in bomb-making. Three armed groups in Colombia have made the U.S. State Department's list of terrorist organizations. Both the FARC and the National Liberation Army, a smaller Marxist group, have been identified as terrorist groups. The U.S. this month added the United Self Defense Forces of Colombia, a right-wing paramilitary group that also has profited from the cocaine business. In a statement over the weekend, the FARC condemned the attacks in the U.S., while also blasting the U.S. as an "imperial state that spreads death and violence." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom