Pubdate: Tue, 16 Oct 2001
Source: The Herald-Sun (NC)
Copyright: 2001 The Herald-Sun
Contact:  http://www.herald-sun.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1428
Author: Ken Guggenheim (AP)

TERROR FIGHT CHANGES COLOMBIA ANGLE

WASHINGTON -- Even as they provided military helicopters and training to 
Colombia, U.S. officials have insisted they were fighting drugs, not 
getting involved in the country's decades-old guerrilla war.

But staying out of that war could be trickier now that the United States is 
considering anti-terrorism aid for Colombia and its Andean neighbors.

The State Department's top counterterrorism official, Francis X. Taylor, 
told reporters Monday that the United States would fight terrorism in the 
hemisphere using "all the elements of our national power as well as the 
elements of the national power of all the countries in our region."

Of the 28 groups that the State Department considers terrorist 
organizations, only four are based in the Western Hemisphere. And three of 
those are in Colombia: the country's two largest guerrilla armies and the 
right-wing paramilitary umbrella group.

Those three will "get the same treatment as any other terrorist group in 
terms of our interest in going after them and ceasing their terrorist 
activities," Taylor told reporters at the Organization of American States, 
after attending a closed-door meeting on terrorism.

Taylor declined to discuss details of anti-terrorism aid because the 
package hasn't been completed. He told lawmakers last week that it was 
designed to complement last year's $1.3 billion Colombian aid package and 
an $882 million follow-up Andean aid plan that Congress is considering.

Much of the U.S. aid has been for helicopter and training to help 
Colombia's military fight guerrillas and, to a lesser degree, 
paramilitaries. Both partly finance their operations by protecting drug 
crops and traffickers.

To counter critics who warned that the United States was headed to a 
Vietnam-style quagmire in Colombia, U.S. officials have stressed that the 
aid was to fight drugs, not to help Colombia defeat the guerrillas.

Both critics and supporters of the Colombian aid have been skeptical, 
though, that such a distinction could be made.

"It's very difficult to separate the counter drug effort when the rebels or 
the insurgents are the ones that are living off the income from the drugs. 
How do you separate the two?" said Rep. Cass Ballenger, R-N.C., who chairs 
the House International Relations Western Hemisphere subcommittee.

With greater concern about terrorism since the Sept. 11 attacks, lawmakers 
aren't as likely to be concerned about the difference between fighting 
terrorists or fighting guerrillas. "I don't think they'll be that much 
differentiation," he said.

Rep. William Delahunt, D-Mass., said he didn't know what the State 
Department was planning for Colombia, but separating counterterrorism from 
counterinsurgency "would be a very difficult and delicate distinction to make."

Taylor last week said Colombia's largest guerrilla group, the Revolutionary 
Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, was "the most dangerous international 
terrorist group based in this hemisphere." Both the FARC and the National 
Liberation Army have been involved in bombings, kidnappings, extortion and 
hijackings.

Also on the terrorist list the right-wing paramilitary United Self-Defense 
Forces of Colombia, which has been involved in assassinations, kidnappings 
and massacres. The State Department and human rights groups say that 
Colombian security forces have collaborated with paramilitaries.

For all three groups, the terrorist activities have occurred primarily 
within Colombian borders -- a distinction from the Afghanistan-based 
al-Qaida organization blamed in the Sept. 11 attacks.

The top Democrat on the Western Hemisphere subcommittee, Rep. Bob Menendez 
of New Jersey, said a key question in shaping U.S. policy toward Colombian 
groups is whether they have been involved in attacks in the United States.

"If the answer is no, does the president's standard of this fight on global 
terrorism include those who may be terrorists, but not committed acts on 
the United States?"

If President Bush wants to go beyond pursuing terrorists responsible for 
the U.S. attacks, he will need to define the mission and go back to 
Congress for support.

"I think we're going to have to figure out how much we can absorb at one 
time," he said.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart