Pubdate: Thu, 18 Oct 2001 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2001 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.herald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Tim Johnson DRUG-POLICING EFFORTS MAY SUFFER DEA, Coast Guard Divert Resources To Terrorism Fight WASHINGTON -- As the U.S. government focuses on terrorism, drug traffickers in South America are smuggling more narcotics through the Caribbean toward U.S. borders, experts said Wednesday. "Trafficking organizations see a window of opportunity to traffic in the Caribbean," Drug Enforcement Administration chief Asa Hutchinson told a legislative panel. The DEA and the Coast Guard have removed personnel from counter-narcotics functions and deployed them to combat terrorism, and the Coast Guard has pulled eight cutters from the Caribbean, officials told the House Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation. Independent experts said counter-narcotics efforts might become a partial casualty -- despite $1.3 billion in U.S. counter-drug assistance to Colombia this year -- as the Pentagon engages in military action in Afghanistan and combats terrorism at home. Not A Priority "Colombia is just not an intelligence priority right now. Look at the Gulf War. We pulled all sorts of resources from South America," said Raphael Perl, a narcotics and terrorism specialist with the Congressional Research Service. U.S. forces now deploy fewer of the specialized radar aircraft known as Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) over the Andes and the Caribbean to watch for suspicious planes, said Bruce M. Bagley, a University of Miami expert on the narcotics trade. "There were about four [AWACS aircraft] we were using on a regular basis before. And at least two have been withdrawn," Bagley said. As U.S. radar planes re-deploy to South Asia, drug traffickers may be testing to see if U.S. counter-narcotics efforts have lessened, said Peter Probst, a former Pentagon counter-terrorism official. "This, unfortunately, works to their advantage. They are incredibly opportunistic," he said. The U.S. military denies that counter-narcotics operations have diminished. "We can't tell you the number or location of our resources, due to operational security reasons," said Capt. Trisha Cundiff, a spokeswoman for U.S. Southern Command air forces. "But the Air Force remains committed to continuing cooperative efforts . . . in counter-drug operations." Of the many agencies involved in U.S. counter-narcotics efforts, the Coast Guard may face the greatest strains as its vessels are diverted to protect coastal nuclear and power plants and ports with storage facilities for potentially explosive materials. The number of vessels and aircraft devoted to counter-narcotics missions has fallen between 65 and 75 percent since Sept. 11, Coast Guard Rear Adm. Terry M. Cross told the subcommittee. The shift to homeland security "challenges our ability to adequately resource other missions, notably drug interdiction," Cross warned in prepared testimony. After the Sept. 11 terror attacks, the Coast Guard pulled three cutters from counter-drug operations in the eastern Pacific, and dropped the number of cutters in the Caribbean on law enforcement patrols from 11 to three, Cross said. The DEA also faces a staffing shortfall as it helps on the counter-terrorism front. "A little over 100 agents" are temporarily serving as air marshals, Hutchinson told The Herald after the hearing. Another 40 DEA intelligence analysts are on loan to the FBI, he added. Unintended Benefit Some experts believe that enhanced vigilance at U.S. borders may counter-balance reduced surveillance over the Andean region and throughout the Caribbean. "It cuts both ways," said Jonathan M. Winer, a former deputy assistant secretary of state for international law enforcement. As border agents heighten their alert, "it has the potential to create a crackdown on crime across the board." Advocates of aggressive U.S. counter-narcotics tactics voice annoyance that the State Department has not established the safety mechanisms that would allow the renewal of a policy to target any suspicious aircraft in the Andean region and shoot them out of the sky. Washington stopped sharing radar signals with Andean countries in late April after a CIA radar plane helped a Peruvian jet fighter shoot down a civilian aircraft, killing a U.S. missionary and her daughter. A still-secret report discussing the conditions for restarting the program remains under discussion at the State Department two months after its completion. "The [department] is still paralyzed. It's mind-boggling," said a senior congressional aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth