Pubdate: Thu, 25 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: Carolyn Skorneck (AP) SENATE KEEPS CUT IN ANDEAN FUNDING WASHINGTON -- The Senate approved a $15.6 billion foreign aid bill but, ignoring the argument that American credibility was at risk, cut back sharply on the Bush administration's request for money to fight drugs in South America. Ratcheting down the Andean drug war could "substantially erode our credibility" as the United States asks countries worldwide "to join the coalition for a long, protracted, difficult war to rout out global terrorism wherever it existed," Sen. Bob Graham, D-Fla., said Wednesday. Colombia is "the global testing ground for our commitment to terrorism," said Graham, the Intelligence Committee chairman. "Hardly more than a year into this battle, we are beginning to sound the trumpet of retreat and running up the white flag of surrender." The Senate blocked his amendment in a procedural vote, 72-27. President Bush requested $731 million for the Andean drug effort. The Appropriations Committee's foreign operations panel, chaired by Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., cut it by $164 million to $567 million. Graham wanted to restore that money. The House's $15.2 billion foreign aid bill, passed in July, contains $676 million for the South American drug fight. "We're spending four times more on the Andean drug program ... than what we're doing to stop disease -- smallpox or tuberculosis, malaria, ebola, plague -- from coming into our country," said Leahy. "We keep pouring money down here," Leahy said. "We don't know where it's going. We don't know how it's being spent. We know it's not effective. We know it hasn't stopped drugs coming up here." The foreign aid bill passed, 96-2. Sens. Graham and Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., voted against it. Sens. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., and Mary Landrieu, D-La., did not vote. In the Middle East, Israel will get $2.7 billion in military and economic aid; Egypt, $2 billion, and Jordan, $225 million. Separately, the Senate approved a one-year moratorium on the State Department's program to certify which foreign countries fully cooperate in the war against drugs. Many allies, including Mexico, have rebelled at such a scorecard. The Senate also approved spending $2 million for education programs for Afghan women. Meanwhile, the House Appropriations Committee unanimously approved a $317.5 billion defense spending bill, but the figure could go up by $20 billion or more for the war on terrorism before the full House votes on it. The spending bill for fiscal 2002, which began Oct. 1, is $19 billion more than last year's, representing a 6 percent increase and $1.9 billion less than Bush requested. Congress has separately approved $10.5 billion for military construction spending, and more defense money is included in other measures. The bill's $7.9 billion for missile defense, $400 million less than Bush wanted but $2.7 billion more than was spent last year, is wrapped into a new counterterrorism and weapons of mass destruction program. "This is basically a peacetime defense bill, and we ain't at peace no more," said Rep. Jerry Lewis, R-Calif., chairman of the Appropriations Committee's defense panel. Appropriations Committee Chairman Bill Young, R-Fla., predicted the full House will vote next week, but not before the committee acts on Bush's request to spend $20 billion, part of the $40 billion Congress approved in the wake of the Sept. 11 terror attacks. The committee's top Democrat, Rep. David Obey, D-Wis., said, "This bill should be supported across the board." He recommended spending "above and beyond the $20 billion" extra. Editor's note: The foreign operations spending bill is H.R. 2506. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh