Pubdate: Wed, 31 Jan 2001 Source: Hawk Eye, The (IA) Copyright: 2001 The Hawk Eye Contact: attn: Letters, P.O. Box 10, Burlington IA 52601-0010 Fax: 319-754-6824 Feedback: http://www.thehawkeye.com/hawkeye/forms/lettoed.html Website: http://www.thehawkeye.com/ VIETNAM REDUX DEFOLIATION PLAN PUTS COLOMBIA AT RISK OF A BROADER WAR Last year Congress approved a controversial $1.3 billion aid package to Colombia to help fight its illegal drug industry. The deal came despite warnings that the U.S. is getting much too involved in Colombia for its own good. Congress and the Clinton administration ignored warnings that escalating the drug war could start a real war that will destabilize Colombia and its neighbors. The U.S. money will buy training for Colombian soldiers and police, plus a fleet of helicopters with which they will attack the drug cartels. They will also go after the anti-government rebels and paramilitaries who profit from the drug trade. The containment strategy has until now involved tracking drug-carrying cartel aircraft and raiding remote jungle cocoa processing laboratories where the leaves are refined into cocaine. The new effort will target the fields where coca is grown. Aerial tankers have begun spraying chemical defoliants on coca plantations, which are carved from Colombia's vast mountain jungles. In all wars, civilians get caught in the middle. The first defoliation was done last month in the Indian village of Santa Rosa del Guamuez Colombian government aircraft sprayed herbicide over coca patches. They also destroyed the local residents' corn crop, their pastures and nearby patches of jungle. Chemicals also fell in the ponds where the Cofan and Paez tribes raise fish. The government defends its decision to spray, saying its herbicide is no worse for the environment than the fertilizer and pesticides that the coca growers use to produce their illegal crop. A few million Vietnamese who had their country defoliated would argue the point. The villagers whose crops have been destroyed are justifiably worried. Not just about hunger, but about getting sick. With Colombia planning to spray the entire state of Putumayo, there is a huge potential for unprecedented human and environmental disasters. As for the rebels and drug dealers, they say they will start shooting at the aerial sprayers. The warnings about the dangers of escalating Colombia's drug war are starting to ring true. - --- MAP posted-by: GD