Pubdate: Sat, 24 Feb 2001 Source: Scotsman (UK) Copyright: The Scotsman Publications Ltd 2001 Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Forum: http://www.scotsman.com/ Author: Jeremy Mcdermott BOGOTA CONFLICT CROSSES BORDERS MEDELLIN, Colombia -- Colombian President Andres Pastrana will ask the United States for more aid when he visits Washington this weekend - but President George Bush is already faced with a foreign policy nightmare as US military aid sanctioned by his predecessor, Bill Clinton, sends Colombia's 37-year civil conflict over its borders. "We are a poor country," Mr Pastrana said in a recent interview in the presidential palace in Bogota. "But we are spending $ 1 billion a year of our money to keep drugs off the streets of Washington and New York. We need more help. This is a long-term plan, maybe 15 to 20 years." Mr Clinton handed Colombia more than GBP 1 billion of mainly military aid for the war against drugs last year, using a presidential waiver to bypass human rights conditions normally attached to such aid, conditions that Colombia could not, and cannot, fulfil. The US aid is centred around three US-trained and equipped anti-narcotics battalions backed up by 60 helicopters. Under a campaign called Plan Colombia some of the assets have been unleashed in southern Colombia in the world's largest aerial drug eradication programme. But the impact of the aid has already become apparent. The war has escalated, as have human rights abuses, and respected observers are saying the plan is fundamentally flawed. "I agree that this is an enormous problem and that there is great danger. But we cannot simply start something and later not have a plan if it does not work out. That is how we got involved in south-east Asia," Henry Kissinger, the former US secretary of state, told the Council for International Relations this week. The Colombian president is unlikely to ask for more military aid, but rather cash for some of the social investment programmes he promised under Plan Colombia, but which his government cannot finance. But Mr Bush is under pressure, not only at home as the debate rages over how to handle a Colombia on the brink of open war, but from Colombia's neighbours, who say they are paying the price of flawed US policy and could be drawn into the conflict. "Our northern border was traditionally peaceful, without conflict, until decomposition and delinquency settled in southern Colombia and started spreading their poison beyond that border," Ecuador's president, Gustavo Noboa, said this week. More than 7,000 refugees have fled across Ecuador's border from the US-backed drug offensive, escalating fighting between right-wing paramilitaries and Marxist guerrillas intent on controlling the lucrative drug trade. Last month paramilitaries and rebels fought a pitched battle in Ecuador's Amazon region. Venezuela is also suffering. More than 3,000 refugees have fled fighting and paramilitary massacres along the border, while Colombian guerrillas have kidnapped 40 Venezuelan landowners for ransom. Venezuela's president, Hugo Chavez, an outspoken critic of US military aid to Colombia, said: "Peace negotiations are the only way; the US (military) aid could lead to a military escalation of the conflict. It could lead us to a Vietnamisation of the whole Amazon region." Panama, without an army, disbanded after the 1989 US invasion that toppled Manuel Noriega, is also vulnerable. Last year Colombian paramilitaries burned a Panamanian village to the ground and factions attacked another community, killing a 12-year-old girl. Brazil has set up a task force to stop the fighting and drug trade from spreading over the border, boosting troops along the 960-mile frontier to over 12,000. "For Brazil, Plan Colombia is causing the biggest worry," said General Alberto Cardoso, the presidential security adviser. Peru's caretaker government has offered lukewarm support for Plan Colombia, but fears its consequences. "(The violence) is serious ... we are guarding our borders for possible infiltration not only from Colombia but via Ecuador," the prime minister, Javier Perez de Cuellar, said. Mr Bush on Thursday said he was eager to have Mr Pastrana report on how his government is faring against the drug trade and the guerrillas. But he added: "I share the concern of those who are worried that at some point in time the United States might become militarily engaged." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth