Pubdate: Wed, 28 Feb 2001 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2001 The Washington Post Company Contact: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071 Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Karen DeYoung, Washington Post Staff Writer BUSH BACKS COLOMBIA ON TRADE President Bush said yesterday that he will push for the renewal and expansion of a regional trade agreement sought by Colombia to boost its economy and provide alternative jobs for people involved in illegal drug cultivation and trafficking. "Absolutely . . . I'll be pushing it," Bush told reporters before he sat down for a 45-minute meeting with Colombian President Andres Pastrana at the White House. "I'm a free-trader." But while he will "be glad to help Colombia in any way to make the peace" and to bolster its economy through trade, Bush said, he will decline an invitation from Colombia's largest guerrilla group to observe its peace negotiations with the government. "This is an issue that the Colombian people and the Colombian president can deal with," he said. Both sides declared themselves pleased with yesterday's meeting, Pastrana's first at the Bush White House. Pastrana briefed Bush on the status of Plan Colombia, his government's military and social development program to eradicate hundreds of thousands of acres of coca and heroin poppies, the raw materials of cocaine and heroin. The plan calls for the Colombian army to defeat opposing armies of leftist guerrillas and right-wing paramilitary forces who control drug-producing areas, allowing the government to provide security and development aid for the local populations. The United States has contributed $1.3 billion to the effort, primarily for military training and equipment. Despite widespread acknowledgment of the high volume of Colombian drug exports to this country, the U.S. military involvement has strong critics who question the Colombian army's human rights record and who fear that U.S. involvement could escalate. But the Bush administration has voiced its support for continuing aid, and it is expected to allot substantial funds for Colombia in its budget. During his four-day visit here, Pastrana sought to refocus the discussion over U.S. involvement in Colombia away from drug trafficking, guerrilla wars and human rights. Instead, he emphasized the importance of increased trade and foreign investment to his country's long-term stability. He won Bush's support for renewal of the Andean Trade Preference Act, a 1991 program due to expire in December. Colombia also wants the pact, which eliminates U.S. tariffs on 6,000 products from the Andean region, expanded to include textiles, apparel and other leading exports. Without the agreement, Pastrana has said, Colombia could lose hundreds of thousands of jobs to exports from Caribbean countries that benefited from a separate trade deal last year. Emerging from its worst recession in 60 years, Colombia has a 20 percent unemployment rate, and Pastrana has said that the only way to keep more Colombians from turning to drug cultivation or joining the guerrillas and paramilitaries is to provide them with jobs in a strong economy. A senior Bush administration official said that Pastrana also "talked about his government's plans to attract more investment in the energy sector." Colombian exports to the United States totaled $7 billion last year, nearly twice the value of U.S. exports to Colombia. Bush, who said it was "my honor to welcome a friend of our country to the Oval Office," said he and Pastrana had also discussed efforts to reduce demand for drugs in the United States. "I explained to the president that we're fully aware of the narcotics that are manufactured in his country but also told him that many of them wouldn't be manufactured if our nation didn't use them. And we've got to work together to not only help Colombia, but help our own country," Bush said. In brief comments to reporters after the meeting, Pastrana said he had suggested that the United States participate in a group of foreign observers monitoring his government's talks with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, the country's largest guerrilla group. "We think it's important," Pastrana said. The European Union and several Latin American countries plan to participate in a March 8 meeting with the guerrilla organization, known by its Spanish initials FARC, and both the United States and Cuba are invited. But the United States has refused all contact with the FARC since the group acknowledged killing three American humanitarian workers in 1999. White House Chief of Staff Andrew H. Card Jr. and national security adviser Condoleezza Rice attended Bush's meeting with Pastrana. It was conducted in English, which Pastrana speaks fluently. But Bush ended the pre-meeting photo opportunity and question session by shooing reporters out of the Oval Office with a shout of "Adios." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D