Pubdate: Sat, 03 Mar 2001 Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Copyright: 2001 Cox Interactive Media. Contact: 72 Marietta Street, NW, Atlanta, Ga. 30303 Website: http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/ Forum: http://www.accessatlanta.com/community/forums/ Author: Carolyn Skorneck - Associated Press 20 NATIONS PASS CONTROVERSIAL U.S. DRUG WAR TEST Washington --- The government certified 20 of 24 countries as fully cooperating with U.S. anti-drug efforts Thursday, including close allies Mexico and Colombia, despite those two nations' continuing drug-producing and trafficking status. On Capitol Hill, meanwhile, lawmakers called for overhauling the report card process that often embarrasses U.S. allies. Afghanistan and Myanmar continued their long-standing "decertified" status, making them subject to economic penalties that will have no real effect because both countries are under U.S. sanctions for other reasons. Cambodia and Haiti were decertified but received a national security waiver of economic penalties. Nigeria and Paraguay, in the same category last year as Cambodia and Haiti, moved up to fully certified. In addition to Mexico, Colombia, Nigeria and Paraguay, the other certified countries were the Bahamas, Bolivia, Brazil, China, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, India, Jamaica, Laos, Pakistan, Panama, Peru, Thailand, Venezuela and Vietnam. The certification process has been denounced in the United States by those who consider it counterproductive and by foreign countries embarrassed by their grades and annoyed at being judged by the world's biggest drug-consuming nation. "Certification is more than an affront to Mexico and to other countries. It is a sham that should be denounced and canceled," Mexican President Vicente Fox said last year. President Bush has endorsed a move in Congress to set aside the certification process, and he told Fox during a Feb. 16 visit to Mexico that he would tout Fox's anti-drug efforts to U.S. lawmakers. The report did praise Mexico's aggressive eradication program, saying that effort, plus drought in its principal drug cultivation areas, resulted in record low levels of opium poppy production. But the report also noted that "Corruption of the law enforcement sector by drug trafficking organizations remains a serious institutional problem." The decertification of Afghanistan came despite a recent report by U.N. drug control officers that the ruling Taliban militia had virtually wiped out opium production since banning poppy cultivation in July. While acknowledging that effort, the State Department said it was too early to assess its effectiveness. Regarding Colombia, the world's largest cocaine producer, the report said a U.S.-backed aerial eradication program successfully treated 116,090 acres of coca and 22,230 acres of opium poppies last year. That led to a dramatic slowing in coca cultivation growth rates from an average of 22 percent per year from 1997 through 1999, to 11 percent last year, the report said. At a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing, lawmakers promoted a variety of alternatives to certification. Rand Beers, the top State Department anti-drug official, defended certification but left the door open for alternatives. Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) proposed suspending certification for two years to develop a replacement policy. An alternative proposal by Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) would retain certification but exempt countries that sign bilateral anti-drug agreements with the United States. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry F