Pubdate: Thu, 15 Mar 2001 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2001 The Miami Herald Contact: One Herald Plaza, Miami FL 33132-1693 Fax: (305) 376-8950 Website: http://www.herald.com/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?mherald Author: Jim Wyss U.S. READY TO FIX BASE IN ECUADOR MANTA, Ecuador -- The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will shut down the local airport in a few days for a $65.3 million overhaul, deepening an increasingly bitter debate about Ecuador's role in the regional fight against drug trafficking. Officially, the government says the strip is little more than a "filling station" for the various spy aircraft used by the Pentagon to monitor clandestine drug flights around the Andes, but many here see it as a threat to national sovereignty that could drag Ecuador deeper into the region's drug wars. "The base represents a provocation and involves us in a problem that's not ours," said Vice President Antonio Posso, the second-ranking congressional official, whose left-leaning Pachakutik party attacked the Manta operation in court. "I agree that we need to do our part to control drug trafficking, but there is the fear that the base will be used against the [Colombian] guerrillas," Posso said. "We may already be seeing reprisals." Although the Manta agreement clearly forbids the base from being used for anything but drug surveillance, that hasn't kept Colombia's largest guerrilla force -- the leftist FARC -- from calling it a "declaration of war." And though few blame the Manta operations, there are indications that Colombia's guerrillas are increasing operations in this small Andean nation of 12.5 million. The United States has been using the Manta airport to refuel and maintain a handful of P3 and C130 airplanes. Painted innocuous flat-gray, the craft are jammed full of state-of-the art surveillance gear allowing them to monitor road, sea and airways for the drug runners that ship an estimated 587 metric tons of cocaine out of the region per year -- mainly from Colombia. When the refurbished and extended strip reopens in October, it will be able to handle heavier and more powerful AWACS surveillance planes and the KC-135s that can refuel them in midair. Barracks for the 250 servicemen needed to operate and service the craft will also be built. The planes, along with others based in the Caribbean and El Salvador, are the drug war's eyes. When they spot suspicious activity they relay messages through a base in Key West to the countries involved. It's up to each nation's military to make a stop or seizure. For decades Ecuador has largely managed to avoid the drug and guerrilla troubles of its neighbors. Relying on little more than a policy of blind-eye neutrality, both left- and right-wing guerrilla groups regularly cross the border but tread lightly -- valuing Ecuador as a rear-supply and resting spot. But as the country plays a more active role in the war on drugs, that could change, admitted the base's Ecuadorean commander, Col. Rodrigo Bohorques. "The agreement we signed is to fight narco-trafficking and you can't fight passively," he said. "There is the possibility that people or groups who believe they are affected by the base could try to make us feel vulnerable to damage." According to U.S. Ambassador Gwen Clare, the operations are strictly for surveillance of the drug trade and the base will help keep problems at bay. "I tell [opponents] we're trying to attack a problem on your frontier that is threatening your stability," she said. But more and more Ecuadoreans seem to disagree. "Letting the U.S. use the airport is like letting one neighbor use your patio to spy on another neighbor's house," said Miguel Moran, the head of the Manta-based "Tohalli" organization that opposes the agreement. "We're getting involved in Colombia's problems more and more -- the Manta base is proof of that." A study by the local CEDATOS polling firm found 65 percent of the population thought the Manta agreement posed a threat to the country. Those fears are fueled by daily reports of increased spillover from Colombia. Cocaine labs have been found on this side of the border, the army has engaged in sporadic firefights with irregular troops, and kidnappers are beginning to set up shop here. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth