Pubdate: Tue, 02 Jul 2002 Source: Blade, The (OH) Copyright: 2002 The Blade Contact: http://www.toledoblade.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/48 CAUTION FOR COLOMBIA Colombian President-elect Alvaro Uribe Velez used his visit to the United States last week to push hard for more U.S. military assistance to his country in its nearly four-decades-long struggle with rebel forces. He deserved a sympathetic ear but not an open wallet. The reasons are several. The Colombian government's own commitment to ending the conflict is not convincing, and the argument that extirpation of the rebel movements in Colombia will end or even reduce Colombian narcotics exports to the United States doesn't hold water. The United States should resist Mr. Uribe's pleas that America become more deeply involved in this particular "big muddy" for now. The new Colombian president was elected in May on a platform that promised a more muscular approach to the country's rebel movements than that taken by his predecessor, President Andres Pastrana. The outgoing president spent three years in negotiations with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, the FARC, and this produced some periods of relative quiet in the country but no resolution of the conflict. Colombia has received some $2 billion in aid from the United States in recent years, mostly in the form of military equipment and training. It is the third largest U.S. aid recipient, after Israel and Egypt. The Colombian government's war with its rebels is fundamentally a local affair, and the government's own commitment to winning is not overwhelming. U.S. military strategists consider its army of 35,000 to be too small to do the job. At the same time, young Colombians who are college-bound - in other words, the children of the elite of Colombian society - are exempt from the draft. The number of U.S. troops stationed in Colombia is capped at 400. That sounds about right. Finally, the basis of the $2 billion aid program in the first place - the idea that getting rid of the rebels would somehow reduce if not eliminate illegal Colombian narcotics exports to the United States - turns out to be false when put to the test. A recent study indicates that narcotics production and exports are not related in practice to turns in the tide in the civil war. The right American position toward the Colombian conflict is continuing interest, but no increase in U.S. involvement in spite of the lures of talk about the war on terrorism, the war on drugs, protecting petroleum pipelines, or whatever other combination makes the military aid lottery pay off in Washington. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth