Pubdate: Thu, 04 Jul 2002 Source: Deseret News (UT) Copyright: 2002 Deseret News Publishing Corp. Contact: http://www.desnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/124 Author: James Risen, New York Times News Service Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?172 (Peruvian Aircraft Shooting) BUSH TO OK AIR INTERDICTION IN DRUG WAR Program Had Been Halted After Plane Went Down In Peru WASHINGTON - President Bush is expected to approve the resumption of a program to force down or shoot down airplanes suspected of ferrying drugs in Latin America, a year after the program was halted by the mistaken downing of a plane carrying American missionaries in Peru, U.S. officials say. Once the president gives his final approval, the State Department would take over the program from the Central Intelligence Agency, and U.S. officials said air interdiction operations could begin in Colombia as early as this fall and would likely be expanded to Peru later. The Pentagon would support the program as well, providing intelligence about suspected drug flights gathered from ground-based radars and from other sources, officials said. The program calls for the United States to identify and locate suspected drug planes, and for Colombian and Peruvian air force planes to shoot them down if they do not respond to calls to land. U.S. officials said the governments of both Colombia and Peru had expressed support for restarting the operation. The program's many critics had assumed that the mistaken killings of two Americans would make it impossible for the White House to start it up again. But the plans for resumption began months ago, and in recent weeks, Colombia's incoming president, Alvaro Uribe Velez, visited Washington to urge an aggressive U.S. role in the Latin American drug war. The decision to shift the management of the program to the State Department came after the CIA director, George J. Tenet, made it clear that his agency no longer wanted any part of the operation, officials said. Since the plane's downing, Congress has placed restrictions on the CIA's involvement, officials said. Secretary of State Colin L. Powell has expressed strong support for resuming the air interdiction operations through the State Department, and has repeatedly inquired about the progress of the department's work on the program, officials said. Although Bush has not given a final green light, the administration is already far advanced in its preparations for resuming the air interdiction program, several officials said. The Cessna Citation surveillance jets that the CIA previously operated in the air interdiction program have been upgraded and transferred to the State Department, officials said. Colombian Air Force pilots have just completed basic training in the United States on how to fly the Citation jets and are scheduled to begin more advanced training in how to perform the complex interdiction missions as early as August. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager