Pubdate: Fri, 15 Mar 2002 Source: Tacoma News Tribune (WA) Copyright: 2002 Tacoma News Inc. Contact: http://www.tribnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/442 Author: Karen DeYoung; The Washington Post COLOMBIA AID HIKE IN THE WORKS Anti-Terror Funds: Bush, Key Congressional Leaders Agree Military Aid Limits Must Be Lifted WASHINGTON - The Bush administration plans to ask Congress next week to remove all restrictions on U.S. military aid to Colombia, including those that limit assistance to counter-narcotics efforts, impose human rights standards on the Colombian military and cap the number of U.S. military personnel in the country, administration and congressional sources said. The plan, which also seeks to ward off restrictions on any future aid, is included in legislation the administration expects to submit to Congress asking for additional funds for global and domestic anti- terrorism efforts this year. The White House put aside a similar Colombia proposal barely two weeks ago on grounds that Congress might not support a significant broadening of the U.S. military mission to assist the government of President Andres Pastrana in its fight against leftist guerrillas. The Pentagon, backed by some officials in other departments, had proposed including Colombia in the global war on terrorism. To the administration's surprise, however, a number of key congressional figures subsequently said they would support expanded U.S. aid in response to the changed circumstances in Colombia, where Pastrana last month abruptly ended three years of peace talks with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC. A senior administration official said the new plan was developed in response to a "strong recommendation" from Congress to lay its Colombia cards on the table and allow an open debate. "Everybody said, 'Look, you've got a supplemental coming up. Do it the honest and right way, and put in (that) legislation that you're going to do counter-terrorism' " in Colombia, the official said. "We're not trying to slip anything by or do this in the dead of night," he added. The administration plans to "make explicit" to Congress in some other fashion that it will continue to respect the 400-person cap on U.S. military personnel in Colombia as well as the congressional insistence that the Colombian military clean up its human rights record. The multibillion-dollar appropriations package, including the new Colombia policy, is now awaiting final sign-off at the Office of Management and Budget. The administration has long insisted that it has no intention of directly involving U.S. forces in the Colombian war. In essence, the proposal would authorize the deployment of U.S.-trained Colombian troops and U.S.-provided military equipment for government actions against groups that the United States has designated as terrorists. "All we are trying to do is to add the words 'counter-terrorism' to what the U.S. can do in helping Colombia," the official said. Bush is also likely to sign a new presidential directive on Colombia, replacing a Clinton administration document that restricts U.S. intelligence-sharing and other military assistance to counter- narcotics, officials said. Three Colombian groups - the 16,500-member FARC, the smaller guerrilla National Liberation Army (ELN) and the 10,000-strong right-wing paramilitary umbrella group known as the Colombian Self-Defense Force (AUC) - - are on the administration's list of global terrorist organizations. The aid proposal is a direct offshoot of the administration's new anti-terrorism focus. But it also conforms to a longstanding view of some senior Bush officials that the United States ought to help Colombia's democratic government fend off a threat from guerrillas who espouse a Marxist ideology. The latter view has been consistently rejected by Congress, where there has been bipartisan agreement on aid limits since the passage of a $1.3 billion anti-narcotics assistance package in early 2000. Since both the guerrillas and the paramilitary forces finance their activities largely through involvement in the drug trade, Congress authorized U.S. aid to be used against them only when such use overlaps with the anti-narcotics offensives in the southern part of the country where most Colombian coca is grown. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom