Pubdate: Sat, 23 Mar 2002 Source: Palm Beach Post (FL) Copyright: 2002 The Palm Beach Post Contact: http://www.gopbi.com/partners/pbpost/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/333 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/colombia.htm (Colombia) ANSWERS FROM COLOMBIA Should the United States give Alvaro Uribe money? Should the United States give Alvaro Uribe weapons? Mr. Uribe's name draws blank looks now, but it probably won't after May 26. That's when voters in Colombia are expected to make him their country's next president. Mr. Uribe's policies and plans therefore are of vital interest as President Bush asks Congress for more money and military leeway to help Colombia fight . . . whoever it is Colombia is fighting. Mr. Uribe is the Harvard-educated son of a rancher. He has been mayor of Medellin, home of the infamous drug cartel, and head of Colombia's civil aviation authority. Much more than the current president, Andres Pastrana, Mr. Uribe is a law-and-order candidate. His outlook is born of personal tragedy. Guerrillas assassinated his father in 1983. So if the United States gives Colombia more aid and more leeway, Mr. Uribe is likely to use it enthusiastically against . . . whoever Colombia is fighting. Why the hesitation about who the enemy is? Consider the recently assassinated Archbishop Isaias Duarte. The government said the killers worked for drug lords. Then it said leftist guerrillas might be responsible. The emerging U.S. position is that the killers must be terrorists. All three possibilities can be right because the same killers can be all three. Guerrilla organizations that have spent four decades trying to overthrow Colombia's government pay for their operations with drug money. Their kidnapping and killing of civilians make them terrorists. We have pretended that the three aspects were distinct. Colombia can use U.S. aid to fight drug dealers who ship most of America's heroin and cocaine. But the nearly $2 billion in helicopters, training and intelligence can't be used to fight rebels or terrorists. If Congress approves new aid and looser restrictions, Congress also must insist on increased oversight. This week's bombing in Peru before President Bush's visit underscores the importance of Colombia in the region. If instability becomes routine in northern South America, the area could become a haven for terrorists. The war in Afghanistan isn't over. Enemy leaders and soldiers slip away. U.S. troops are going to the Philippines and Yemen. There's talk of war in Iraq. Given those involvements, the legal limit on U.S. troops -- set by Congress at 400 -- should not be increased. Colombia might need freer reign to use U.S. aid, but that must come with a promise that Congress will know who is getting the aid and what is happening to it. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh