Pubdate: Sat, 30 Mar 2002 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Section: World and Nation Copyright: 2002 St. Petersburg Times Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/419 Author: David Adams, Times Latin America Correspondent U.S. ABANDONS COLOMBIA PLAN ON SUBSTITUTE CROPS There Is More Bad News From The Front Lines Of The Drug War U.S. officials have abandoned an alternative development plan that was supposed to be a key element in halting the cultivation of drug crops in southern Colombia. The action comes as Washington is considering broadening its military support for Colombia, which is likely to intensify the war in the poorest drug-producing regions. According to a report by the U.S. Agency for International Development, the plan failed to wean local farmers away from cultivating the lucrative coca plant used to make cocaine. The study, which has not been publicly released, also blames poor soil quality and a lack of security in the remote area of Putumayo, which is a battleground for guerrillas and paramilitary groups. Originally the idea was to encourage peasant farmers to stop growing coca using a carrot-and-stick policy. Money and technical help were made available to farmers who agreed voluntarily to plant legal crops. Those who didn't were threatened with eradication of their coca fields by aerial spraying. Although the decision to halt the alternative development program withdraws a major plank from the overall counter-drug policy, officials say they plan to forge ahead anyway with the spraying. This has critics alarmed. "They are going back to a strategy that has not worked in the past," said Adam Isacson, refering to the all-stick-and-no-carrot policy in the mid to late 1980s in the Guaviare region of Colombia. Although coca was successfully wiped out from this area, production simply moved elsewhere. "Even if they are successful in Putumayo, what's to stop that happening again," says Isacson. "There's lots of room to go." Isacson points out that the entire coca production in South America only occupies about 544,000 acres, which is about three-quarters the size of Rhode Island. But southeastern Colombia alone -- where most of the coca is grown -- is 100-million acres, or roughly the size of Texas, New Mexico and Oklahoma combined. Experts have long compared the way drug production shifts to the effect on a balloon when you squash it an one end and expands elsewhere. But U.S. officials believe they can outpace the "balloon effect" by massive spraying on a scale never before witnessed. This year the target is to spray 370,500 acres, going up to almost 500,000 next year. The philosophy appears to be the more farmers are sprayed, the more likely they will give up. But critics say Washington may be giving up too soon on the less destructive approach of alternative development. They note that counter-drug officials never liked the idea of voluntary eradication pacts with farmers, believing it to be too soft and slow an approach. The USAID office in Colombia was understaffed and ill-equipped to deal with the job it was given, critics charge. U.S. program managers also relied too heavily on Colombian officials with little or no knowledge of the area, which had been long ignored by the central government. Local development groups and municipal officials were bypassed by Bogota's notoriously elitist federal bureaucracy. Isacson and others argue that the program could have been made to work had it been given more time and greater resources. Peasants were given a deadline of July 27 this year to destroy their coca crops or risk being sprayed. Despite signing pacts with 35,000 farmers, Putumayo department officials say only 8,200 farmers ever received the aid they were promised. That was partly due to a U.S. government insistence that farmers destroy all their coca crops before receiving any U.S. aid. That led to resentment among farmers who asked what they were supposed to live on during the time it took to grow new crops. A report last month by the General Accounting Office, the auditing branch of Congress, found that USAID spent barely 10 percent of its $52- million budget for Putumayo. That was only a tiny portion of the $1.3- billion budgeted for the overall strategy, known as Plan Colombia, which focused mainly on military training for counter-narcotics operations and the aerial spraying of crops. The GAO report also noted that the program was hampered by a lack of security in the region. Given these obstacles, critics argue it is perhaps premature to declare the plan a failure. With the July deadline approaching, peasants will now be left to fend for themselves as best they can. That will likely result in food shortages as well as greater environmental damage, as farmers are pushed deeper into the rain forest to grow their illegal crops. It is also likely to create greater mistrust of the government, a factor guerrilla recruiters can be expected to exploit. U.S. officials say they won't be abandoning the needs of the region altogether. Instead, they say they are turning their efforts to large infrastructure projects, such as bridges and roads, to provide jobs and improve access for farmers to local markets. Other smaller projects will include new schools, health clinics, and provision of running water and electricity. These are all things badly needed by Putumayo's peasant communities. But after so many broken government promises, it may take a lot more than that to break southern Colombia's dependence on coca farming. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth