Pubdate: Fri, 09 May 2003 Source: Herald News (NJ) Copyright: 2003 North Jersey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.northjersey.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2911 Author: Kibret Markos SPEZIALE: SEND TROOPS TO FIGHT DRUG WAR The U.S. government must deploy Special Forces troops to Colombia, seal its border with Mexico, and cut economic aid to a host of nations in Latin America to win the war on drugs, Passaic County Sheriff Jerry Speziale said. In an interview Wednesday on Fox News Channel's "The O'Reilly Factor" about his new book on undercover narcotics work, Speziale prescribed a military operation on a scale of the Panama invasion of 1989 into nations whose governments are not cooperating in the war on drugs. "We have to go in strong," he said. "We have to deal with the foreign governments and make sure they are 100 percent with us in this fight against narcotics." The Colombian government would welcome American troops to fight a rebel movement funded with drug money, he said. "So you'd go in with the U.S. Special Forces and attack these guys?" asked Bill O'Reilly, host of the show. "Absolutely. Absolutely," Speziale said. The sheriff lamented "a lot of bureaucratic stuff that holds us back" from sending troops abroad and said the U.S. government is not sufficiently funding international operations against drug cartels. He said the war on drugs is weakened by changes in drug enforcement policy every time there is a change in the U.S. administration. O'Reilly said later in the interview that drug cartels making billions of dollars can easily bribe underpaid officials in poor Latin American countries such as Mexico, Costa Rica, Panama, Nicaragua, and Honduras. "We're never going to beat these guys, because they just bribe their way in and out of everything," O'Reilly said. "And they have territories, and we can't invade Mexico, you know." "But you know what we can do?" Speziale replied. "We can cut the economic aid that we supply to these countries." When O'Reilly said the administration would never cut aid and "won't even seal the border," Speziale said, "Yes, but if we're really looking to have this war, that's what we need to do ... because this is a form of terrorism that's against our country already." Speziale criticized the "flimsy" extradition treaties that most Latin American governments signed with the United States and ridiculed the prison system in Colombia, which allows inmates to build their own jails. "When a drug lord goes to jail in Colombia, he builds his own jail," he said. "He brings his girlfriends on Fridays and his wives on Saturdays. He has his own chefs and cooks. You call that a jail?" Speziale has been appearing in a series of TV interviews since last week to promote his book "Without a Badge," which recounts his experience as an undercover drug agent working to infiltrate the Cali cartel, the powerful drug trafficking ring based in Colombia. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth