Pubdate: Tue, 03 Jun 2003 Source: Associated Press (Wire) Copyright: 2003 Associated Press Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/27 Author: Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Plan+Colombia GAO SAYS COLOMBIA WON'T MEET TARGET FOR DRUG-SPRAY PLAN WASHINGTON (AP)--The U.S. may have to spend $230 million a year to keep funding drug spraying programs that were supposed to be taken over by the Colombian government, a congressional investigator told a Senate panel Tuesday. Colombia lacks the money and trained personnel to meet a 2006 target for taking over responsibilities of flying and maintaining combat helicopters, said Jess Ford, director of international affairs and trade for the General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress. He appeared before the Senate Caucus on International Narcotics Control. The helicopters are used on drug-fighting missions, such as protecting spray planes that fumigate fields of coca and opium, the raw material for cocaine and heroin. Those fields are often protected by guerrillas, who partly fund their insurgency through the drug trade. The U.S. has given Colombia about $2.5 billion over four years, mostly to buy, fly and maintain helicopters and spray planes. U.S. and Colombian officials say the program has been successful, accounting for a 15% drop in coca cultivation and 25% drop in opium cultivation last year. Colombian Vice President Francisco Santos Calderon said he expected a 50% drop of coca cultivation by the end of this year. "Plan Colombia is working," he said, referring to the Colombian-U.S. plan to cut drug production. Santos said his government has made great advances against insurgents, including the largest guerrilla group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC. But he said he fears those successes may make FARC "more violent and more prone to get allies in the international community of terrorists." The State Department's top counternarcotics official, Paul E. Simons, said that after initial setbacks in the program, Colombia was now expected to meet its goals for reducing drug production. "We believe we have turned a corner, particularly with the coca crop, in Colombia," he said. Army Gen. James T. Hill, commander of U.S. Southern Command, said recent intelligence suggests that traffickers and insurgents have been hurt financially, have had more difficulties in producing cocaine and are having more fighters desert their units. But Ford said the fumigation program has had mixed results. He said coca cultivation rose annually from 1995 to 2001 and opium cultivation was steady. He described a series of impediments that limited the effectiveness of drug aid, such as slow deliveries of helicopters and rules limiting where the Colombian army's counternarcotics brigades can operate. Some problems have been resolved, but others remain, he said. Billions of dollars that were expected in aid from other countries never came. Colombia's financial resources are limited as it continues its war against guerrillas and paramilitaries. Also, Colombian police never agreed to a U.S. embassy plan to have it take over the eradication program. Ford said Colombia cannot sustain the program without U.S. money or U.S.-funded contractors who maintain and fly the aircraft. The $230-million-a-year estimate doesn't include additional costs, such as drug interdiction programs and alternative development projects, he said. The State and Defense departments "have still not developed estimates of future program costs, defined their future roles in Colombia, identified a proposed end state or determined how they plan to achieve it," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk