Pubdate: Fri, 05 Aug 2005 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2005 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Pablo Bachelet URIBE PITCHES PEACE PLAN TO BUSH President Bush Gave Colombian President Uribe A Warm Welcome In Texas, But Refrained From Endorsing A Peace Plan WASHINGTON - President Bush extended a warm, Texas-style welcome to Colombian President Alvaro Uribe at his ranch Thursday as Uribe launched an effort to build international support for his expensive and controversial peace plan. The visitor didn't seem to get the kind of strong backing he was looking for, but the invitation to join the president at his Crawford ranch underlined his status as Washington's closest ally in Latin America. Bush said that the United States and Colombia would work together "to fight drug trafficking and terrorism, and to promote security, democracy and the rule of law throughout the Americas." Bush also praised Uribe as "strong and principled." Uribe's high standing in Washington comes from his close cooperation with U.S. officials in the war on drugs, as well as his right-of-center politics in a region now largely dominated by left-of-center governments. He is considered one of the keystones in U.S. efforts to isolate his next-door neighbor, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, a leftist who regularly and fiercely attacks Bush and Washington policies and coordinates closely with Cuban leader Fidel Castro. In April, Colombia played a key role in brokering a deal between Washington and Chile that allowed Chile's then interior minister, Jose Miguel Insulza, to become secretary general of the Organization of American States. And Colombia scored a major international victory last month when its ambassador to the United States, Luis Alberto Moreno, was elected to head the Inter-American Development Bank. Washington supported Moreno discretely. Uribe's visit came at a delicate time for Colombia. His government is looking to implement an amnesty law that sets the legal framework to disarm 15,000 members of the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, a right-wing paramilitary organization also known as AUC. He is trying to raise $130 million for the process but has run into opposition from human rights groups and some members of U.S. Congress who say the AUC traffics drugs and is responsible for thousands of murders. The Bush administration has supported the law as a way to demobilize the fighters and perhaps shrink Colombia's 40-year civil conflict. Bush avoided giving the amnesty law an outright endorsement at a news conference with Uribe, but he promised to lobby Congress for continued funding of Plan Colombia, the multibillion-dollar anti-drug-trafficking plan. "I will ask the Congress to sustain our commitment to follow-on programs for Plan Colombia, so Colombia can build on its progress and win its war against the narco-terrorists," Bush said. Colombia has obtained almost $4 billion under the five-year plan, which formally ends in December. The Bush administration has asked Congress to extend the program for one more year. To some analysts, Uribe seemed to come away with few clear gains from his Texas visit. "It seems to me that President Uribe would have liked specific support from the administration on demobilization," said Mark Schneider, a former specialist on Latin America with the U.S. Agency for International Development. "He didn't get it." Congress has set conditions for any funding of the demobilization plan, seeking assurances that Colombia will continue to extradite top drug traffickers to face U.S. justice and ensure that the AUC networks halt operations. This week, the State Department certified that Colombia was doing enough to ensure that its security forces were held accountable for human rights excesses, freeing up about $70 million in aid. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth