Pubdate: Thu, 12 Oct 2006 Source: Ogdensburg Journal/Advance News (NY) Copyright: 2006 Johnson Newspaper Corp. Contact: http://www.ogd.com/letter.htm Website: http://www.ogd.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/689 Author: Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/plan+colombia U. S. CUTTING BACK AID TO COCAINE PRODUCERS SAN JOSE DEL FRAGUA, Colombia - The United States is quietly cutting back economic aid in a region where cocaine production is surging, a strategy critics say hurts Washington's $4 billion effort to try to wean Colombia off the illegal drug trade. In an internal memo obtained by The Associated Press, the U.S. Agency for International Development blames unacceptable security risks for its workers and a lack of private investment partners for its pullout from Caqueta, a former rebel stronghold in impoverished southern Colombia. Six years and more than $4 billion in American tax dollars after Plan Colombia was launched in Caqueta, Colombia's army is still fighting rebels here, and coca, the raw ingredient of cocaine, is still the region's No. 1 cash crop. But the alternative development programs meant to provide farmers with a profitable alternative to growing coca are vanishing in the state - a symptom, critics say, of how Plan Colombia has failed to persuade enough coca growers to switch to legal crops even as coca production reaches volumes unseen in years. Washington spends $70 million annually on development projects in drug-producing areas of Colombia. While such projects win praise, the United Nations and development groups lament their limited scope. Caqueta and neighboring Putumayo state produced 24 percent of the 356,000 acres of coca detected by the most recent U.S. survey - contributing to a 26 percent surge last year nationwide. Yet Caqueta has seen only a trickle of U.S. development aid - $5.6 million since 2000. And now even that is drying up. As part of the U.S. strategy to win over coca growers, almost 20 percent of annual assistance is devoted to nonmilitary social programs and development projects. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin