Pubdate: Tue, 24 Apr 2007 Source: New York Post (NY) Copyright: 2007 N.Y.P. Holdings, Inc. Contact: http://www.nypost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/296 Author: Dick Morris & Eileen McGann A DRUG-WAR DILEMMA Charlie Rangel (D-Harlem) faces a crucial choice: As chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, will he do what's needed to keep drugs off the streets? He's a key man in ratifying the free-trade agreement between the United States and Colombia - and that accord will have real consequences on 125th Street and across America. With the help of the Drug Enforcement Administration, Colombia has been making sensational progress in the war on drugs. We visited Medellin, Colombia, earlier this month and found no vestiges of the once-dominant Medellin cartel. The city used to see kidnappings every day. Now - with the cartel's leaders dead, in prison or hiding in the jungle - there have been none for three years. Under President Alvaro Uribe, Colombia has used $2 billion-plus a year in military aid - granted by the Clinton and Bush administrations - to extradite top drug lords to the United States, imprison 30 death-squad leaders and disarm 30,000 paramilitary militia that protected the drug gangs. The leftist guerillas of FARC have been driven back into remote, unpopulated areas and dare not surface outside their jungle hideouts. But if Colombia is no longer to export cocaine, it has to be able to sell flowers, textiles, sugar, bananas and other harmless fare to its U.S. customers without tariff or quota barriers. Along with deals covering Panama and Peru, the U.S.-Colombia free-trade accord is set to come to the floor of Congress in the next few months. Enter Rangel, whose committee has jurisdiction. At the insistence of the AFL-CIO, Rangel has demanded that the treaty include a requirement that labor unions be allowed to organize and flourish in those Latin American nations. Uribe has no objection to the proposed language - the Bush administration does. Its lawyers warn that the provision could be used by Colombia, Panama or Peru to sue the United States to force repeal of state right-to-work laws or other obstacles to unionization in this country. The Bushies suspect that the U.S. labor movement is trying to insert the language into the treaties as a back-door way of opening the doors wider to unionization here. Whether these worries are valid is beside the point. The administration's position leaves Rangel with a clear choice: Do the bidding of the AFL-CIO - or pass the treaty as-is and reduce the flow of drugs to his district. While the Bush administration is committed to fighting drugs, too, its concern is a bit more theoretical than that of the congressman from Harlem. If Rangel helps to kill the free-trade treaty because of a battle between Big Labor and the president, he'll undermine and undercut Colombia's successful war on drugs. The troops in Colombia who risk their lives daily to smash labs, defoliate cocoa plants and arrest drug lords will find themselves swimming against the economic tide. If America does not reward Colombia by making its non-cocaine exports profitable, it will leave the poor of that South American ally no choice but to go back to the drug labs. Let the administration and the unions fight over Panama or Peru - or, better yet, resolve their differences in a straightforward legislative battle without holding a Third World country hostage. The free-trade agreement with Colombia is of vital importance to all those who take the war on drugs seriously - most of all, one would think, Charlie Rangel. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake