Pubdate: Wed, 18 Mar 2009 Source: Post-Bulletin (Rochester, MN) Copyright: 2009 Post-Bulletin Company, LLC Contact: http://www.postbulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1342 Author: Joel Brinkley Note: Joel Brinkley is a former Pulitzer Prize-winning foreign correspondent for The New York Times and now a professor of journalism at Stanford University. Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Plan+Colombia 'PLAN COLOMBIA' SHOULD BE SHUT DOWN President Obama says he is determined to cut the federal deficit in half, so I have an idea that will start saving millions of dollars right now: Shut down Plan Colombia. To date it has wasted about $6 billion. Over the last few weeks, senior Colombian officials have been flooding Washington, lobbying everyone they can find to renew federal funding for this ridiculous enterprise. I had a chat with one of them, Vice President Francisco Santos. "So far," he told me, "we have not heard of any changes to Plan Colombia." That's too bad. The program began in 1999, under President Clinton, and it seemed to make sense at the time. The United States deployed a small air force in Colombia, 82 aircraft, and began spraying coca plants with a non-toxic herbicide, while also helping Colombia fight insurgents and shut down processing plants that use coca leaves to produce cocaine. Back then, Colombian traffickers had 463,322 acres of coca-plant cultivation. From that, they produced 90 percent of the world's cocaine. After 10 years of eradication efforts, Colombia now has more than 575,750 acres of coca-plant cultivation -- a 25 percent increase! The United Nations reports that cultivation increased by 27 percent over the last year, and Colombia still produces 90 percent of the world's cocaine. So what gives? Over the years, Plan Colombia officials have released perfectly believable statistics showing that they have eradicated many hundreds of thousands of acres. But the simple truth is, as spray planes kill coca plants, the traffickers simply plant new bushes in different parts of the country. Plan Colombia just can't keep up. We have given these drug-enforcement teams a decade to find an approach that works. They have failed, probably because there is no way to solve this problem as long as demand for cocaine remains strong, and profits to be earned from producing it remain staggeringly high. Meantime, Plan Colombia has become an expensive laughing stock. And while it has not achieved its goal, the effort has spawned ancillary violence. As traffickers are forced to move their work to different parts of the country, they push into provinces that have not been players in Colombia's narco-trafficking culture. Suddenly, relatively peaceful areas become violent. People die. In Narino Province last month, insurgent traffickers massacred between eight and 20 indigenous people whom they had accused of being army informants. Narino, a quiet area just a few years ago, now is estimated to have almost 50,000 acres of coca plants. It is now a violent drug-war zone. A few days ago, authorities seized 5.7 tons of cocaine there. I asked Vice President Santos about this. Even as he defended Plan Colombia, he could only nod as I described the violent change that has come to Narino. OK, the cocaine flooding the western world is a statistical anomaly. In Britain over the last year, cocaine has become so readily available that the price fell by 2.5 percent. Pressed, Santos acknowledged that Colombia could manage the program on its own. Joel Brinkley is a former Pulitzer Prize-winning foreign correspondent for The New York Times and now a professor of journalism at Stanford University. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom