Pubdate: [Fri, 01 Mar 1996] Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Author: Bob Ramsey I am very disappointed by your editorial on the decertification of Colombia ("Columbia and Drugs - Withdraw trade preferences pending cooperation," March 14).] It sickens me to see the Colombians continually criticized for not fighting hard enough against drugs. Colombia has less than a seventh the population of the U.S. and more than 3,000 Colombian law enforcement officers have died trying to appease the U.S. drug policy, 600 in this past year. Their police suffer drug war casualties at about a hundred times the rate of U.S. police. How will we Americans like our drug war when cellular phones, tinted car windows and all guns are banned, armored vehicles patrol the streets, 12 police are murdered each day, and drugs are more prevalent than ever? Don't tell Colombians they aren't trying hard enough. A year ago, your Mexico city correspondent stated Mexican government corruption is so pervasive that removing it would be like cutting out a lung. Yet Mexico is granted a "special relationship" so U.S. taxpayers can keep pouring in billions of dollars and Mexico will take longer to default on loans from New York banks. If Mexico ever pays back the $50 billion, it will be with drug money. Colombia may be synonymous with drugs to Americans, but to our neighbors to the South, the U.S. is synonymous with might-makes-right hypocrisy. BOB RAMSEY, Irving