Source: Reuter Pubdate: 10/01/97 By Karl Penhaul BOGOTA (Reuter) A team of Russian agents may soon be brought to Colombia to help smash the growing ties between Colombian drug mobs and the Russian mafia, diplomats said Wednesday. Russian ambassador Ednan Agaev said a deal would likely be finalized during the upcoming visit of Russian Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov to Bogota, scheduled for Nov. 26. ``We need to establish a legal basis before we can base secret agents and police here ... We hope to sign an accord with the Colombia government on the fight against drugs during the visit of Primakov,'' Agaev told Reuters in a phone interview. ``The size of the team depends on the true dimension of the problem. Its task would probably be to identify routes and connections and to try and follow the Russian criminals back to their chiefs in Russia.'' Colombian police chief Gen. Rosso Jose Serrano said ties between Colombian, Italian and Russian mobs were nothing new and sprang up after the collapse of Communism. More than 50 tons of Colombian cocaine have been seized in Russia since the start of 1996 and this was just a ``small part of the total,'' according to Agaev. Colombian police said a cooperation agreement would be signed in the near future and that the Russian agents would analyze the links between Colombian and Russian criminals. Earlier this week the Washington Post reported that the Russian mafia was distributing Colombian cocaine throughout Russia and Europe and was also negotiating to sell sophisticated weaponry, including surfacetoair missiles, helicopters and even submarines to the cartels. Agaev said the Russian antidrug force sent to Colombia would likely consist of former KGB agents now regrouped in the Federal Security Service (FSB), police and members of the intelligence services. This year Colombia and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration set up a joint unit to combat the growing trade in highgrade Colombia heroin estimated to supply about twothirds of the U.S. market. In addition to signing an antidrug agreement, Primakov is due to meet President Ernesto Samper, Foreign Minister Maria Emma Mejia and private sector businessmen. His twoday visit will be the first by a Russian or Soviet foreign minister.