Source: Miami Herald Contact: Tue, 14 Oct 1997 Clinton expresses concern on Colombia's drug battle By TIM JOHNSON Herald Staff Writer CARACAS An increasingly deteriorating internal situation in Colombia is not only worrying its neighbors, but also U.S. officials accompanying President Clinton on a South American tour. At a state dinner hosted by President Rafael Caldera on Sunday night, Clinton and the Venezuelan leader discussed Colombia at length, said Deputy National Security Adviser Jim Steinberg, who added that Washington believes that Colombia's "situation is obviously very worrisome." White House drug czar Barry McCaffrey praised Venezuelan counter narcotics efforts even as he warned energetically of the deterioration within Colombia caused by two leftist insurgencies with links to drug traffickers. "They're armed with very sophisticated weapons. They have taken control of perhaps 40 percent of the countryside, particularly the parts of the frontier that border on aspects of Venezuela," he said in remarks released Monday. Hitting an increasingly common theme from senior Clinton administration officials, McCaffrey later told a drug prevention forum that he doesn't like the annual U.S. exercise of certifying whether countries do enough in counter narcotics. "It has produced dissension. It has produced pain. It has increased fingerpointing. It has become unhelpful," McCaffrey said. Unlike Colombia, which has been "decertified" by Washington for two consecutive years, Venezuela has received passing grades. But McCaffrey said drug cartels are placing new pressures on Venezuela. "There's about 10 metric tons of heroin coming out through Venezuela," he said, adding that "a little over 100 metric tons [of cocaine] transits Venezuela." Given camouflage by increased trade between Colombia and Venezuela, which now amounts to nearly $3 billion a year, traffickers increasingly smuggle narcotics in regular trucks, he said. "There's 30,000 trucks and vehicles a day crossing that border between Colombia and Venezuela. . . . It represents a way to smuggle cocaine and heroin out to ships or light aircraft out into the eastern Caribbean, or north into the United States," McCaffrey said. Steinberg said Clinton broached the subject of Colombia with Caldera because of indications of "growing linkages between some elements of the guerrillas and the narcotraffickers." He noted that Colombian guerrillas have attempted to block municipal elections Oct. 26. "There have been a number of political candidates who have been assassinated by the guerrillas," Steinberg said. "It's not a question of, I think at this point, of the government itself collapsing, but it's certainly a very serious challenge in many parts of the country."