Source: Detroit News (MI) Contact: http://www.detnews.com/ Pubdate: Fri, 8 May 1998 Author: Douglas Farah / Washington Post U.S. COPTERS CAN'T FLY IN COLOMBIA DRUG WAR Vietnam-era Hueys grounded by age; Washington political squabbles delay money for maintenance U.S. Gen. Charles Wilhelm, left, is welcomed by Colombian Gens. Jose Serrano and Manuel Bonett as he arrives at anti-narcotics base Tuesday. The Colombians want new U.S. copters. SAN JOSE DEL GUAVIARE, Colombia -- On an airstrip at this base in the sweltering heart of a no-man's land roamed by Marxist guerrillas, drug traffickers and paramilitary death squads sits a row of six Huey UH-1H helicopters, the primary weapon Colombian police have to combat the flow of drugs to the United States and the spread of lawlessness here. But the helicopters can't fly. They are part of an aging fleet of 36 Hueys provided to Colombia by the United States -most of which have been grounded over the past two months because of mechanical problems. Helicopters are vital to drug interdiction because there are no roads through this jungle, distances are vast, detection of laboratories from the ground is virtually impossible and access by river is slow and dangerous. But the Hueys were grounded because of structural flaws brought on by age; most were used in the Vietnam War. In the past 10 days, 15 of the 36 helicopters have undergone testing and emergency repairs that allow them to resume flying temporarily, according to State Department officials. In addition to stalling interdiction activities, grounding the helicopters has fanned an already acrimonious debate between the White House and congressional Republicans over the type of anti-drug aid the United States should give Colombia, which produces 80 percent of the world's cocaine and a growing portion of its heroin. The dispute has led to a congressional freeze on $36 million that the administration wanted to spend in Bolivia and Colombia to pay for drug eradication and crop substitution programs. Not only do drug traffickers exercise considerable influence in this region, but some traffickers are closely allied with Marxist guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, while others are closely allied with right-wing paramilitary groups. The Clinton administration is trying to walk a fine line, aiding the police and army in combating drug trafficking without getting involved in counterinsurgency -- a line senior administration officials admit is often blurred at best. Many in Congress, especially on the Republican side, are pressing the administration to take a more active role and to increase aid to the military and police because of increased rebel activity in recent months. Rep. Benjamin A. Gilman, R-N.Y., who chairs the Committee on International Relations, has been demanding the administration upgrade the Colombian police's helicopter fleet. Nonbinding language urging the purchase of three Black Hawk helicopters was in the fiscal 1997 budget. The State Department argues that the Hueys can be upgraded and repaired much more cheaply and the Colombian police do not have the training or budget to maintain the Black Hawks. Gilman, in a letter sent Monday to Thomas Pickering, undersecretary of state for political affairs, accused the administration of "trying to fight the war on drugs on the cheap" and said upgrading the existing fleet of Hueys had been promised by the administration for the past two years but never carried out. "It makes no sense to merely upgrade 40-year-old equipment that is already grounded or not operating and cannot survive crashes or ground fire as well as the Black Hawk," Gilman wrote. "Let's get serious and fight this scourge with the tools and equipment our good friends want and need to fight our fight, at its source." - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)