Pubdate: Fri, 21 Aug 1998 Source: Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com Author: Tod Robberson U.S. OFFICIALS DENY DIRECT COLOMBIA AID BOGOTA -- The U.S. State and Defense departments said Thursday that they do not provide direct support for counterinsurgency operations in Colombia and that neither employs mercenaries here. Their remarks followed a Dallas Morning News report Wednesday that discussed the damage done by repeated Colombian guerrilla offensives to government anti-drug efforts. The report, based on interviews with intelligence and anti-drug operatives in Colombia, said the Clinton administration had launched a multimillion-dollar covert program to help bolster the Colombian armed forces after a series of devastating defeats by the guerrillas. The story said that the covert program employs active-duty U.S. military personnel, mercenaries and private contractors, and that some U.S. personnel are involved in live-combat training, among other activities. State Department officials did not return phone calls before the article was published, and U.S. Ambassador Curtis Kamman declined an interview request. A State Department spokeswoman said Thursday that neither the State Department nor its contractors in Colombia are involved in activities such as those mentioned in the Morning News article. "These contractors are not mercenaries," she said. "They are not engaged in counterinsurgency operations or any other activity not fully sanctioned by the U.S. Congress and the executive branch." The Defense Department said in a statement that it has "no covert counterinsurgency program in Colombia" and that the Pentagon "employs no ex-military personnel, private contractors or mercenaries to conduct any covert counterinsurgency program in Colombia." The Central Intelligence Agency declined to comment. "We don't discuss covert actions or activities," a spokeswoman said. Copyright 1998 The Dallas Morning News - --- Checked-by: Rolf Ernst