Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Pubdate: 19 Sep 1998 Author: Tod Robberson, The Dallas Morning News COLOMBIA FEARS U.S. ANTI-DRUG BILL MAY HARM PEACE TALKS Measure would halt aid over creation of demilitarized zone White House drug czar Barry McCaffrey said Wednesday that "this bill is not the answer. I understand that elections are coming, but they should not vote for this bill." BOGOTA, Colombia - President Andres Pastrana's government says it fears that a proposed $2.6 billion U.S. anti-drug bill threatens to torpedo upcoming peace talks with the nation's two main guerrilla groups. The regional anti-drug bill, which passed the U.S. House on a 384-39 vote Wednesday, calls for suspending drug-fighting aid to Colombia if the Pastrana government halts counternarcotics operations in a planned demilitarized zone dominated by the guerrillas. The zone will be established when peace talks are convened in November. The U.S. Senate is expected to take up the anti-drug measure soon, with members of the Republican majority saying it has good chances passing before November's elections. The Clinton administration opposes the bill, characterizing it as election-year posturing. If the bill becomes law, it could lead to suspension of several hundred million dollars in covert and nonsecret U.S. anti-drug aid to Colombia. Upon taking office last month, Mr. Pastrana identified peace talks with the guerrillas as his top priority. Colombian officials and guerrilla leaders say that establishing the demilitarized zone is the most crucial factor in advancing the peace process. Critics in Bogota and Washington say the zone, an area four times the size of Connecticut in the heart of Colombia's cocaine-producing southern region, would give the guerrillas free rein over drug production and export without fear of government intervention. The zone would cover nearly 17,000 square miles across five provinces. An estimated 76 tons of coca are produced annually within the zone, which the Colombian anti-narcotics police commander, Col. Leonardo Gallego, said constitutes 12 percent of national production. Pastrana government officials warn, however, that the threat to suspend aid could scuttle the peace talks, because no anti-drug operations can occur in the demilitarized zone without risking a direct military confrontation with the guerrillas. Foreign Minister Roberto Rojas said he plans to travel to Washington next week in hopes of dissuading Senate members from passing the measure. White House drug czar Barry McCaffrey said Wednesday that "this bill is not the answer. I understand that elections are coming, but they should not vote for this bill." Clinton administration officials noted that the bill faces several major hurdles before it can become law. Foremost among them is its potentially budget-busting price tag for anti-drug operations across Latin America. A State Department spokeswoman called the bill "an admirable effort to bring the war on drugs to the forefront" but criticized aspects of it as an attempt at "micromanagement." But she took a cautious approach to the issue of Colombia's proposed demilitarized zone. "We are for the peace process, but not at the expense of counternarcotics operations," the spokeswoman said. Col. Gallego insisted that airborne coca-eradication operations in the demilitarized zone would not be affected by the peace talks. But he and other officials have avoided comment on the trickier issue of military-style assaults on cocaine laboratories and clandestine airstrips in the zone, which typically are protected by the guerrillas in exchange for a "tax" payment. In its main editorial Friday, the Bogota daily El Espectador lambasted the congressional measure as "absurd and unacceptable." Referring to the Clinton administration's current preoccupation with the Monica Lewinsky affair, the editorial added: "This decision underscores the ease with which the U.S. Congress takes decisions on matters of foreign policy and the lack of maneuvering room that the executive branch has in certain areas. . . . Without doubt, the measure is as inconvenient for the Clinton government as it is for the government of Pastrana." Rep. Elton Gallegly, R-Calif., criticized the bill as bordering on "interference in Colombian affairs" and a "threat to tie one arm behind . . . [Mr. Pastrana's] back" in his negotiations with the guerrillas. Carlos Salinas, who monitors Colombia for the human rights group Amnesty International, said the bill seemed less an attempt at seriously addressing the problem of drug trafficking than a show of "congressional chest-thumping" during an election year. "Definitely, this is a measure that these members of Congress can take back to their constituents just before the elections and say, 'Look, I'm tough on drugs,' " he said. - --- Checked-by: Pat Dolan