Source: San Mateo County Times (CA) Contact: Tue, 22 Sep 1998 Page: 7 Author: Ana Carrigan U.S. MUST FOLLOW COLOMBIA LEADER'S LEAD WHEN Andres Pastrana, Colombia's new president, visits Capitol Hill on Thursday, he will try to persuade congressional leaders not to sabotage his government's courageous efforts to end 35 years of civil war by negotiating with that country's guerrillas. Lamentably, his chances of success are poor. Odds are that Pastrana's commitment to honor his overwhelming mandate from the electorate to negotiate will again collide with the only Colombian policy in town: U.S. drug czar Barry McCaffrey's counter-narcotics war. Only strong White House and State Department leadership to rally bipartisan support for Colombia's peace negotiations can avert a crisis now, and such support seems unlikely. In the view of Congress, Pastrana's bold new policies are at best unwelcome, at worst downright dangerous. I Congress has only two things in mind when it focuses on Colombia: drugs, and narco-guerrillas. Colombian coca and poppy fields grow 80 percent of the cocaine and 60 percent of the heroin that reaches 'the United States. 'McCaffrey, determined to cut off 'drugs at the source, has declared war on the 200,000 peasants who earn a living cultivating coca plants. Enter the narcoguerrilla, who shoots at the U.S. spray planes that carry out the crop fumigation strategy. McCaffrey's aerial crop eradication program in Colombia is the most ambitious of its kind in Latin America. It has brought a war of herbicides and helicopter gunships to the southern coca fields and - despite official denials to the contrary - triggered the rapid escalation of U.S. involvement with the Colombian military in the counterinsurgency war. On Wednesday, Congress overwhelmingly approved spending $208 million for helicopters and machine guns to help in the Colombian anti-drug effort. And it went a step further: It said the money would be offered only if the country's leadership does not pursue, as part of its peace plan, the creation of a demilitarized zone in the heart of the coca plantation region. It is that vote that represents the gravest threat to Colombia's hopes for peace. Washington is confused by Pastrana. Politically and economically conservative, a wealthy, freemarket, pro-American, clean politician, Pastrana appeared typecast for the role of "Our man in Bogota." But his refreshing independence on some of the most sensitive issues has upset administration officials accustomed to servile compliance with American demands. They expect of Pastrana what they got from his weak, corrupt predecessor, Ernesto Samper, and they are not getting it. I Pastrana's anti-narcotics chief has publicly characterized the aerial spraying as a failure, and his environmental minister has vetoed the environmentally hazardous herbicide Tebuthiuron from the spraying program - an addition that had been agreed to by Samper, under pressure from the U.S. ambassador. ',Nor is Washington pleased with Pastrana's sixhour meeting with Cuban leader Fidel Castro at the recent nonaligned summit in Durban, South Africa. The administration's most acute unhappiness, however, focuses on Pastrana's commitment to demilitarize an area the size of El Salvador in the heart of the coca plantations before initiating talks with the guerrilla leadership in November. Indeed, this could be a watershed moment in Colombia's relationship with the United States. But somewhere between Bogota and Washington, the promise, the complexity, and the enormity of what is at stake for Colombia's 40 million people, and for U.S. and regional interests, was lost in translation. Once before, in the mid- 1980s, a decade of partisan bitterness in Congress over Central American policies was set aside in the interest of supporting a bipartisan peace pact for the region. Today, such leadership is again called for. Washington and Bogota need to throw away the old model and reformulate their relationship. Currently, the United States is committed to heavy spending to extend aerial crop eradication. Last year, 45,000 acres were sprayed - yet the acreage of coca plantations increased 18 percent over the same period. Indeed, coca plantations have grown by 56 percent over the past two vears. Pastrana and most others realize the spraying program is a catastrophe. Pastrana - who believes that, under Colombia's conditions, growing illicit crops is a social, not a criminal, problem - wants to institute a collaborative effort, based on Colombian manpower and U.S. money, to eradicate he coca plants by hand, in collaboration with the growers. He would then offer them long- and short-term economic development help as part of an agrarian reform effort. At a first, historic meeting between Pastrana and the legendary 68-year-old guerrilla leader Manuel Marulanda, whose peasant army has been at war with the state for 35 years, the army's leaders repeated their desire to collaborate with the government to eradicate illicit crops in return for development of alternative sources of income for the peasant growers. In his inaugural address, Pastrana asked for international help to finance a Marshall Plan to build schools, hospitals, and roads and to develop microbusinesss to bring employment and economic development to the areas where the drugs now flourish. Such a plan is understandably attractive to the peasant army and the small farmers they represent, who are tired of the violence and death that come with an illegal drug trade. BUT U.S. congressmen have not talked to Colombian coca farmers. Instead, when they fly into the country on fact-finding missions, they meet the Colombian police, U.S. military advisers, and intelligence staff who prop up the Colombian military. Without exposure to the population, they have made up their minds to expand the failed U.S. anti-drug program and to halt peace negotiations. Washington's expanded counter-narcotics strategy will continue to target narco-guerrillas, a composite enemy that includes all those to whom Pastrana has given political status, and whose identification has permitted the obliteration of the line between counter-narcotics and counterinsurgency. Ana Carrigan is author of "The Palace of Justice: a Colombian Tragedy." This article appeared in the Boston Sunday Globe's Focus section. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski