Source: Reuters Pubdate: Fri, 18 Sep 1998 Author: By Angus MacSwan U.S. GENERAL SEES TURNING OF CORNER IN COLOMBIA KEY WEST, Fla. (Reuters) - The general leading the United States' war against the Latin American drugs trade said Thursday the situation was looking better in frontline Colombia, where American personnel have been helping the beleaguered military against traffickers' armies. Marine General Charles Wilhelm, commander in chief of the U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM), said that with a new president and a change in the armed forces leadership, there were signs Colombia was ``turning the corner.'' Earlier this year, as the Colombian army reeled from a string of defeats by drug lords' armies allied with leftist guerrillas, Wilhelm had expressed concern about its abilities. The then president, Ernesto Samper, was persona non grata in the United States because of his reputed links to drug lords. Wilhelm met the new president, Andres Pastrana, armed forces chief General Fernando Tapias, and other officials during a recent visit to Colombia. Pastrana took office last month. ``I was very impressed by the new military leadership team and with the national leadership team,'' Wilhelm told Reuters. ``I think we've seen some significant successes by the joint (Colombian military) task force which has been executing Operation Invincible...I think that organization symbolizes a turning of the corner.'' ``Recently we've seen not only the takedown of some fairly significant laboratories but we've seen some small-scale but nevertheless encouraging tactical successes against the insurgents and the narcotraffickers. It's a good team.'' The fight against the illegal drugs trade is a main mission of the Miami-based SOUTHCOM, the U.S. military's Latin American and Caribbean command. Its help to Colombia, the main source of cocaine reaching the United States, includes counter-narcotics training personnel and radar technicians monitoring flight paths and smuggling routes. Wilhelm was speaking in an interview at the Naval Air Station in Key West, where he will host a meeting Friday of top officials involved in the drugs fight from Bolivia, Brazil, Peru, Panama, Colombia, Venezuela and Ecuador. U.S. drugs czar Barry McCaffrey, himself a former SOUTHCOM commander, will deliver the keynote address. Wilhelm said co-operation between the countries of the region was growing ever closer and it showed in the number of drug seizures. ``There are a lot of success stories...I think our activities, particularly in the Caribbean with (operations) Frontier Shield and Frontier Lance, have been very productive.'' But as anti-drugs forces clamp down in one area, the traffickers switch to new routes. They had moved across the Caribbean from east to west and were now increasingly using the east Pacific, the general said. ``I'm concerned about the transit routes through the east Pacific. Some of our intelligence analysis indicates fairly clearly that there's an extensive flow of cocaine out of source zone ports through the eastern Pacific, the Sea of Cortez and into Mexican ports'' from where it is smuggled over the U.S. southwest border. ``We have designed an operation that targets that particular sector. The plan is complete,'' said the general, a crop-haired, personable veteran of conflicts from Vietnam to Somalia. Wilhelm declined to discuss the fate of a planned multinational anti-drugs base in Panama. The original plan envisaged turning the U.S. Howard Air Force base in the canal zone into the regional center, with a U.S. troop presence of 2,000 plus soldiers from other countries. But Washington said in July that talks were at an impasse, locked over the time issue in an agreement allowing U.S troops to stay in Panama beyond the end of 1999, the date set in a 1977 treaty for Panama to regain full control of the canal. One alternative that has been mooted is to move and merge the present U.S. anti-narcotics base in Panama, the Joint Interagency Task Force South, which oversees South America, with its counterpart the Joint Interagency Task Force in Key West, which covers the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry