Pubdate: Fri, Jan 8 1999 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Contact: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Copyright: 1999 The Seattle Times Company Author: Tim Johnson, Knight Ridder Newspapers COLOMBIAN REBELS SAY THEY MIGHT SWITCH, FIGHT COCA SAN VICENTE DEL CAGUAN, Colombia - Insurgents in Colombia say they might be willing to switch sides in the drug war and actually work to eradicate coca crops, even as one of their leaders yesterday lashed out at U.S. counterdrug programs here. A spokesman for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), Camilo Lopez, told Knight Ridder that insurgents could wipe out all coca within four years. Lopez said the insurgency has asked President Andres Pastrana to give it direct control of one of Colombia's 1,072 townships - an area equivalent to a large U.S. county - to demonstrate that rebels know how to knock the wind out of the drug trade. "We don't need coca crops to survive. We don't need a single peasant farmer to grow coca," Lopez said. Colombia has become the world's No. 1 producer of cocaine and a major source of heroin to the United States. FARC rebels provide armed protection to coca and poppy fields and narcotics-processing laboratories. Many experts are skeptical that the rebels would give up their ties to the flourishing drug trade despite recent pronouncements. U.S. aid to Colombia is soaring to meet the rising drug threat. Coca eradication was a subject of discussion when a midlevel State Department envoy met with a FARC commander in San Jose, Costa Rica, in December, U.S. diplomats say. In a speech at a ceremony to launch highly touted peace talks here yesterday, FARC rebel commander Joaquin Gomez decried rising U.S. anti-drug assistance as a smoke screen for counterinsurgency efforts. "U.S. leaders spend huge sums of money through the Colombian security forces to harm civilians with bombings, strafings and indiscriminate fumigation, wiping out fields and barnyard animals and leaving a good part of the land sterile," he said. Gomez cited what he said was the U.S. financing of a new counternarcotics battalion in the town of Barranco Colorado, in Guaviare state, whose true aim is "to maintain a cordon around the FARC secretariat." FARC spokesman Lopez said rebels would shoot at U.S. advisers as well as Colombian police they might find in the battalion. "If U.S. advisers come and they are in the battalion, we aren't going to know who is (American) and who isn't during combat. We're not going to ask for identity documents. . . . Whoever dies, dies," he said. Pastrana has begun an investment program, called the Colombia Plan, to seek foreign help for massive development in the eastern plains, where most coca is grown. Yesterday's ceremony in San Vicente del Caguan, a remote jungle town in southern Colombia, marked the start of talks designed to establish an agenda and locale for full-scale negotiations later this year. The talks would be aimed at ending a war that has claimed tens of thousands of lives, displaced hundreds of thousands of people and cost the Colombian government at least $4 billion a year. Manuel "Sureshot" Marulanda, the longtime head of the FARC, had been expected to participate but did not show up. It would have been the first public appearance in decades by the 68-year-old guerrilla chief, who has spent most of his life in hiding. His absence was apparently due to threats from right-wing paramilitary death squads. Marulanda's absence from the ceremony dampened a festive atmosphere in the town. Pastrana returned to the capital, Bogota, immediately afterward. After the ceremony, four government-appointed negotiators met with rebel commanders in a church sacristy to discuss an agenda and timetable for the talks. Marulanda's conditions for peace include the dismantling of right-wing paramilitary groups and the exchange of 252 jailed rebels for more than 350 police and soldiers captured since 1996. In the long term, he seeks wealth redistribution in a country where the top 5 percent earn 30 times more than the bottom 5 percent. Information from The Washington Post and The Associated Press is included in this report. - --- MAP posted-by: derek rea