Pubdate: Fri, 07May 1999 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 1999 The Miami Herald Contact: One Herald Plaza, Miami FL 33132-1693 Fax: (305) 376-8950 Website: http://www.herald.com/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?mherald Author: Don Bohning, Herald Staff Writer U.S. MILITARY OPENS NEW ANTIDRUG BASES Curacao, Aruba, Ecuador, possibly Costa Rica, replace Panama Ecuador and the Dutch Caribbean islands of Curacao and Aruba are the new front lines in the U.S. military's war on drugs, the result of the American troop withdrawal from Panama under the 1977 Panama Canal treaties. ``We started counterdrug air operations effective May 1 from all three sites,'' Raul Duany, spokesman for the Miami-based U.S. Southern Command, said Wednesday. That was the day that airfield operations ended at Howard Air Force Base in Panama, the previous base for counterdrug surveillance flights. Howard is to be turned over to Panama on Nov. 1. A six-year effort to negotiate an agreement to set up a Multinational Counter-Narcotics Center at Howard beyond the Dec. 31, 1999, canal turnover date collapsed last September, forcing Southcom to look elsewhere. Unlike Howard, which is a U.S. military base, the Curacao, Aruba and Ecuador sites and one other eventual site, possibly in Costa Rica, will operate under access agreements with the local governments, using existing civilian airfields. U.S. Air Force, Army, Navy, Coast Guard and Customs surveillance and tracking aircraft will operate from the locations to monitor drug traffic from the Andean region through the Caribbean to the United States. Personnel assignments Duany said only about a dozen permanent personnel will be assigned to each of the sites, with up to 200 additional temporary personnel at any given time, depending on aircraft rotation. The permanent personnel would be assigned for air traffic control, communications and maintenance. He said an Air Force task force is ``currently surveying all three sites -- known as forward operating locations (FOL) -- and contracting for necessary improvements to conduct sustained expeditionary operations.'' Duany said the improvements would begin in October and include ``significant upgrades, such as additional ramp space.'' U.S. officials have said the Ecuador site, at Manta, a military base on the Pacific coast, would require the most work. All the sites, including one being looked at in Costa Rica, have the 8,000-foot runways needed to accommodate AWAC radar planes for monitoring illegal drug flights and C-141 aircraft, in addition to the smaller planes needed for the counterdrug operations. The three locations are ``in the heart of the transit zone,'' Duany said. ``Before, it was concentrated in one location [Panama], and even though [it was] strategically located, we will now have wider coverage because of the diverse locations.'' The forward operating locations will be augmented from U.S. military bases at Roosevelt Roads, Puerto Rico; Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and Soto Cano, Honduras. The Joint Inter-Agency Task Force South, based at Howard, which coordinates antidrug operations, was being shut down this week and merged with the Joint Inter-Agency Task Force East with headquarters in Key West, Duany said. Less coverage Ana Maria Salazar, the Pentagon's deputy assistant secretary for drug enforcement policy, acknowledged Tuesday in testimony before a House committee in Washington that there will be an initial ``degradation'' of antidrug operations because of the shutdown of Howard. She estimated that current coverage of the Caribbean region is only half of what it was two years ago. Salazar said the United States has been flying 2,000 counterdrug missions a year out of Howard. Salazar said operations should be up to 85 percent of that next year as a result of the Curacao, Aruba and Ecuador locations. If another location is established in Central America, she said it would boost surveillance to 110 percent of the 1997 level by 2001. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea