Pubdate: Fri, 24 Sep 1999 Source: Wall Street Journal (NY) Copyright: 1999 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Section: Lead Editorial - page A14 Contact: 200 Liberty Street, New York, NY 10281 Website: http://www.wsj.com/ THE COKEHEADS' COUNTRY If it weren't for the fact that so many Americans working for Fortune 1000 companies think the most important thing in life is sucking cocaine up their noses, nobody in the U.S. would much care about Colombia. But the reality is that tens of thousands of Colombians -- peasants, judges, mayors, journalists -- have died with bullets in their heads so that American office workers could feel unusually good about themselves for a few hours. Until George Soros spends enough money to make recreational drugs legal at corporate lunches, it will be America's problem that the sovereign nation of Colombia is on its way to becoming the world's first drug republic. Alas, Colombia is a case study in how U.S. policy makers fail at what they get paid to do. Colombia is a nation of 38 million people, where a homicidal guerrilla movement's modus operandi is to invade a town, murder the mayor, open the jails and start taxing the peasantry who raise coca plants for the drug lords. The heavily armed guerrillas then protect everybody in the production line from the Colombian military and police. Because of the resulting stalemate, Colombia's hapless president has effectively ceded control of an area about the size of Switzerland to the guerrillas and their drug-gangster partners. In short, rural Colombia is close to what a country will look like, say Russia, when the law finally loses for good and the criminals win. Colombia's President, Andres Pastrana, has been in the U.S. this week to plead his case to the United Nations and to meet with President Clinton and members of Congress. He wants $3.5 billion in international aid. Colombia is the U.S.'s number one supplier of cocaine. While coca cultivation is down in neighboring South American countries, Colombia now reportedly looks like the coca equivalent of a Nebraska cornfield. So what have we done about all this? In 1993, the Clinton administration shifted the emphasis of drug control policy away from attacking drug traffickers along their transit routes in favor of moving the anti drug offensive into the source countries. The weapon of choice is crop eradication. Not surprisingly, Colombia since has grown increasingly violent. Indeed, thanks to the healthy cocaine export market (that is, American users) and a stepped up effort to eradicate the plants, guerrilla tax coffers are brimming. As a consequence of this fiscal surplus, the gangsters are able to buy plenty of weapons. In other words, with Colombia's guerrilla gangster army armed to the teeth, it is U.S. policy to fight them with herbicide. How did U.S. policy arrive at such a dead-end? Step one was to reach an American political consensus that Colombia should be forbidden to use its army to fight back. The Colombian army was portrayed in the U.S. and Europe as a "human rights violator." The existing, largely incompetent army has long been weakened by its own historic isolation from the civilian government. But the U.S. Army program at Fort Benning, Ga., which teaches Latin American officers how to behave like professionals, has cut funding for students and is under pressure to close. Working out of this mindset, Congress says it is in favor of sending military funds to Colombia to fight the drug lords, but it can't be used to violate the human rights of the guerrillas. So what's left? The U.S. exhorts Colombia to bomb the fields! Without a modern, efficient army, Colombia can never establish law and order outside the big cities. As a result of U.S. policy, drug money from our value free yuppies fuels a law-of-the-jungle rural society in Colombia where the winners rob, kill, kidnap, maim, and extort the weak. This is the manifesto of both the Marxist guerrillas and their enemies, the vigilante paramilitary. Millions of peasants are caught in this crossfire. This thriving criminal underworld threatens to destabilize the entire Andean region. Guerrillas are now popping up in Ecuador; and they have long taken advantage of the wild, untamed Venezuelan border area. The U.S. military withdrawal from the Panama Canal also weakens the region. With no upside in sight, President Pastrana wants to strike some kind of a peace deal with the guerrillas, though they've virtually made double-crossing his overtures an entertaining national sport. Still, even the white-flag waving president now seems to recognize that reasonable negotiations require that the state regain some control and that to do so Colombia is going to need a strong, modern, professional army. We should help them acquire it. For now, though, it is de facto U.S. policy to deprive the people of Colombia of any such ability to clean up their own mess. So long as the Clinton administration and Congress are willing to hold this position, they should stop whining all the time about our drug problem with Colombia. America's cokehead population may be irresponsibly narcissistic, but on this subject their political leadership is hardly less self indulgent. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake