Pubdate: 4 Oct 1999 Source: U.S. News and World Report (US) Copyright: 1999 U.S. News & World Report Contact: 1050 Thomas Jefferson Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20007-3871 Fax: (202) 955-2685 Feedback: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/usinfo/infomain.htm Website: http://www.usnews.com/ Forum: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/forum.htm Author: Linda Robinson IN FOR A DIME, IN FOR A DOLLAR? PUERTO OSPINA, Colombia -- Sgt. Lerma Mezu swings his .50-caliber machine gun from one riverbank to another as his comrades peer over their M-60s into the dense foliage, fingers tensed on triggers. These Colombian marines are speeding up the wide, brown Putumayo River for a day's work in the drug- and guerrilla-infested southwestern jungle. Their mission: to find and destroy cocaine labs hidden deep in this no man's land. The Riverine Brigade is the first Colombian military unit to be trained by the U.S. Marines and supplied with surplus U.S. guns, fast boats, and flak jackets as part of a new push to roll back the country's exploding drug industry. No one has to tell them to be on guard; in the town where they're landing, a fellow marine was killed by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, last year. As the marines hit the jungle, Colombian President Andres Pastrana met with President Clinton last week to seek help for his country's mounting crises. Alarmed by a doubling of coca cultivation and increasingly aggressive Marxist rebels, U.S. officials had urged him to come up with a comprehensive strategy. Pastrana's response is a three-year plan. It calls for a whopping $ 3.5 billion in foreign aid--and would draw the United States more deeply into Colombia's drug war. The cornerstone? Some $ 1.5 billion in U.S. training and equipment for the besieged Colombian military and police, on top of $ 289 million this year. Pastrana would also continue a decade-old drug eradication effort, fund alternative jobs for poor coca-growing peasants and 1 million people displaced by the 35-year-old war, and shore up an economy mired in its worst recession in 60 years. The economy contracted by 7.6 percent in the second quarter, and investor jitters have sent the Colombian peso down 20 percent against the dollar this year. War Talk Sending U.S. money abroad is rarely popular. But Pastrana, on a quick trip to Capitol Hill, found congressional leaders receptive. U.S. worries go beyond the burgeoning flow of drugs to the faltering of the region's oldest democracy, the spillover of its conflict into neighboring countries, the kidnapping of U.S. citizens, and the swelling numbers of Colombians fleeing to the United States. While the administration is prepared to back a substantial aid hike, direct U.S. military involvement is not on the table. Seeking to stop rumors of a possible U.S. intervention, Pastrana said in a U.N. speech last week: "The times of intervention are over. These are times of cooperation." Invasion talk has been fueled by the growing U.S. and Colombian military role in the drug war. Colombia's police have been unable to penetrate the guerrilla-dominated regions where most of the world's coca and a new crop of heroin poppies are grown. Rebels guard coca fields and drug labs and shoot down government helicopters and fumigation planes. So in the past year U.S. marines, Navy SEALs, and Green Berets have begun teaching Colombian military units infantry tactics, assault and infiltration techniques, reconnaissance, and mortar handling. A U.S.-supported intelligence center has been set up, and the first of three Army counterdrug battalions has been trained in Colombia by the 7th Special Forces Group of Fort Bragg, N.C. In an exercise earlier this month at Tolemaida base, 70 miles south of Bogota, members of the 931-man battalion scrambled out of a Blackhawk helicopter shooting blanks, smoke bombs, and mock mortars at "narcotraffickers" dressed in blue pants and white T-shirts, as music blared over loudspeakers. There's no music where they're headed, however. The newly trained antidrug troops will be deployed in December to Putumayo, the epicenter of new coca cultivation. As the Riverine Brigade has discovered, the line between fighting drugs and rebels here is murky. FARC rebels are so involved in the drug business that the commander of the main Navy base, Capt. Amaury Peniche, bluntly calls them "a cartel." He says they control refining labs and have begun forcing coca growers to sell only to their collection centers. The Marine unit here struggles to patrol 3,100 miles of rivers with just 28 boats and has so little gas that its generators run only nine hours a day. Minutes after the marines dock at Puerto Ospina, Maj. Humberto Serna outlines the day's operation and leads two platoons on a grueling march into the thick jungle. Sucking mud grips the men's boots as they hump quickly along a trail tangled with vines and roots, sweating profusely as the tropical heat mounts. "Chiqui," one of the masked informants who were brought along as guides, says the FARC'S finance unit comes every 90 days to collect 50,000 pesos ($ 27) from each coca grower. No one knows if guerrillas are nearby today, but the safety is switched off every M-16 and Galil rifle. They spot the first lab, a rough wooden hut surrounded by coca bushes. The men on point race over the hill after lab workers who have already fled. "If we had helicopters, we could make lightning strikes and catch more people," mutters Serna. "The Holy Spirit" Leaving a platoon to guard the drums of liquid cocaine and bag of chemicals, the lead unit plunges deeper into the rain forest, once pristine but now pocked by fields of burned trees where coca shoots sprout. Up ahead the marines fire a shot to signal that they've captured someone, since their Motorola UHF radios don't work in the rolling terrain. Calling in air support is not an option. "We're protected by the Holy Spirit in front of us and the Holy Trinity behind," jokes Serna grimly, as a torrential downpour turns the trail to shin-deep mud. Crossing a log over a rushing river, the men reach a large compound divided into sleeping rooms and a covered porch, where coca leaves are steeped in acetylene alcohol. They find 320 gallons of liquid cocaine waiting to be distilled, coca leaves, and tanks of chemicals. Other than some chickens, pigs, and two dogs, the place is deserted. The troops take logbooks from the house and fill vials and baggies with drug samples, then spill the noxious mixture out of the drums and ignite it. A tremendous explosion shoots flames and billowing black smoke into the sky. "We don't burn houses, but this one's attached so there's no way around it," Serna says as he records the location with his global positioning system device. The scouts, meanwhile, have discovered a third lab, where a barking dog leads them to a man who denies any knowledge of the drug activities. After his photo is found in the house, he pleads that he was laid off from his lumberyard job. "They all have similar stories," Serna sighs. "They can't find jobs, so they come here. There's no other work." The platoon, tired and hungry, returns to torch the first lab, then races through the hills and drenching rain to the boats. Navigating the log-strewn river at night is too risky, and even in daylight they ran aground twice, so as the sun sets they string hammocks behind two rows of troops guarding their perimeter. Right across the river in Ecuador, armed men believed to be FARC rebels have just kidnapped 12 foreigners, including one American oil worker. Serna tells the soldiers to look sharp. "We gave them some hard hits today, so they will be looking to hit back," he says. They've destroyed the equivalent of 170 kilos of refined cocaine today, adding to the 2,400 kilos of coca paste, 26 labs, and $ 100,000 in drug cash the brigade has seized in its first month. Daisy Chain The United States would like to draw a neat line between the drug and guerrilla wars, but the men on the ground know the FARC will come after them since they are challenging their control of the region and a drug business that finances their war. Indeed, the FARC issued a communique last week denouncing the U.S.-Colombian drug war as a ruse to make war on them. Colombian Defense Minister Lu s Fernando Ram rez says U.S.-trained troops are authorized to go after rebels they encounter or who threaten them, even though the United States insists that its aid is strictly for counternarcotics efforts. The reality is that Colombia's problems can't be parsed. "It's a daisy chain," says former U.S. Ambassador to Colombia Myles Frechette. "Everything is connected to everything else--drugs, guerrillas, kidnaps, paramilitaries, refugees. . . . We finally recognize that there's no quick fix." Success in the drug war hinges on Colombia's ability to gain control over its territory. How? "Insurgencies tend to be resolved at the bargaining table. The question is how Colombia is going to achieve a position of strength at the bargaining table," says Gen. Charles Wilhelm, chief of the U.S. military's Southern Command. "My own feeling is that they need the leverage of improved performance on the battlefield." The Army has less than a 2-to-1 ratio of combat troops to rebels, and fewer helicopters than the police, so it will be sorely tempted to use the antidrug units to turn the tide. A senior U.S. official doesn't see a problem since U.S. troops won't be involved. "The concern in the public is escalation," he says, "getting ourselves involved in an insurgency, and that, I think, is not where we are going." If only one could predict where mission creep stops. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake