Pubdate: Thur, 11 Feb 1999 Source: Reuters Copyright: 1999 Reuters Limited. Author: Jim Loney HAITI IS KEY CARIBBEAN DRUG ROUTE-U.S. OFFICIAL MIAMI, Feb 11 (Reuters) - South American drug traffickers are using Haiti as a main smuggling route through the Caribbean but the region lags far behind Pacific-Mexico routes for U.S.-bound drugs, U.S. anti-drugs chief Barry McCaffrey said on Thursday. Although Caribbean smuggling routes are a "huge problem," 50-70 percent of illicit drug traffic to the United States flows up the eastern Pacific or across the 2,000-mile (3,200 km) Mexico border, McCaffrey told academics at the University of Miami's North-South Centre. The island of Hispaniola, shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic, is the key route through the Caribbean and little progress has been made toward stemming the flow, said McCaffrey, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy. "Clearly Haiti is viewed as enormously vulnerable, almost open, to being used as a drug smuggling conduit into the United States and into the Dominican Republic, and that's what's happening," he said. "I see no credible effort so far to oppose that process." McCaffrey said the United States needed to continue long-term support for the anti-drugs fight in Colombia, where land under coca plant cultivation "exploded" by 26 percent last year, and Mexico, where U.S. officials have defended the government's efforts against traffickers. Coca plants provide the raw material for cocaine. The Washington Post reported on Wednesday that Mexico had produced such dismal results against drug trafficking in the last year that Congress would try to add it to a blacklist of countries unworthy of aid. President Bill Clinton has requested a record $17.8 billion budget for the drug war in 2000, an increase of $735 million over 1999. McCaffrey said some South American drug traffic was moving through Cuban airspace and sea lanes, but reiterated past statements that the United States had no evidence the Cuban government was involved in smuggling. However, he said Cuba was potentially a major smuggling threat to the United States. "Cuba will be open within five years and it will be a major, logical drug smuggling route to Europe and the United States," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck