Pubdate: 26 Feb 1999 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 1999 Associated Press Author: Frank Bajak US NAMES COLOMBIA AS DRUG WAR ALLY BOGOTA -- The U.S. decision to fully certify Colombia -- by far the world's No. 1 cocaine producer -- as an ally in the war on drugs is a crucial vote of confidence in President Andres Pastrana's young government, his foreign minister said Friday. ``It represents one more step in a new era characterized by the normalization of relations with the United States,'' Guillermo Fernandez de Soto told reporters. He said the nation would not fail in its efforts to fight drug trafficking ``so that Colombia can never again be treated by the community of nations as if it were a pariah.'' President Clinton gave Colombia full certification Friday as an anti-narcotics ally. Last year, the country did not receive full certification and was decertified in 1996 and 1997 as punishment for President Ernesto Samper's alleged ties with drug bosses. Samper was elected in 1994 with $6 million in contributions from the Cali drug cartel, money he claimed entered his campaign without his knowledge. Accompanying economic sanctions were minimal, but being blacklisted by Washington was a huge blow to Colombian pride. Colombia's national police sprayed 230 square miles of coca, the raw material of cocaine, with herbicides in 1998, but the coca crop nevertheless grew from 310 square miles to more than 390 square miles. Police also reported making record drug seizures. Much of the new coca cultivation displaces acreage lost in neighboring Bolivia and Peru, the two other major coca-growing countries. The majority of Colombia's coca is located in areas controlled by leftist rebels and right-wing paramilitary groups, for whom drugs are a major revenue source. Colombia is also a source of heroin. The U.S. decision to grant full certification recognizes a new partnership with Pastrana's government, which took office in August and has continued the eradication campaign. Pastrana has also pushed for alternative development, however, insisting eradication and law enforcement alone will not end drug trafficking in Colombia. - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski