Pubdate: Wed, 5 May 1999 Source: Jane's Defence Weekly Copyright: Jane's Information Group Limited 1999 Contact: 1340 Braddock Place, Suite 300, Alexandria, VA 22314-1651 USA Fax: 1 703 836 0297 / 1 800 836 029 Website: http://www.janes.com/ Author: Bryan Bender, JDW Bureau Chief USA WARNS OF COLOMBIAN INSURGENCY SPREADING Washington DC - Military intelligence reports have raised alarms in the USA that the expanding reach of paramilitary groups and technological advances by illegal drug cartels in Colombia will result in instability spreading into neighbouring states. Senior US officials warn that they may be facing a regional problem of potentially immense proportions. The rising stakes in the Andean Ridge of South America - a region one US official described as the "backyard Balkans" - could adversely affect not only the democratically-elected governments but also the USA's "source zone strategy" of eradicating and interdicting illegal narcotics at their source, according to officials. Intelligence information made public last week says that Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebels controlling nearly 40% of the country, the smaller National Liberation Army (ELN) and right-wing paramilitary groups are increasingly operating outside of Columbia's borders, threatening other nascent democracies in the region. "Regionally, the governments of Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru and Panama have become increasingly concerned about the possible spill-over of violence from Columbia into their respective sovereign territories," says Barry McCaffrey, director of the office of national drug control policy and the former four-star army general who commanded the US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM). "For example, guerrilla units have found sanctuary in Panama's Darien Province and cross the Colombia-Panama border nearly at will," McCaffrey told the Senate Armed Services Committee's emerging threats panel. "These countries have responded by substantially strengthening the military law-enforcement presence on their common borders with Colombia. This set of circumstances may have extended implications for the continued growth of democratic institutions in the region. A situation that once was an internal Colombian problem may be growing into a long-term regional challenge." Meanwhile, US civilian and military authorities also revealed that Colombia's drug cartels, which have a close relationship with the insurgency and have doubled their production of cocaine between 1995 and 1998, now have at their disposal new technologies and techniques that make US and other nations' counter-narcotics efforts more difficult. "For example, unclassified intelligence reports suggest that 'super go-fast boats' are now being manufactured on the west coast of Columbia for use in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific," McCaffrey reported. These boats have greater speed and cargo capacity than the latest-model Eduardono boats and can out-run US vessels. Other intelligence indicates the drug cartels are also capitalizing on expanding global information networks to support their activities. These new developments come as the US Department of Defense's $1 billion annual counter-narcotics effort is at a crossroads with the planned military withdrawal from Panama by the end of the year. The USA has successfully negotiated agreements with Ecuador and the Netherlands to construct forward operating locations (FOLs) on the islands of Curacao and Aruba in the Caribbean and at Manta, Ecuador, to help replicate its anti-drug air activities that had been housed at Howard Air Force Base in Panama. Negotiations are under way for an additional FOL, officials said. Other steps taken include moving other military elements to the USA and merging Joint Interagency Task Force (JIATF) South with JIATF East in Key West, Florida. "This has been a tedious and occasionally contentious undertaking," said US Marine Corps Gen Charles Wilhelm, SOUTHCOM chief. "It has consumed much of the time and attention that we normally devote to day-to-day counter-drug operations. Now that the architecture is in place we have refocused our attention on the operational side of our mission and are working vigorously on a campaign plan, to be completed by 31 May, that will chart a course for efficient, well coordinated and fully integrated [counter-drug] operations from our new operating locations." At the same time, SOUTHCOM has undertaken some new counter-drug activities, according to Gen Wilhelm, including: the training of riverine units in Peru; meetings with the Colombian Army's new counter-narcotics battalion; and the commencement of Operation 'Caper' to intercept traffickers in the long uncontested eastern Pacific corridor. The DoD's counter-drug funding request for Fiscal Year 2000 totals $954.6 million, including $92.4 million for the restructuring of SOUTHCOM's counter-drug structure. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea