Pubdate: 14 August 1999 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Copyright: 1999 The Seattle Times Company Contact: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Author: Douglas Farah & Serge F. Kovaleski U.S. EMBASSY IN COLOMBIA IN DRUG PROBE U.S. officials are investigating six to eight American Embassy employees and dependents in Colombia for possibly using the mission's postal system to smuggle illegal drugs or other contraband to the United States, according to sources in Washington and Bogota. The investigations began after the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Division charged the wife of the Army officer in command of the U.S. military's counter-drug efforts in Colombia with illegally shipping cocaine to the United States via the seldom-inspected government mail system. The new inquiries were triggered during a follow-up review of embassy mailing records and have not yet led to criminal charges. But U.S. officials described them as particularly embarrassing because Colombia produces 80 percent of the world's cocaine and most of the $289 million in annual U.S. aid to the South American country goes to combat drug trafficking. Several months ago, the inspector general's office in the State Department began a congressionally requested review of the department's Colombia program, according to congressional and State Department officials. The review centers on millions of dollars in U.S. aid given to the Colombian National Police over the past two years. Most of the money has gone to the police air wing, including about 40 helicopters and a handful of other aircraft. The review is focusing on whether the State Department followed congressional guidelines. "We have a very important embassy that has a lot of serious internal problems, and that is something we can't afford," said a congressional staffer who deals with Colombian issues. "It is just too important a country to allow ourselves to be embarrassed like this." U.S. officials acknowledged that embassy postal systems are easy to abuse because mail, delivered through the Army Postal Service (APO) by the U.S. Postal Service, is seldom inspected. In Bogota, the APO is located inside the embassy and is only available to embassy employees and their dependents. An embassy spokesman in Bogota declined yesterday to comment on this story and added that Ambassador Curtis Kamman also would not comment. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea