Pubdate: Wed, 18 Aug 1999 Source: International Herald-Tribune Copyright: International Herald Tribune 1999 Contact: http://www.iht.com/ Page: 8 Author: Juanita Darling and Ruth Morris NEW, WORRY ON ROLE OF U.S. TROOPS AND CIA IN COLOMBIA DRUG WAR BOGOTA - Back in 1982, when U.S. leaders feared communism more than cocaine, Vice President George Bush attended the inauguration here of President Belisario Betancur and offered him a U.S. military ban to keep an eye on his country's leftist insurgents, according to a Colombian official of that era. Wary of such a high-profile U.S. presence, Mr. Betancur demurred, but he did agree to let the Americans install radar stations for surveillance. By 1990, relations were cordial enough that a group of U.S. military advisers reviewed Colombia's military intelligence organizations and recommended changes. Hundreds more soldiers, Marines, Coast Guard personnel and CIA and Drug Enforcement Administration agents have since fol-lowed them to Colombia. Today, Americans assist in operating five jungle radar stations, fly drug-eradicating crop dusters and are working to redesign the Colombian Army into a more effective drug-fighting force. They also pilot spy planes like the one that crashed into a Colombian mountain last month, killing all seven crew members, including five U.S. Army aviators. The crash of that plane has raised questions about what exactly 200 or more U . S. Department of Defense employees -- both civilian and military -- are doing in Colombia. And that is not counting the unknown number of agents of the Central Intelligence Agency and the Drug Enforcement Agency, or DEA. Are they here to combat drugs, or are they harbingers of another U.S. venture into an inwar with Marxist guerrillas? And what happens to the information gleaned by U.S. spies? The standard answer from U.S. military officials is that most are involved in training missions and that none are involved in combating the Marxist guerrillas who have been fighting the Colombian government for more than three decades. The numbers are unusually high now -- 283 on Aug. 10 -- because of investigations into the crash of the De Havilland RC-7 last month, said Lieutenant Colonel Bill Darley, a Pentagon spokesman. "Two hundred people scattered over a country, "Colonel Darley said, are nott hat much."- Upon his return Monday to Washington Monday from a trip to Colombia, Undersecretary of State Thomas Pickering dismissed the possibility that more U.S. troops would be deployed. "That is not our policy," he said. But many political and human rights analysts recall that until 1996 the Pentagon also denied that the U.S. military advisers in El Salvador-officially never more than 55 at a time -- were involved in combat against the country's leftist guerrillas in the 1980s. Such concerns have been heightened as U.S. officials point to the strong ties between rebels and drug traffickers to justify the growth in U.S. antinarcotics assistance to Colombia. Colombian rebels get an estimated $600 million a year in "taxes" on opium poppies and coca -- the raw material for cocaine -- grown in territory under their control. Colombia supplies about three-fourths of the cocaine and a growing share of the heroin consumed in the United States. To curb that supply, the United States has budgeted $289 million in anti-narcotics aid for Colombia this year, with the restriction that the money not be used to fight the rebels. Colombian military leaders say they also need U.S. help with intelligence. "The population is involved with the guerrillas, so we cannot get intelligence, from them," said General Fernando Tapias, head of the Colombian armed forces. In contrast, the rebels seem to have quite a reliable network to tell them when the army and police plan to attack a cocaine laboratory, he said. Often, the labs have been moved or no one is there. U.S. intelligence technology, such as the De Havilland RC-7 or the radar stations, thus becomes crucial. The concern is that the information obtained, analyzed and provided to the Colombian military may be leaked to rightist private armies. Estimated to have a troop strength of about 5,000, these groups fight the rebels mainly by attacking civilians believed to support the insurgency. "Members of the armed forces are involved in promoting the actions of the paramilitaries," said Teofilo Vasquez, a researcher at -the Center for Research and Popular Education, a Colombian group that studies human. rights issues. Several high-ranking 'Colombian military officers have been relieved of their commands pending investigations into allegations that they had ties to armed right-wing groups. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea