Pubdate: Tue, 24 Aug 1999 Source: International Herald-Tribune Copyright: International Herald Tribune 1999 Contact: http://www.iht.com/ Author: Douglas Farah, Washington Post Service FEARING POTENTIAL DRUG CRISIS, U.S. PLANS TO BOOST AID TO COLOMBIA WASHINGTON - The Clinton administration is preparing to greatly step up military and economic aid to Colombia in response to fears that the growing strength of drug-financed Marxist guerrillas there could undercut counter-narcotics efforts across the Andean region. In separate visits to Colombia, senior U.S. officials warned President Andres Pastrana last week that he risks losing U.S. support if he makes further concessions to the insurgents in an effort to restart stalled peace negotiations, according to sources familiar with the talks. But the officials -- the White House drug adviser, Barry McCaffrey, and Undersecretary of State Thomas Pickering also told Mr. Pastrana the United States will sharply increase aid if he develops a comprehensive plan to strengthen the military, halt the nation's economic free fall and fight drug trafficking, Part of the economic aid will be $3 billion in International Monetary Fund loans, with some additional direct U.S. military aid. Mr. Pickering, briefing reporters here, said he asked Mr. Pastrana to present his plan by the middle of September in order to seek supplemental funding from Congress this year. While specific aid figures will not be discussed until Mr. Pastrana presents his plan, senior officials and congressional sources said it would be hundreds of millions of dollars. Colombian defense officials last month requested $500 million in additional military aid over the next two years, a number U.S. officials said is being discussed. U.S. security assistance already stands at $289 million this year, making Colombia the thirdlargest recipient of such U.S. aid after Israel and Egypt. "We are working toward a muchlarger engagement with the United States, involving combating narcotics, strengthening our battlefield capabilities and economic issues," said a Colombia Foreign Ministry official. "It is a muchbroader engagement than just the narcotics issue because all our problems are linked. " President Bill Clinton, for the first time senior administration officials could recall, was briefed on Colombia by Cabinet officials Wednesday. The officials said National Security Adviser Sandy Berger !get and Mr. Pickering, the State Department's third-ranking offi- cial, were put in charge of interagency coordination of Colombian policy. The decision to escalate aid comes a year after the United States resumed helping the! army and expanded intelligence sharing, ending a period covering most of this decade during which collaboration was cut off because of the army's abysmal human rights record. Currently the United States is training a 950-man Colombian Army counternarcotics battalion, the first such specialized unit in the military, whose primary objective will be to regain control of guerrilla-controlled territory. Pentagon and State Department officials said they recently agreed to try to provide the group with 18 Huey UH- IN helicopters. And, according to the same sources, the United States is planning on funding at least two more such battalions, a move that would boost U.S. aid by tens of millions of dollars. Mr. Pickering said he was "sobered but certainly not panicked" by his trip and stressed that the guerrillas are not on the verge of military victory. But other officials were less optimistic. "Colombia is a disaster, and I don't see any way around that," said Mr. McCaffrey, a retired general who recently proposed spending an additional $1 billion in the Andean drug-producing region, with about half of the money going to Colombia. "We are in a period of intense debate in the administration and on the Hill, but we don't have the latitude to let a fellow democracy go under." Mr. McCaffrey said his proposal, including money for alternative development and judicial reform along with military aid, was an attempt to tackle Colombia's multiple problems. " So far, the debate has been at a micro level, about 10 helicopters here or training a battalion there," Mr. McCaffrey said. "We are not talking about the right order of magnitude for this problem." Colombia produces 80 percent of the world's cocaine and about 70 percent of the heroin found in the United States. Two Marxist guerrilla groups AC the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, with about 15,000 combatants, and the National Liberation Army, with about 5,000 -- control about 40 percent of the national territory and receive hundreds of millions of dollars a year from protecting drug-trafficking routes, airstrips and laboratories. In addition, some 7,000 right-wing paramilitary troops, who also derive millions of dollars from cocaine trafficking, control about 15 percent of the national territory. With the U.S. military gone from Panama, officials say, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia is increasing its use of the southern portion of that nation as a safe haven, while expanding its presence in neighboring Ecuador and Venezuela. And President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela, a populist leftist who has expressed sympathy for armed revolution, has denied use of Venezuelan airspace to U.S. airplanes pursuing drug traffickers. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D