News (Media Awareness Project) - Colombia: Colombia Wants More US Money |
Title: | Colombia: Colombia Wants More US Money |
Published On: | 2000-12-21 |
Source: | Seattle Times (WA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-02 08:19:46 |
COLOMBIA WANTS MORE U.S. MONEY
WASHINGTON - Despite a $1.3 billion anti-drug aid package already approved,
Colombia will need up to $600 million a year more in drug-fighting funds
from the United States in the next few years, Colombia's ambassador says.
Ambassador Luis Moreno says he is confident U.S. support for Colombia will
remain strong despite the change in administrations.
"This was a bipartisan policy," he said in a recent interview. "It began as
a bipartisan policy and it should remain that way."
The $1.3 billion package approved last summer is intended to help Colombia,
the world's largest producer of cocaine, cut its drug production in half
over six years.
Much of the package was for helicopters to help the country's military
fight leftist guerrillas who finance their insurgency in part by protecting
coca fields and cocaine laboratories.
President-elect Bush supported the Colombian aid in an Aug. 25 speech in Miami.
Bush, like President Clinton, said he opposed using U.S. troops in battle
there.
The Clinton administration has stressed that military aid will be used
strictly for fighting guerrillas linked to the drug trade and not to help
Colombia in its civil war.
Some Republicans say it's naive to separate the drug fight from the overall
conflict and that the Bush administration may not be as concerned about
that distinction. Clinton administration officials have repeatedly said
more aid would be necessary in coming years to meet the anti-drug plan's goals.
Barry McCaffrey, director of the White House Office of National Drug
Control Policy, has predicted $400 million to $600 million will be needed
next year for Colombia and its neighbors, but the administration has not
said how much would have to be spent beyond that.
Moreno said Colombia will likely need $500 million to $600 million for at
least three or four years.
"I think equipment (such as helicopters) will continue to be important," he
said. But he added that as guerrillas are forced out of coca-growing
regions, "money will be needed to reach agreements with peasant families to
do manual eradication" of coca crops.
Whether Congress will agree is uncertain, as the aid plan is already under
attack from many sides.
Two powerful Republican lawmakers, Benjamin Gilman of New York and Dan
Burton of Indiana, have insisted that more aid should go to Colombia's
National Police instead of the military. They and other Republicans have
criticized U.S. efforts as slow and ineffective.
Some Democrats have been skeptical that the aid will reduce drug production
and fear the package will draw the United States into Colombia's guerrilla
conflict and help a military linked to human-rights atrocities.
WASHINGTON - Despite a $1.3 billion anti-drug aid package already approved,
Colombia will need up to $600 million a year more in drug-fighting funds
from the United States in the next few years, Colombia's ambassador says.
Ambassador Luis Moreno says he is confident U.S. support for Colombia will
remain strong despite the change in administrations.
"This was a bipartisan policy," he said in a recent interview. "It began as
a bipartisan policy and it should remain that way."
The $1.3 billion package approved last summer is intended to help Colombia,
the world's largest producer of cocaine, cut its drug production in half
over six years.
Much of the package was for helicopters to help the country's military
fight leftist guerrillas who finance their insurgency in part by protecting
coca fields and cocaine laboratories.
President-elect Bush supported the Colombian aid in an Aug. 25 speech in Miami.
Bush, like President Clinton, said he opposed using U.S. troops in battle
there.
The Clinton administration has stressed that military aid will be used
strictly for fighting guerrillas linked to the drug trade and not to help
Colombia in its civil war.
Some Republicans say it's naive to separate the drug fight from the overall
conflict and that the Bush administration may not be as concerned about
that distinction. Clinton administration officials have repeatedly said
more aid would be necessary in coming years to meet the anti-drug plan's goals.
Barry McCaffrey, director of the White House Office of National Drug
Control Policy, has predicted $400 million to $600 million will be needed
next year for Colombia and its neighbors, but the administration has not
said how much would have to be spent beyond that.
Moreno said Colombia will likely need $500 million to $600 million for at
least three or four years.
"I think equipment (such as helicopters) will continue to be important," he
said. But he added that as guerrillas are forced out of coca-growing
regions, "money will be needed to reach agreements with peasant families to
do manual eradication" of coca crops.
Whether Congress will agree is uncertain, as the aid plan is already under
attack from many sides.
Two powerful Republican lawmakers, Benjamin Gilman of New York and Dan
Burton of Indiana, have insisted that more aid should go to Colombia's
National Police instead of the military. They and other Republicans have
criticized U.S. efforts as slow and ineffective.
Some Democrats have been skeptical that the aid will reduce drug production
and fear the package will draw the United States into Colombia's guerrilla
conflict and help a military linked to human-rights atrocities.
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