News (Media Awareness Project) - Colombia: US Antidrug Team Arrives In Colombia |
Title: | Colombia: US Antidrug Team Arrives In Colombia |
Published On: | 2000-08-06 |
Source: | Boston Globe (MA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 13:39:08 |
US ANTIDRUG TEAM ARRIVES IN COLOMBIA
FLORENCIA, Colombia - US Special Forces trainers quietly arrived in
Colombia last week to begin preparing this country's second antinarcotics
military battalion, a key element in a $1.3-billion American aid package,
US and Colombian sources said.
Colombian soldiers with rifles drawn surrounded both the 83 trainers and
the US Air Force C-17 transport plane that brought them into this southern
town about two hours by highway from guerrilla-held territory. The trainers
then were transported to a nearby military base, according to a Colombian
Armed Forces spokeswoman.
The battalion is scheduled to be ready by Christmas, said a US Embassy
official. A 12-man brigade headquarters command to oversee the military
antinarcotics activity will begin training in September.
The 780 soldiers in the new battalion will join the first US-trained
battalion, which began functioning Dec. 15, 1999, to provide support for
police antinarcotics operations. Police handle drug enforcement in
Colombia, which produces about three-fourths of the world's cocaine and an
increasing share of the heroin consumed in the United States. However,
police increasingly have come under attack from armed groups guarding drug
crops.
FLORENCIA, Colombia - US Special Forces trainers quietly arrived in
Colombia last week to begin preparing this country's second antinarcotics
military battalion, a key element in a $1.3-billion American aid package,
US and Colombian sources said.
Colombian soldiers with rifles drawn surrounded both the 83 trainers and
the US Air Force C-17 transport plane that brought them into this southern
town about two hours by highway from guerrilla-held territory. The trainers
then were transported to a nearby military base, according to a Colombian
Armed Forces spokeswoman.
The battalion is scheduled to be ready by Christmas, said a US Embassy
official. A 12-man brigade headquarters command to oversee the military
antinarcotics activity will begin training in September.
The 780 soldiers in the new battalion will join the first US-trained
battalion, which began functioning Dec. 15, 1999, to provide support for
police antinarcotics operations. Police handle drug enforcement in
Colombia, which produces about three-fourths of the world's cocaine and an
increasing share of the heroin consumed in the United States. However,
police increasingly have come under attack from armed groups guarding drug
crops.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...