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News (Media Awareness Project) - US FL: Editorial: It's Not Our War
Title:US FL: Editorial: It's Not Our War
Published On:2000-02-09
Source:St. Petersburg Times (FL)
Fetched On:2008-09-05 04:16:36
IT'S NOT OUR WAR

The U.S. should consider alternatives to a Clinton administration proposal
to fight drug trafficking in Colombia with a strategy that could draw the
United States into the country's civil war.

Anyone wondering where the next black hole for our military resources will
open up should look south. The Clinton administration's anti-drug aid plan
for Colombia has the potential for absorbing a large chunk of our military
budget and, if we're not careful, sucking the United States into a
guerrilla war that parallels Vietnam. Even some of our military leaders are
expressing concerns about what we may be getting into.

Colombia is a country imploding under the dual stresses of insurgency and
widespread drug trafficking. Three leftist guerrilla armies and a number of
right-wing paramilitary groups have been battling for decades for control
of various sections of the country. To finance these operations, insurgent
groups have made alliances with drug traffickers, offering protection for
drug fields, laboratories and personal airstrips.

According to a new study by the Central Intelligence Agency and the Drug
Enforcement Administration, cultivation of coca, the raw material for
cocaine, has been allowed to expand exponentially to 480 tons in 1998. Half
of all coca grown in the world now comes from Colombia.

In response, the Clinton administration has proposed a whopping
$1.6-billion plan to help prop up Colombia's flagging security forces with
U.S. military trainers and high-powered equipment, including 30 Blackhawk
helicopters and 33 Huey helicopters. But dissension over this plan is
percolating inside the Pentagon, where some officials appear to understand
the difference between an anti-drug campaign and a counter-insurgency
operation. Senior defense officials have told the New York Times that they
worry about the expanding role of our defense forces in the battle against
illegal drugs and the risk of U.S. soldiers being drawn into Colombia's
civil war.

In fact, the White House has acknowledged that a primary purpose of the
plan is to "(help) the Colombian government push into the coca-growing
regions of southern Colombia, which are now dominated by insurgent guerrillas."

There are alternatives to what the Clinton administration is proposing.
Officials at the DEA suggest that training Colombia's special anti-drug
police teams, as opposed to its military, would be more effective and less
costly. Other U.S. officials say pressing Colombia to make internal
changes, including reforming the judiciary, could make a difference. Of
course, the real answer to combatting the flow of Colombian cocaine is for
the United States to refocus its drug war on prevention and treatment.
Reducing demand by providing universal drug treatment in this country would
do more to hurt drug traffickers than our military involvement in Colombia.

Congress should put the brakes on the White House plan. Colombia's civil
war should not become our war.
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