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  Plan Columbia Broadens
Posted by FoM on July 17, 2001 at 21:05:27 PT
By Jason Vest 
Source: The Nation 

justice These days, the buzz on Capitol Hill seems loudest about Gary Condit. But late Thursday afternoon, phones started ringing after a congressional staffer discovered a disconcerting bit of text in the considerably-less-sexy but eminently-more-important House Foreign Operations Appropriations bill.

The passage has left a number of legislators and staffers wondering: Is the Bush Administration trying to quietly increase the use of private US military contractors in the Andean drug war?

When the Clinton Administration was pushing Plan Colombia--the $1.3 billion package of largely military aid it held would help end Colombia's narcotics-financed civil war--Congress took into account concerns that the US might find itself mired in another Vietnam. As such, legislators capped the number of Colombia-based US military personnel at 500, and restricted them to training activities. Unlike their active duty counterparts, however, civilian contractors--many of whom are former soldiers or airmen working under State Department auspices--can put themselves in harm's way, as they're specifically paid to do everything from piloting fumigation planes to ferrying and even rescuing counternarcotics troops. But Congress capped their numbers, too, mandating that no more than 300 outsourced civilians can be in Colombia at any time.

As violence and drug production spills over Colombia's borders, the Bush Administration has decided to broaden Plan Colombia. Congress is giving the Bush Administration an additional $676 million to fund what is now called the Andean Counterdrug Initiative (ACI)--an effort that would send more drug war cash to Colombia, and, now, its neighbors. Many are skeptical that a disproportionate amount of money spent on supply reduction will ameliorate America's drug problem or Colombia's war; as such, on July 10, House Appropriations Committee Democrats Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and David Obey (D-WI) offered amendments that would have redirected some or all of the money to US drug treatment programs. No one was surprised when they failed. "At least on this side of the Hill," sighed one Democratic staffer, "the notion of expanded treatment or demand reduction is virtually hopeless."

But what did come as a shock was the discovery of language in the bill (apparently inserted late in the game by Foreign Operations subcommittee chairman Jim Kolbe) that not only gives the Bush Administration authority to send as many private military specialists as it wants to Colombia, but to send them in as heavily armed as they want--and with broad rules of engagement.

According to the bill, the $676 million will only be available as long as it's "without regard to section 3204(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 106-246"--the part of Plan Colombia that capped the contractor cadres at 300. Neither Kolbe's office nor State Department officials had responded to queries by Friday evening, leaving critics of US Colombia policy concerned that the bill's language could open the door for the US to start fielding a private army in Colombia. "It's a back-door way of escalating our involvement in the Andean region and providing additional money to private military contractors [PMC's} who have not been effective," said Nadeem Elshami, a staffer for Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill).

Lisa Haugaard, legislative coordinator of the Washington-based Latin America Working Group, said that State is likely to explain the waiver of contractor limits as necessary to accommodate more contract personnel for the US Agency for International Development, or "the more palatable side" of the Plan Colombia expansion. While ACI does increase funds for social and economic development programs, according to the State Department's fact sheet on ACI, there is also more fiscal support for "backing joint operations between the Army's new, air mobile counternarcotics brigade and the Colombian National Police's anti-narcotics unit" as well as "maritime and aerial interdiction and the Colombian National Police's aerial eradication program with additional spray aircraft"--all areas where US private military contractors play a role. "This is an attempt by the Bush administration to shake off the limits imposed by Congress last year," says Haugaard. "The question is, is Congress going to let them?"

Any effort to strike the language is likely to face an uphill battle in the House, which will likely vote on the bill July 18 or 19. But Schakowsky (who has introduced legislation banning the use of PMC's in the Andes) and Rep. John Conyers, Jr. (D-Mich) are nonetheless gearing up to lead a fight against the contractor cap waiver.

On the other side of the Hill where the Democrats are in control, several powerful senators have seen the House bill, and are not pleased--especially after a pointed encounter with administration representatives last week. At a July 11 hearing before the Senate Foreign Operations Appropriations subcommittee, Assistant Secretary of State for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Rand Beers incurred some ire by dodging a number of questions put to him about the use of--and lack of information about--State Department contractors like DynCorp.

But Beers also told senators that US contractor pilots would be out of Colombia by the end of 2002--an assertion which some senators and their staffs now find strange, given the language in the House bill. "If anything, the number of Americans should be going down, not up, as people in the Andean countries learn from Americans and take on their own responsibilities," says a senior aide to one committee chairman. "There are concerns here about the growing presence of Americans in Colombia and throughout the Andean region, and about the limited information on what they're doing, and risks to their safety."

Which raises another question about the Andean Counterdrug Initiative. Apparently even the most vigilant Andean policy critics missed a condition buried in the original Plan Colombia package that has cropped up again in the ACI legislation, a proviso stating that "section 482(b) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 shall not apply to funds appropriated under this heading." The first part of Section 482 forbids State Department contractors from using federal money to buy weapons. But Section 482(b) actually exempts State Department counternarcotics contractors from this restriction, allowing them to buy guns and ammo with federal funds to arm aircraft and personnel--as long as it's for "defensive" purposes.

"Defensive," as staffers and others note, can already be expansively interpreted; by essentially erasing the "defensive" clause, the new bill removes even the vaguest restrictions on armed contractor arsenals and activities. According to Sanho Tree, director of the Drug Policy Project of the Institute for Policy Studies, the re-affirmation of the Section 482(b) exemption is particularly troubling, as it echoes a proposal in a US Air Force-sponsored RAND Corporation report that policymakers are reading with increasing interest.

Entitled "Colombian Labryinth," the RAND report asserts that "drugs and insurgency are intertwined in complicated and changing ways but the former cannot be addressed without the latter," and concludes US-backed efforts to reduce the drug supply in Colombia have been ineffective, The reason, RAND says, is because the US has focused more on "counternarcotics" assistance (aid to anti-drug police and special military anti-drug units) rather than "counterinsurgency" (aid to Colombian military in its war with the left-wing FARC and ELN).

While a number of investigative journalists and watchdog groups have demonstrated US aid and assistance has already crossed the line from counternarcotics to counterinsurgency, RAND recommends that the US once and for all dispense with the dubious notion that there's any difference between the two, and lays out an expansive proposal for increasing US military aid and assistance to Colombian government in its fight against leftist rebels. But use of US troops is something even the Bush Administration is leery of: at his confirmation hearing earlier this year, Peter Rodman, Bush's nominee to be Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs, told senators that " None of us wants to get into a war. The word 'counterinsurgency' scares the hell out of everybody."

But as Tree notes, everything the RAND report recommends--helping the Colombian military develop new infantry and air tactics, setting up better intelligence networks in Colombia, and greater training and equipping Panama's police and military--are all things that don't necessarily have to be done by active-duty US military personnel, but hired contractors. "While there are certainly those who favor that approach," says a Congressional specialist on Colombia, "we haven't really felt that much pressure to go down that road this year, contrary to last year. Whether that view would carry weight here, without a fair amount of more selling on the part of the administration, isn't clear." There is, however, even more money slated for Colombia's armed forces and counternarcotics operations in the Pentagon's FY02 spending bill, which is still stuck in the Defense Appropriations subcommittee. In additional, while troops may be capped, a lot of US-produced military hardware is already heading south.

As for the language in the House bill, whether or not it gets a warm reception from Senate Foreign Operations Appropriations subcommittee remains to be seen; Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt) is no fan of the drug war, and even ranking minority member Mitch McConnell (R-Ky) is working with Leahy to legislate a ban on presidential waivers of human rights conditions tied to counternarcotics aid. While Leahy's office did not return calls, Allison Dobson, press secretary to Senator Paul Wellstone (D-MN), said Wellstone will "certainly fight the House provision" if it crops up in the Senate. "Plan Colombia," she said, "is quicksand. What this shows is we're being asked to put more and more into it, which is what we feared from the beginning."

Source: Nation, The (US)
Author: Jason Vest
Published: July 17, 2001
Copyright: 2001 The Nation Company
Contact: letters@thenation.com
Website: http://www.thenation.com/

Related Articles & Web Sites:

DynCorp
http://www.dyncorp.com/

Colombia Drug War News
http://freedomtoexhale.com/colombia.htm

DynCorp's Drug Problem
http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread10211.shtml

State Outsources Secret War
http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread9844.shtml


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Comment #6 posted by mayan on July 18, 2001 at 16:18:34 PT
Here we go again.....
I just saw a piece on CBS Evening News about this. The mercenaries are packing their gear right now just waiting for this bill to pass. Greed will be the end of us. For oil,timber & medicinal plants in the rainforest we will attempt to wage war in our own hemisphere. This country doesn't need anymore enemies! We will soon have every terrorist & third world nation itching to get even with the U.S.A.

What is happening in Columbia should be on the front page every day! They just postponed the America's Cup soccer tournament a couple weeks ago. Things must be getting pretty bad down there. Those people live & breathe soccer.

I can't believe how ignorant our leaders are. We are repeating the same mistakes over & over again. INSANITY!!!

This country is going to hell real quick.


[ Post Comment ]

 
Comment #5 posted by kaptinemo on July 18, 2001 at 05:01:10 PT:

Something to remember
From an old Jackson Browne song, ca 1986
LIVES IN THE BALANCE

I've been waiting for something to happen
For a week or a month or a year
With the blood in the ink of the headlines
And the sound of the crowd in my ear
You might ask what it takes to remember
When you know that you've seen it before

(Viet Nam, children -k.)
Where a government lies to a people
(Consider: all we've heard is the US side. Are you hearing anything being said by Colombians not a part of 'their' government on the news media? -k.)
And a country is drifting to war

(Pretty explicit, that. 'Drifting'. As in 'mission creep'. As in what happened in Somalia; started out as a 'humanitarian mission', turned into a bloodbath for our military personnel. Was it worth it? Can we learn from our mistakes? Or do more people have to die before Uncle quits sniffing methane, gets his head out of his arse, and takes a good look around at what's really happening, not what he's told is happening.)

And there's a shadow on the faces
Of the men who send the guns
To the wars that are fought in places
Where their business interest runs

(Like oil, children. Like oil. Isn't it interesting that the US is suffering a purely artificial 'energy crisis' at the same time we are about to jump feet first [to protect our children from the scourge of drugs!] into an area with the largest deposits of sweet crude in South America? 'Coincidence?', you say? As my Brit friends used to say "Pull the other one", meaning, pull the other leg.)

On the radio talk shows and the T.V.
You hear one thing again and again
How the U.S.A. stands for freedom
And we come to the aid of a friend
But who are the ones that we call our friends--
These governments killing their own?
Or the people who finally can't take any more
And they pick up a gun or a brick or a stone
There are lives in the balance
There are people under fire
There are children at the cannons
And there is blood on the wire

There's a shadow on the faces
Of the men who fan the flames
Of the wars that are fought in places
Where we can't even say the names

They sell us the President the same way
They sell us our clothes and our cars
They sell us every thing from youth to religion
The same time they sell us our wars

(Emphasis mine, again -k.)
I want to know who the men in the shadows are
I want to hear somebody asking them why
They can be counted on to tell us who our enemies are
But they're never the ones to fight or to die

(In all the wars of the last Century, you never heard of any Rockefeller, Carnegie, Mellon, Vanderbilt, etc, being KIA. Even when we had a draft and all were supposedly subject to it. Interesting, no?)

And there are lives in the balance
There are people under fire
There are children at the cannon.
And there is blood on the wire

At the time Browne wrote and sang this, the US was conducting Ollie North's Enterprise from a basement room in the White House. The same White House where Ronnie Ray-gun was falling alsleep during Cabinet meetings...and Georgie Prime loudly proclaimed he was 'out of the loop' about Ollies fun 'n' games. So who was running the show? Do you think Ollie was a rogue? If you do, I've got some prime oceanfront property in Kansas I'd like to sell you.

Most of the incriminating documents were destroyed before Lawrence Walsh's people could get to them. But all you had to know was that every name called to testify in favor of what went on was a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Many of the Congressional 'investigators' of Iran/Contra belonged to the same supposedly innocuous 'debating society'. Many of the CEO's of major corporations (and all of the CEO's of the Fortune 100) belong to this group...that stood to make a lot of money on increased US involvement in Central and South America...and still do. These are the 'men in the shadows' that Browne was referring to.

Like the French say, the more things change, the more they stay the same.

[ Post Comment ]

 
Comment #4 posted by dddd on July 18, 2001 at 03:32:37 PT
well,,Digit
I do like to post first,,,,but then I look back at my postings,
and I sometimes feel I am saying too much,,so ,,believe it
or not,I try to moderate my yakking about every thing here.

Plan Colombia made me freak in the first place,,the stuff that's
happening now is so egregious,,that I have to kindof hold back,,
,,too much freakin' out is bad for ones heath.

I think Ram2025 has got the right saying..."WAKE UP"

dddd

I assume 'Digit',,and 'digit',,are one in the same,,,,get a red name
or I may play some cheap joke on you someday....


[ Post Comment ]

 
Comment #3 posted by ram2025 on July 17, 2001 at 21:49:53 PT:

wake up
This is just plain ridiculous.

Why are we risking our children to fight a Black market that we are majorly funding?

Life's a Circle when history is forgotten, and the government's seemingly infinite stupidity is making me dizzy. I fear that the rest of the world is feeling the same way.

"What this shows is we're being asked to put more and more into it, which is what we feared from the beginning."
--Isn't this pretty much how any "aid" turns into a "conflict" and then mutates into War? Viet Nam, Desert Storm, Andean Counterdrug Initiative. (pffft)

Bushy--Ask yourself: "How do I want to go down in history?," and you may get out of this term. Otherwise, I won't be here when the fit hits the shan.



[ Post Comment ]

 
Comment #2 posted by digit on July 17, 2001 at 21:37:53 PT:

where's dddd
dddd must be having a day off from posting first :)

[ Post Comment ]
 
Comment #1 posted by Digit on July 17, 2001 at 21:36:59 PT:

corruption
You know those little brown envolopes the french have been handing around to their politicians for years?

This is the same thing, Openly declaring that you are doing something but not declaring for what purpose exactly it is being done for or to what extent it is being done.

Power corrupts, what else can i say.

But it still doesn't make sence, Bush says he doesn't want to harm the American Economy... why is he wasting money on this?

Corrupted by power, fearfull of heading in the opposite direction because of ... pride? PRIDE??? IS THAT WHY WE ARE ALL SUFFERING???

AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRGGHHHHHH!

justice will come one day, i only hope its not too late for the rest of us who have not already fallen.


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