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  State Dept. Official on U.S. Support for Colombia
Posted by FoM on September 01, 2001 at 20:08:05 PT
News from The Washington File 
Source: Department of State 

justice The United States strongly supports Plan Colombia, the strategy designed by Colombian President Andres Pastrana to curb illicit drugs and re-establish civil order in his country, says Marc Grossman, U.S. under secretary of state for political affairs.

Grossman, on a three-day visit to Colombia, held a press conference August 31 to discuss U.S. assistance to Colombia and to other countries in the vicinity. "When President Pastrana asked us to provide security and development assistance to support Plan Colombia, with bipartisan support in the U.S Congress, we provided a $1.3 billion assistance package," he noted.

Furthermore, "to continue and broaden the scope of that support, President Bush has proposed a $880 million Andean Regional Initiative that will help address the regional problems of instability and poverty, and prevent drug trafficking from moving across borders from Colombia to its neighbors, Ecuador, Bolivia, Peru, Venezuela, Brazil and Panama," he said.

Much remains to be done, Grossman stressed. But he added that thanks to Plan Colombia, positive changes are underway. To date, "scores of narcotics fields and [drug laboratories]" have already been shut down in southern Colombia, he declared. Social and government reform programs are in progress, he said, and alternative crop development is helping to provide former coca farmers with a legitimate source of income.

He also raised the issue of safety concerns surrounding aerial crop-eradication efforts, which have focused on the use of the chemical glyphosate to spray (and obliterate) coca fields. "Enormous quantities of glyphosate-based formulations are safely used worldwide in agriculture each year, including in the United States, which has some of the strictest environmental regulations in the world," Grossman said. "In Colombia, the government, with U.S. support, carries out a spray program with stringent guidelines, safeguards and verification measures to prevent damage to the health of Colombians and the environment."

Additionally, the United States wants "to work with Colombia and its neighbors to increase trade to provide a permanent alternative to harvesting drugs," he declared. "If we act with resolve and skill, we can fashion an outcome that benefits everyone: a strong, stable, democratic Andean region at peace and free from the plague of drugs."

Following is the text of Grossman's opening remarks at the press conference, as prepared for delivery:

(begin text)

Opening Statement Undersecretary of State Marc Grossman Press Conference - Bogota, Colombia

August 31, 2001

Thank you for being here this morning. Let me introduce myself. I am Marc Grossman, under secretary of state for political affairs. I am part of a team made up of people working on the United States government's effort in Colombia.

This is my first visit to Colombia. I want to thank President Pastrana and the many other distinguished Colombians I have met for their hospitality and their insights. I also wish to salute Ambassador Patterson and her mission [personnel]. They do a great job.

Our conversations have given me a better understanding of the situation in Colombia that I will convey to Secretary Powell as he prepares for his visit to Colombia.

President Pastrana's government is engaged in a struggle that matters to everyone in this hemisphere because Colombians are fighting to re-establish two things that almost every citizen of our hemisphere wants: peace and prosperity.

Let me highlight one other thing before we continue. Drugs are a challenge to society shared by producing and consuming countries. As President Bush noted last May, "The most effective way to reduce the supply of drugs in America is to reduce the demand for drugs in America."

Colombia matters to the United States. When President Pastrana asked us to provide security and development assistance to support Plan Colombia, with bipartisan support in the U.S Congress, we provided a $1.3 billion assistance package.

To continue and broaden the scope of that support, President Bush has proposed a $880 million Andean Regional Initiative that will help address the regional problems of instability and poverty, and prevent drug trafficking from moving across borders from Colombia to its neighbors, Ecuador, Bolivia, Peru, Venezuela, Brazil and Panama.

We support Plan Colombia because:

-- Plan Colombia recognizes that a negotiated settlement is the only way to achieve peace.

-- Plan Colombia recognizes the effect of drug trafficking; it is the main source of supply for continued unrest in this country. The FARC, ELN and AUC are all involved in the drug trade.

-- Plan Colombia recognizes that jobs and economic opportunity must be created to help turn turbulence into stability. I visited a hearts-of-palm factory in Putumayo yesterday.

-- Plan Colombia recognizes that without full protection for human rights, no democracy is complete.

With all the discussion there's been on Plan Colombia, it's easy to forget that U.S. assistance to Plan Colombia is less than a year old. There are positive things to say:

-- More than 34,000 farm families have already signed manual eradication pacts. The first tranche of a 5-year $222.5 million USAID agricultural assistance package is now beginning to arrive to help them make a living with legal crops instead of drugs.

-- Social and government reform programs have begun. For example, out of 40 planned Casas de Justicia, or community legal service centers, 18 are now active.

-- U.S. assistance has strengthened Colombia's ability to deal with internally displaced persons and human rights violations. There is a pilot early-warning system to prevent guerrilla and paramilitary massacres, now being tested in the field. Satellite human rights units are being established around the country so police and prosecutors are able to respond rapidly to suspected human rights violations.

-- In southern Colombia, the U.S.-trained Counter-Drug Brigade has shut down scores of narcotics fields and labs -- without a single credible charge of human rights violations against the soldiers who took part.

-- The combination of aerial spraying of coca plantations and voluntary, manual eradication for farmers who sign crop substitution pacts with the government has had a serious impact on drug production in southern Colombia. Fifty thousand hectares of coca plantations have been sprayed from the air nationwide in what we believe is a safe and environmentally sound manner.

-- Let me talk for a moment about glyphosate. Enormous quantities of glyphosate-based formulations are safely used worldwide in agriculture each year, including in the United States, which has some of the strictest environmental regulations in the world. In Colombia, the government, with U.S. support, carries out a spray program with stringent guidelines, safeguards and verification measures to prevent damage to the health of Colombians and the environment.

-- The governments of the United States and Colombia also would welcome a review of our procedures, a study of our materials, and any other aspect of the coca eradication program -- consistent with the need to maintain the security of individuals in the program -- so long as we are confident that such a review is carried out by persons who are neutral, credible and scientifically qualified.

Does more need to be done to implement Plan Colombia? Of course. We need:

-- A stronger push to modernize and strengthen Colombia's criminal justice system;

-- More alternative development programs for former small-scale narcotics producers;

-- Increased effectiveness of government human rights units and programs to counter kidnapping, money laundering, and corruption; and

-- Additional support for Colombian programs to rehabilitate child soldiers and protect human rights and labor union officials who have been targeted for violence. We are concerned about attacks against civil society by the guerrilla groups and illegal self-defense groups. The Colombian police and military face many challenges, but they need to do more to protect these courageous people who are trying to improve the lives of Colombians.

-- Have the anticipated 35 helicopters arrive in Colombia to increase the mobility and effectiveness of the government's counter-narcotics battalions.

We also want to work with Colombia and its neighbors to increase trade to provide a permanent alternative to harvesting drugs. Key to that will be renewing the Andean Trade Preferences Act. The Bush Administration will work with Congress to renew, enhance, and expand ATPA before it expires in December of this year.

Why are we doing all this? Because Colombia matters. Colombia is a fellow democracy, the second most populous country in South America. Colombia is the fifth-largest export market for the U.S. in Latin America, with two-way trade last year exceeding $11.1 billion. Colombia exported $3.6 billion worth of oil to the U.S. last year, making it our seventh-largest supplier. The U.S. has more than $4.5 billion in direct commercial investment in Colombia. Colombians deserve the right to live in peace and freedom.

So what happens in Colombia matters. If we act with resolve and skill, we can fashion an outcome that benefits everyone: a strong, stable, democratic Andean region at peace and free from the plague of drugs.

(end text)

This site is produced and maintained by the U.S. Department of State. Links to other Internet sites should not be construed as an endorsement of the views contained therein.

Note: (Says U.S.-Colombian partnership will contribute to peace, prosperity) (1510)

Complete Title: State Dept. Official on U.S. Support for Plan Colombia

Source: Office of International Information Programs
U.S. Department of State
Released: August 31, 2001
Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov

The Washington Files
http://usinfo.state.gov/products/washfile.htm

Related Articles:

U.S. Ends Top-Level Visit To Colombia
http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread10784.shtml

U.S. Seeks Expanded Military Effort in Colombia
http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread10780.shtml

U.S. May Send More Aid To Colombia
http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread10776.shtml


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Comment #7 posted by qqqq on December 12, 2001 at 20:32:44 PT
hey...avbug
....I am curious as to how the heck you know what you claim to know?It sounds as if you are somehow defending,or justifying what is going on in Colombia.
..I dont care how accurate the spraying of herbicides is in Colombia.I think it is wrong and absurd to begin with,,,and I trust the federal government about as much as I'd trust Bill Clinton taking a group of cheerleaders on a camping trip.

..It sounds as if you know what you are talking about,,but why are you talking about it?Perhaps you feel that the details have been skewed to make the federal government look bad....??...Yup,,you know how darn honest those government guys are.They are always getting accused of stuff that they would never do.I wish people would stop being so mean to those poor government guys.

[ Post Comment ]

 
Comment #6 posted by avbug on December 12, 2001 at 17:22:27 PT
Grossman's statement
There is absolutely nothing out of place with this statement.

I've read several comments above by individuals who state that the spraying of roundup in Columbia is done differently than in the United States. This is entirely untrue, and is inflamatory. Spraying is done to precise GPS coordinates with a tolerance much stricter than that used to fly an instrument approach by an airliner, and is always preceeded and proceeded by exacting survey work to ensure that only the intended target crop is affected.

No ag operation flown in the Continental United States is subject to that level of scrutiny.

The herbicide in use is mixed and dispensed in exact conformance with the labeling, just as it is used in the United States. The pilots dispensing the chemical are highly experienced aerial applicators who understand drift control. The chemical is not simply dispensed to drift where ever it might with the wind. It is dispensed exactly as it is in the United States, with the same precision and care.

Grossman's comments are accurate and truthful, and do not distort the facts.

[ Post Comment ]

 
Comment #5 posted by lookinside on September 02, 2001 at 08:33:36 PT:

amazing...
they want to respond to human rights violations with cops
and prosecutors??? WHO THE H*** DOES HE THINK IS COMMITTING
THE VIOLATIONS???

i've used glyphosate for years...it works...but i don't
spray it straight up and let it rain down willy nilly on
myself or my family or my cats...

the spraying in columbia CANNOT be done from the air without
overspraying... they cannot avoid contaminating people...the
smallest breeze can cause the spray to travel far beyond the
target areas...

next step: build more prisons in columbia...they are way
behind the U.S. in the per capita incarceration rate...

the really interesting thing to me is the current state of
our economy...people aren't going to gain confidence as long
as the "shrub" continues to pursue idiotic programs like
this...bald faced lying will not change things...his
administration is doomed...

the news blackout doesn't help them...it just gives the
impression that they are hiding something...and they
are...extreme ineptitude is not something they want seen on
the evening news...


[ Post Comment ]

 
Comment #4 posted by Charlie on September 02, 2001 at 08:28:59 PT
Gross - man...
The United States strongly supports Plan Colombia, the strategy designed by Colombian President Andres Pastrana...

Yeah, right...more like Monsanto, Exxon, and our 'contract' workers...

[ Post Comment ]

 
Comment #3 posted by Jose Melendez on September 02, 2001 at 06:33:28 PT:

incredible
-- The governments of the United States and Colombia also would welcome a review of our procedures, a study of our materials, and any other aspect of the coca eradication program -- consistent with the need to maintain the security of individuals in the program -- so long as we are confident that such a review is carried out by persons who are neutral, credible and scientifically qualified.

So that means if I fly down there and bring or mail back samples of sprayed locations for testing, they will say I am not neutral, therefore the tests cannot be credible, right?


And I guess I can pretty much forget about bringing my video camera, because showing who is doing what and where might compromise individual security...


What are they going to do if a few hundred people arrive in Columbia to sample the soil and water, or shoot photos and video?

...without a single credible charge of human rights violations against the soldiers who took part

This guy speaks like Gary Condit. I wonder how many incredible charges of human rights violations there are?




[ Post Comment ]
 
Comment #2 posted by kerouacko on September 02, 2001 at 00:40:54 PT
Gross, man
I seriously feel sick reading this propaganda. The nausea is initially induced by the cute little euphemisms used, such as "Assistance Packages" and "Regional Initiatives." Then there's just the filth. The US can't keep drugs from crossing its own borders, and yet by sending $880 million to the Colombians, they are going to be able to accomplish the feat? And we're supposed to be proud or something that all these farmers have been coerced into signing 'non-growing' pledges? Then there's the fact that this jag-off can state with a straight face, "Plan Colombia recognizes that without full protection for human rights, no democracy is complete." That is so ridiculous given the context that it justifies no response. Then Grossman says that because the US uses the same pesticide that is being sprayed in Colombia, and because the US "has some of the strictest environmental regulations in the world" that A+B=C. Sorry, but tell that to your little tools. The way the chemical is being rained down upon the Colombian countryside in no way resembles the way it used in the US. It is seriously time for me to smoke a little and relax. I just hate getting so worked up over this BS.

[ Post Comment ]
 
Comment #1 posted by dddd on September 01, 2001 at 21:36:35 PT
Bizzarre...Grotesque....and downright Ghastly!!
.....talk about creepy.....try reading the speech again,but
imagine it is part of a fiction novel written in the late 50's..

no more cocaine for me,,,I'm going to do my part,and switch to palm hearts.


dddd


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