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Breaking News! On June 21, the U.S. Senate approved
a $1 billion aid package to Colombia for the purpose
of equipping the Colombian military to combat insurgent
forces and drug trafficking. The aid package will now
be reconciled in a conference committee between the
House and Senate. The House approved a $1.7 billion
aid package to Colombia on March 30. Details are available
in the Senate Bill Status section of this paper.
I. Colombia Background
Size: Colombia is 439,735 square miles (1,138,910
square kilometers) and is almost 50,000 square miles
larger than the entire Eastern seaboard of the U.S.
including Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Delaware,
Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Georgia, and Florida. (Source: CIA World Factbook 1999,
www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook).
Population: In 1999, Colombia’s population was 39,309,422.
(Source: CIA World Factbook 1999, www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook).
Economy: Colombia’s GDP in 1997 was $96 billion, compared
to $8.511 trillion in the U.S. Colombia’s per capita
GDP was $2,446 while the U.S per capita GDP was $29,142.63
in 1997. (Source: State Department, Background Notes,
1999, Iowa State University, www.econ.iastate.edu/classes/econ355/choi/rank.htm).
Unemployment: Unemployment in Colombia currently exceeds
20%. (Source: Gen. Barry McCaffrey, Director, White
House Office of National Drug Control Policy, “Rescuing
Colombia,” Boston Globe, March 2, 2000).
Exports: Colombia’s major licit exports are petroleum,
coffee, coal, gold, bananas, and cut flowers. Their
total licit exports totaled at $11.3 billion in 1998.
(Source: CIA World Factbook 1999, www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook).
II. COLOMBIAN GOVERNMENT
President: Andres Pastrana was elected August 7, 1998,
and holds office until 2002. He is a member of the Social
Conservative Party (Partido Social Conservador). (Source:
State Department, Background Notes, 1999, www.state.gov/www/background_notes/colombia_0199_bgn.html).
Colombian Congress: The Colombian Congress is composed
of two primary parties and more than twenty smaller
parties. The two large parties are the Liberal Party
(Partido Liberal) and the Social Conservative Party
(Partido Social Conservador). There are 161 members
of the Colombian House of Representatives and 102 members
of the Colombian Senate. The Partido Liberal holds the
majority in both the House and the Senate with 54.0%
and 55.9% respectively. (Source: Agorà Telematica, www.electionworld.org/election/colombia.htm).
Ambassador: Colombia’s ambassador to the U.S. is Luis
Alberto Moreno Mejia. The embassy can be contacted at
2118 Leroy Place, NW, Washington, DC 20008, phone: (202)
387-8338, fax: (202) 232-8643. (Source: CIA World Factbook
1999, www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook).
III. INSURGENT FORCES
There are three organized left-wing insurgent groups:
The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) is
the largest insurgent group operating in Colombia with
approximately 15,000 members. The FARC is led by Manuel
Marulanda Vélez. The second largest insurgent group
is the National Liberation Army (ELN), led by Nicolás
Rodríguez. The ELN has approximately 5,000 members.
The third major insurgent group in Colombia is the People’s
Liberation Army (EPL) with approximately 500 members.
The EPL is led by Francisco Carballo, who is currently
imprisoned. (Source: Center for International Policy,
www.us.net/cip/colombia/infocombat.htm). The U.S. State
Department has designated both the FARC and the ELN
as “foreign terrorist organizations” for their involvement
in “terrorist activity” that threatens the security
of U.S. nationals or national security. According to
the State Department, both the FARC and the ELN are
engaged in the illegal drug trade. (Source: The U.S.
State Department, “Foreign Terrorist Organizations,”
October 1998, The Washington Office on Latin America
notes that the insurgents’ involvement in the drug trade
is limited to the taxation and protection of coca crops:
“Although politicians in Washington frequently use the
term ‘narcoguerrillas’ to imply a complete integration
of Colombia’s drug cartels and guerrillas, there is
no evidence that FARC and other insurgent groups are
involved in the illicit industry’s most lucrative stages:
transshipment and the sale of drugs on the international
market.” (Source: Winifred Tate, Washington Office on
Latin America, “In Focus: Colombia’s Role in International
Drug Industry,” Volume 4, Number 30, November 1999,
www.wola.org).
IV. RIGHT-WING PARAMILITARIES
There are hundreds of paramilitary groups in Colombia.
The largest paramilitary group is the United Self-defense
Groups of Colombia (AUC), with between 5,000 and 7,000
members. The AUC is actually a coalition of paramilitary
groups led by Carlos Castano. (Source: Center for International
Policy, www.us.net/cip/colombia/infocombat.htm). According
to the Drug Enforcement Administration, the paramilitary
groups “provide security for cocaine laboratories and
clandestine airstrips in the northern and central parts
of the country.” Carlos Castano is cited as one of “certain
paramilitary leaders” who have “become major drug traffickers
in their own right.” (Source: Congressional Research
Service Report for Congress, “Colombia: The Problem
of Illegal Narcotics and U.S.-Colombia Relations, 1998,
p. 4).
V. COLOMBIAN MILITARY AND LAW ENFORCEMENT
Army: The Colombian Army has 120,000 soldiers with
50,000 available for combat. The remaining 70,000 soldiers
have administrative duties or protect national infrastructure.
Police: The Colombian National Police (CNP) is the
lead agency for counter-drug activities. They have approximately
120,000 officers.
Air Force: The Air Force has approximately 10,000
servicemen. Their primary duty is to defend national
borders, however, they also aid in combating the insurgent
groups.
Navy: The Colombian Navy has approximately 5,000 sailors.
Their primary function is to protect maritime borders,
however, they also confront insurgents while patrolling
Colombian rivers.
Citizen Groups: The Special Vigilance and Private
Security Services (CONVIVIR) was created by the Colombian
government in 1994 to “license” citizens to defend themselves.
There are over 400 CONVIVIR groups in rural Colombia.
Many of these groups have been implicated in a large
number of human rights violations. In March, 1999, President
Andres Pastrana pledged to begin dismantling the CONVIVIR
groups. (Source: Center for International Policy, www.us.net/cip/colombia/infocombat.htm).
VI. VIOLENCE IN COLOMBIA
Violence in Colombia is the leading cause of death.
With a record 25,100 violent deaths in 1992, Colombia's
murder rate is approximately nine times that of the
United States. Of those deaths, at least 4,100 were
politically motivated. (Source: www.fas.org/asmp/library/scourge/scourge-CH1.html).
Data on the number of human rights workers, government
employees, and academics who are murdered or kidnapped
in Colombia is scarce. In the first nine months of 1999,
two human rights defenders were killed and dozens more
were threatened. Two academics, Julio Gonzalez and Everardo
de Jesus Puerta,who worked in favor of human rights
with the Committee of Solidarity with Political Prisoners
(Comité de Solidaridad con los Presos Políticos, CSPP),
were also murdered. Subsequent threats forced the CSPP
to suspend activities for several months.
Several other human rights groups closed their doors
because of threats. The Association of Family Members
of Victims of Trujillo (Asociación de Familiares de
las Víctimas de Trujillo, AFAVIT) suffered repeated
threats, and more than fifty AFAVIT members won political
asylum in Canada in 1999. More than thirty others were
forced to leave Colombia in 1998 and 1999.
According to reports, surveillance of human rights
groups in Colombia is open and aggressive. Telephones
have been tapped so callers could hear those listening
eating, turning newspaper pages, and listening to music.
Several offices reported having their calls blocked,
cut off, or detoured to telephones in military barracks.
One group discovered that a false non-governmental organization
was set up by military intelligence to monitor their
activities. Fear that the military and paramilitaries
had infiltrated offices to report on the movements of
key leaders was widespread. (Source: Human Rights Watch,
“World Report 1999: Colombia,” www.hrw.org/wr2k/americas-03.htm).
VII. COLOMBIAN AID PACKAGE
Plan Colombia: Plan Colombia was introduced by President
Pastrana on October 22, 1998, to improve economic development,
political reform, negotiation of peace, and citizen
security. Pastrana described Plan Colombia as, “a collection
of alternative development projects that will create
an economic, social, and production transformations
in the conflict zones." Over time, different aid proposals
to Colombia shifted the emphasis from social spending
to an almost exclusively militarized aid package. The
Clinton Administration’s aid proposal, while ostensibly
designed to support Pastrana’s Plan Colombia, fell short
of this goal with over 80% of the aid allocated for
security forces for counternarcotics operations. (Source:
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Colombia, Replies of
the Minister of Foreign Relations and the Presidential
High Commissioner for Political and Social Affairs and
Director of Plan Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia, December
10, 1999, www.emcolbru.org/copaz27in.htm; Winifred Tate,
Washington Office on Latin America,“In Focus: Colombia’s
Role in International Drug Industry,” Volume 4, Number
30, November 1999, www.wola.org).
HR 3908: On March 30, the U.S. House of representatives
approved a $8.9 billion emergency supplementary appropriations
package in a 263-146 vote. In addition to the Colombian
aid, the House bill (HR 3908) also includes appropriations
for flood relief for North Carolina, funding for U.S.
troops in Kosovo, and numerous other items. Of the $1.701
billion appropriated for anti-drug activities, 63% –
$1.007 billion – will go to Colombia. This appropriation
is in addition to $330 million for Colombian anti-narcotics
aid already planned for FY 2000 and FY 2001. Thus, the
total proposed aid to Colombia for FY 2000 and FY 2001
is $1.337 billion. (Source: Center for International
Policy, “U.S. Aid to Colombia,” www.ciponline.org/colombia/aid).
Amendments to HR 3908: The following is a comprehensive
list of amendments offered that are relevant to the
Colombian aid:
Passed Amendments:
H.AMDT.620 was introduced by Rep. Thomas Sawyer (D-OH)
to earmark $50 million for assistance for internally
displaced persons in Colombia. The amendment passed
by voice vote.
H.AMDT.622 was introduced by Rep. Benjamin Gilman
(R-NY) to make the delivery of military assistance to
Colombia contingent on Presidential certification of
the following: (1) agreement by the government of Colombia
to a strategy to completely eliminate illicit drug cultivation
by 2005; (2) Colombia’s armed forces having the authority
to dismiss persons for gross violations of human rights;
(3) Colombia’s armed forces cooperating with civilian
authorities in the investigation and prosecution in
civilian courts of gross human rights abuses by armed
forces personnel; and (4) Colombia’s armed forces developing
a Judge Advocate General Corps. The amendment passed
by a recorded vote of 380-39.
H.AMDT.643 was introduced by Rep. Gene Taylor (D-MS)
to provide that none of the funds made available in
the bill may be used for the support of more than 300
United States military personnel in Colombia. The amendment
was agreed to by voice vote.
Failed Amendments:
H.AMDT.617 was introduced by Rep. David Obey (D-WI)
to reduce funding for counternarcotics activities by
$552 million. The amendment failed by a recorded vote
of 186-239.
H.AMDT.618 was introduced by Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA)
to reduce funding for U.S. Department of Defense counter-drug
activities by $51 million. The amendment failed by voice
vote.
H.AMDT.621 was introduced by Rep. Gene Taylor (D-MS)
to limit the number of U.S. military personnel to not
more than 300. Rep. C.W. Bill Young (R-FL) raised a
point of order against the amendment that it sought
to change the existing law and thus constituted legislation
in an appropriations bill. The Chair sustained the point
of order.
H.AMDT.624 was introduced by Rep. Jim Ramstad (R-MN)
to strike all Title I spending from the bill. Title
I deals with counternarcotics spending. The amendment
failed by a recorded vote of 158-262.
H.AMDT.625 was introduced by Rep. Sam Farr (D-CA)
to provide funds for the United Nations Drug Control
Program that will be directed to Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru
and Colombia. Rep. C.W. Bill Young (R-FL) raised a point
of order against the amendment that it sought to change
the existing law and thus constituted legislation in
an appropriations bill. The Chair sustained the point
of order.
H.AMDT.642 was introduced by Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX)
to reduce funding in the bill including: Drug enforcement
Administration; Department of Defense Drug Interdiction
and Counter-Drug Activities; Assistance for Plan Colombia
and for Andean Regional Counternarcotics Activities.
The amendment also sought to that none of the funds
made available on the Title I for “Military Construction,
Defense-Wide” may be used for construction outside of
the United States or any of its territories or possessions;
and none of the funds made available in Title II may
be used for operations in Kosovo or East Timor, other
than the return of United States personnel and property
to the United States. The amendment failed by a recorded
vote of 45-367 (Source: Library of Congress, Thomas,
www.loc.gov).
H.R. 3908 Aid Summary: The supplemental Colombian
aid proposal falls into eight categories: (1) military
assistance – $700.7 million (52%); (2) police assistance
– $386.7 million (29%); (3) alternative development
– $118.0 million (9%); (4) aid to the displaced – $39.5
million (3%); (5) law enforcement/rule of law – $45.5
million (3%); (6) judicial reform – $26.5 million (2%);
(7) human rights – $19.0 million (1%); and (8) the peace
process – $1.0 million (0%). The only change in spending
in HR 3908 after the amendments are considered is an
additional $50 million for assistance for internally
displaced persons in Colombia. It is not yet known where
the funds will come from. (Source: Center for International
Policy, “U.S. Aid to Colombia,” www.us.net/cip/index.htm).
Senate Bill Status: The Colombian aid package is part
of S. 2522, the Foreign Operations, Export Financing,
and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 2001.
Committee Actions: On May 9, the Senate Appropriations
Committee held their mark up of the bill. Sen. Slade
Gorton (R-WA) introduced an amendment to decrease the
military aid to Colombia from $900 million to $100 million.
The amendment failed by a vote of 11-to-15. The overall
package was cut to $1 billion.
Full Senate Actions: On June 21, the Senate considered
the Colombian aid package. Sen. Paul Wellstone (D-MN)
introduced an amendment (S.AMDT.3518) to strike all
military aid to Colombia for the push into Southern
Colombia. The $225 million that is earmarked for the
push into Southern Colombia would be spent on domestic
treatment and drug prevention programs under Sen. Wellstone’s
amendment. The Wellstone amendment failed by a vote
of 89-to-11. Sen. Slade Gorton (R-WA) introduced an
amendment (S.AMDT.3517) cutting the Colombian aid package
from nearly $1 billion down to $200 million in order
to pay down the national debt. The Gorton amendment
failed by a vote of 79-to-19. On June 22, the Senate
voted on S. 2522, passing the bill by a vote of 95-to-4.
Next, the aid package will be considered by a conference
committee between the House and the Senate to reconcile
differences between S. 2522 and H.R. 3908.
Amendments to S. 2522: The following is a list of
the Senators who voted for Amendments to limit U.S.
aid to Colombia.
S.AMDT. 3518 was introduced by Sen. Wellstone (D-MD)
to shift $225 million from the push into Southern Colombia
to fund domestic treatment. The following Senators voted
in favor of S.AMDT. 3518: Boxer (D-CA) (co-sponsor),
Byrd (D-WV), Dorgan (D-ND), Feingold (D-WI), Grams (R-MN),
Harkin (D-IA), Leahy (D-VT), Mikulski (D-MD), Murray
(D-WA), Specter (R-PA), Wellstone (D-MN) (sponsor).
S.AMDT 3517 was introduced by Sen. Gorton (R-WA) to
cut the Colombian aid package from nearly $1 billion
to $200 million. The following Senators voted in favor
of S.AMDT. 3517: Allard (R-CO), Boxer (D-CA), Collins
(R-ME), Craig (R-ID), Crapo (R-ID), Enzi (R-WY), Fitzgerald
(R-IL), Gorton (R-WA), Gramm (R-TX), Grams (R-MN), Gregg
(R-NH), Harkin (D-IA), Hutchinson (R-AR), Kohl (D-WI),
Leahy (D-VT), Mikulski (D-MD), Murray (D-WA), Specter
(R-PA), Thomas (R-WY).
VIII. ISSUES WITH U.S. AID TO COLOMBIA
Coca Cultivation Portability: Traditionally, coca
has been grown in Peru and Bolivia. But eradication
efforts there have created incentives to grow coca in
Colombia. From 1995 to 1999, Peru experienced a 66%
reduction in coca cultivation and Bolivia experienced
a 53% reduction. But Colombia experienced substantial
growth in coca cultivation. In Peru, coca cultivation
fell from 115,300 hectares in 1995 to 38,700 hectares
in 1999. In Bolivia coca cultivation fell from 48,600
hectares in 1995 to 21,800 hectares in 1999. Coca cultivation
in Colombia has doubled from 50,900 hectares in 1995
to 122,500 hectares in 1999. New strains of coca leaf
are cultivated that have a substantially higher cocaine
yield than the traditional plant. Many experts fear
coca eradication in Colombia will lead to new or expanded
coca cultivation in Ecuador, Venezuela, and Brazil.
(Source: White House Office of National Drug Control
Policy, “Clinton Administration’s Proposal for U.S.
Assistance to Plan Colombia”).
“[D]espite two years of extensive herbicide spraying,
[in Colombia] U.S. estimates show there has not been
any net reduction in coca cultivation – net coca cultivation
actually increased 50 percent,” reported the General
Accounting Office in 1999. (Source: General Accounting
Office, “Drug Control: Narcotics Threat from Colombia
Continues to Grow,” June 22, 1999, GAO/NSIAD-99-136
Drug Control).
Eradication is Less Effective in Reducing Drug Use
Then Treatment: In 1994, the RAND Corporation found
that domestic treatment is 23.03 times more effective
than source-country drug control efforts. In order to
reduce cocaine consumption in the U.S. by 1% it would
cost $34 million in treatment, $783 million in source-country
control (i.e. crop eradication), or $336 million in
interdiction efforts (cocaine seizures by the U.S. Customs
Service, the U.S. Coast Guard, the U.S. Army, and the
Immigration and Naturalization Service). (Source: C.
Peter Rydell and Susan S. Everingham, RAND Corporation,
“Controlling Cocaine: Supply Versus Demand Programs,”
1994, Sponsored in part by the White House Office of
National Drug Control Policy).
Eradication Ineffectiveness: Since 1978, Colombia
– with substantial U.S. aid – has been engaged in aerial
fumigation of coca, poppy, and marijuana crops. Yet,
there has been no reduction in the area used for cultivation,
said Ricardo Vargas, a sociologist and expert on narcotics
policies with Acción Andina. The increase in coca cultivation
in the past five years, from 50,900 hectares to 122,500
hectares, corresponds with the expansion of aerial eradication
efforts. Vargas said that in Peru the reduction in hectares
used for cultivation was achieved without the use of
any chemicals. (Source: Ricardo Vargas, Executive Summary,
“Drug Cultivation. Fumigation and the Conflict in Colombia,
October, 1999).
In 1998, the “[Colombian] eradication campaign sprayed
record amounts of coca, over 65,000 hectares,” said
the Assistant Secretary for International Narcotics
and Law Enforcement Affairs, Rand Beers. He reported
that, “[In 1999] the CNP [Colombian National Police]
has sprayed over 7,600 hectares of opium poppy, a record
total.” (Source: Rand Beers, Assistant Secretary for
International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs,
Statement before the Senate Caucus on International
Narcotics Control, September 21, 1999, www.state.gov/www/policy_remarks/1999/990921_beers_caucus.html).
No Eradication Targets or Timetable in Colombia: In
a hearing of the House Government Reform Subcommittee
on Criminal Justice, Drug Policy, and Human Resources
on February 15, Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) criticized
the Colombian aid package for failing to establish a
target for reducing cocaine use in the U.S. or providing
an exit strategy from Colombia. Furthermore, she said,
the Colombian aid package only targets interdiction
and eradication efforts. (Source: Statement of Rep.
Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) before the Government Reform Subcommittee
on Criminal Justice, Drug Policy, and Human Resources
, February 15, 2000).
Human Rights and Judicial Reform are Inadequately
Addressed: The Clinton Administration’s Assistance Plan
“requires the GOC (government of Colombia) to ensure
that these resources are only used by units that meet
stringent human rights criteria.” However, only 2% of
the $1.3997 billion two-year aid package goes to the
improvement of human rights conditions, only 2% goes
to judicial reform, and only 3% goes to law enforcement
and the rule of law. (Source: White House Office of
National Drug Control Policy, “Clinton Administration’s
Proposal for U.S. Assistance to Plan Colombia”).
Colombian Military Collaboration in Human Rights Abuses:
In 1999, the State Department reported that the Colombian
military is aiding right-wing paramilitaries. The report
said, “Credible allegations of cooperation [of the Colombian
armed forces] with paramilitary groups, including instances
of both silent support and direct collaboration by members
of the armed forces, in particular the army, continued.
There were tacit arrangements between local military
commanders and paramilitary groups in some regions,
and paramilitary groups operated freely in some areas
that were under military control. . . Some local army
and police commanders tacitly tolerated – and sometimes
aided and abetted – the activities of paramilitary groups.
. . . ” (Source: “Country Reports on Human Rights Practices,”
U.S. Department of State, February 1999). It is estimated
that paramilitary groups were responsible for 78% of
political killings in Colombia in 1999. (Source: Human
Rights Watch World Report 2000).
Summary of Objections to Colombian Aid: The major
substantive objections to the military side of the aid
package, expressed in the House debate, are (1) the
supply-side approach to reducing drug use is ineffective,
(2) the Colombian military should not receive U.S. aid
when it has such a poor human rights record, and (3)
U.S. involvement in Colombia has no defined objective
or exit strategy, thus creating potential for a military
quagmire like Vietnam. Other criticism focused on the
uncertain length of the U.S. involvement. Although this
is a two-year aid package, “Drug Czar,” Gen. Barry McCaffrey
said we should anticipate a five-year effort in Colombia
even though he proposed a two-year aid package. Some
members of Congress predict a ten-year commitment to
Colombia. (Source: Hearing of the House Appropriations
Foreign Operations Subcommittee of the U.S. House of
Representatives, February 19, 2000).