Andean Regional Initiative:
A Policy Fated to Fail
Volume 6, Number 29
July 2001
revised August 2001
By Gina Amatangelo, Washington Office on Latin America
Editors: Tom Barry (IRC) and Martha
Honey (IPS)
 
29ifandean.pdf
Key Points
- The Bush administration describes its Andean strategy as a three-legged
stool of eradication, military assistance, and alternative development,
but military aid is by far the largest leg.
- U.S. assistance to Colombia and other Andean countries represents
a sizable percentage of the foreign aid budget.
- Opposition to U.S. policy is growing in the region, particularly
opposition to aerial fumigation and to the spillover of the Colombian
conflict into other countries
The Bush administrations Andean Regional Initiative (ARI)largely
an expansion of U.S. support for Plan Colombiapassed the House of
Representatives in late July, largely intact. The House did defeat Bushs
proposal to remove the cap on the number of U.S. military and private
contractors that can be in the region at any one time, a proposal that
would have opened the way for greater direct American involvement. Yet
the current cap of 800 is substantialmore than double, for instance,
the number permitted in El Salvador during the 1980s. The House also trimmed
$55 million from the administrations request of $882 million in
State Department funds for 2002. The majority of the funds$676 millionare
to be administered through the International Narcotics and Law Enforcement
budget. To proceed, the ARI must win Senate approval.
The Bush administration describes its Andean strategy as a three-legged
stool of eradication, military assistance, and alternative development.
About half of the ARI funds are earmarked for Colombia, including funds
for: aerial eradication of drug crops; alternative development; logistical
support, hardware, and training for the Colombian Armys counternarcotics
battalions and the Colombian National Police; social and economic programs,
including assistance for internally displaced persons; and judicial reform.
The remainder is for the regions six other countriesBolivia,
Peru, Ecuador, Venezuela, Panama, and Brazilto support economic
development and the rule of law as well as ongoing drug control efforts,
including eradication, interdiction, and drug use awareness.
Not included in the ARI package is military funding from the Defense
Department. Estimates suggest that if Pentagon funding levels remain constant,
71% of the total U.S. assistance allocated for Colombia in 2002 will go
to security forces. In the ARI regional package, as in U.S. funding for
Plan Colombia, support for military operations continues to overshadow
assistance for democracy strengthening, economic development, and other
nonmilitary programs.
Increasingly, governments of the other Andean nations are expressing
fears that U.S. policy is leading to the Colombianization
of the region. To address these concerns about spillover and instability,
the ARI package includes increased security assistance to protect borders
in Venezuela, Ecuador, and Brazil.
There are also signs of growing opposition to aerial fumigation in Colombia.
In July, a Bogotá judge ordered the suspension of aerial spraying
with the herbicide glyphosate in indigenous communities in southeastern
Colombia until the government investigates complaints of health and environmental
damage. Simultaneously, the United Nations Drug Control Program in Colombia
called for international monitoring to determine the safety and accuracy
of aerial crop spraying, which it termed inhumane and ineffective.
This increasing opposition comes as the pace of spraying is set to escalate
dramatically with the arrival of U.S. aircraft, part of the two-year,
$1.3 billion supplemental package for Plan Colombia approved by Congress
in 2000. U.S. funds for counterdrug programs in the Andes have surged
into the $1 billion range for 2002, with levels for Peru, Bolivia, and
Ecuador doubling. If these trends continue, the ARI will constitute a
major portion of the diminishing overall U.S. foreign aid budget, which
will total roughly $15 billion this year.
In its ARI aid proposal for 2002, the Bush administration has attempted
to address some of the critiques of U.S. support for Plan Colombia. However,
Washington is continuing to invest heavily in training and arming hundreds
of Colombian troops operating in the southern coca producing regions.
Such assistance is drawing the U.S. deeply into this brutal 35-year internal
conflict and is undermining the fragile peace negotiations between the
government and guerrillas. Despite some adjustments, Bushs ARI fails
to adequately address concerns about human rights abuses or health and
environmental damage. The ARI also exhibits only perfunctory interest
in alleviating rural poverty, an underlying cause of the conflict.
The administrations framing of its ARI counterdrug strategy is
reminiscent of efforts by the previous Bush administration, which launched
the first Andean Initiative in 1989. That earlier scheme also prioritized
military hardware and training for counternarcotics operations. Yet, according
to the State Department International Narcotics Strategy Report, since
1989, coca cultivation in the Andes has declined a mere 16%, as relatively
large reductions in production in Peru and Bolivia have been paralleled
by increased cultivation in Colombia.
Problems with Current U.S. Policy
Key Problems
- The U.S. policy debate has not adequately addressed the ties of paramilitary
groups both to the Colombian military and to drug operations.
- Over the past decade, aerial eradication in Colombia has not proved
effective, and it poses both health and environmental risks.
- Aid to Andean militaries is unlikely to improve regional security.
Instead, it is having a destabilizing effect, particularly in Ecuador.
The Andean Regional Initiative is unlikely to have a substantial impact
on the production and trafficking of drugs in the region. It continues
U.S. support for eradication programs that have had little success, have
angered rural communities, and are threatening human health and the environment.
Moreover, the new package once again fails to address the major problem
of the growth of paramilitary violence and associated human rights abuses.
The ARI includes hundreds of millions of dollars for the Colombian Army
and police, which continue to work hand-in-glove with paramilitary groups.
Paramilitary squads often do what the military does not want to risk or
be seen doing: gaining control of rural areas by killing or forcibly evicting
peasant families. Yet the well-documented links of paramilitary squads
to the army, as well as to illicit drug operations, have been largely
absent from the official U.S. debate.
Paramilitary organizations are deeply involved in all phases of the
drug trade: they tax drug production, run cocaine laboratories, protect
trafficking routes, and even run drugs themselves. The Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) called Carlos Castaño, leader of the United
Self Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) paramilitary group, a major
drug dealer in his own right. It concluded that he is closely linked
to the drug syndicates now responsible for shipping tons of cocaine
and heroin into the U.S. Washingtons counternarcotics strategy,
however, is focused on the southern regions where leftist guerrillas have
established a stronghold while ignoring the northern regions, where paramilitary
forces control the drug trade.
And paramilitary violence is increasing. The Colombian Commission of
Jurists reports that the daily average of politically motivated homicide
doubled between 1998 and 2000to almost 20 murders per day. In 2000,
almost 85% of these murders were attributed to state agents and paramilitary
groups, with the remaining 15% attributed to guerrilla groups. According
to a Colombian government human rights agency, civilian deaths by armed
actors rose 75% in 2000, with paramilitaries responsible for almost all
of the increase.
In a particularly brutal incident in April 2001, a paramilitary squad
killed at least 40 peasants in the Alto Naya region of southwestern Colombia,
dismembering some with chainsaws. Less than a month before, UN and Colombian
government representatives had warned the security forces of possible
paramilitary attacks in the region, but the Colombian Army arrived five
days after the slaughter began. Bogotá has failed to take the necessary
measuresincluding prosecuting military officers involved in paramilitary
activityto stop paramilitary violence. The UN High Commissioner
for Human Rights Office has found that the paramilitary phenomenon
continues to expand and consolidate. The governments commitment
to confronting these groups has been weak and inconsistent.
The ARI will continue aerial fumigation programs, which began in Colombia
in 1992 and have expanded since December 2000. But aerial eradication
has not proved effective in stopping coca production, and its human and
environmental cost is high. In recent years, coca cultivation has dramatically
increased, as aerial eradicationwithout accompanying alternative
development programsshifted production from Guaviare province in
south central Colombia to the Putumayo region along the Ecuadorian border.
State Department officials concede that eradication is causing a shift
in cultivation to new areas in Colombia and is also likely to reactivate
production in traditional areas in Bolivia and Peru. Coca prices have
recently risen in Peru, and government officials there fear that thousands
of peasant families may be tempted to return to coca cultivation, because
alternative development programs have failed to establish other sustainable
cash crops.
Both Bogotá and Washington measure success not in terms of decreased
drug flows to the U.S. but in terms of a reduced rate of coca expansion.
Even so, achievements have been nominal, at best. By mid-2001, Colombian
and U.S. officials boasted that they had sprayed 125,000 acres. Yet coca
cultivation in Colombia, estimated by the U.S. and UN to cover 336,000
to 402,000 acres in late 2000, was far higher than earlier U.S. calculations.
Everywhere we look there is more coca than we expected, conceded
U.S. Ambassador Anne Patterson in July 2001. Cultivation of heroin poppies
is also increasing. Moreover, the price of cocaine in the U.S. remained
unchanged since Plan Colombia was launched, according to a May 2001 DEA
report.
Six governors from Colombias southern provinces have repeatedly
called for a halt to U.S.-funded aerial fumigation, complaining that it
is destroying farmers legal cash, food, and animal feed crops. The
governors do support manual eradication if accompanied by serious alternative
development programs. Officials and human rights activists in the region
worry that fumigation is exacerbating social tensions and dislocations
and that peasants are losing trust in the government, fleeing their homes,
and may be joining either the guerrillas or paramilitaries.
The ARI aims to improve security in surrounding countries and to guard
against the collateral damage of Plan Colombia, but this approach has
little chance of success. Ecuador, in particular, is being drawn into
the Colombian conflict. Ecuadors army has clashed with Colombian
guerrillas in the border area, and increasing numbers of refugees are
fleeing into Ecuadors Amazon region. In addition, Ecuadorian legislators
have expressed concern about the U.S. militarys new operational
facility in Manta, on Ecuadors coast near the border with
Colombia. The Manta base serves as the main hub for U.S. counterdrug surveillance
flights, and up to 400 U.S. military personnel may be stationed there.
Toward a New Foreign Policy
Key Recommendations
- The U.S. should focus on a new three-legged stool strategy: support
for the Colombian peace process, sound and sustained alternative development
programs, and demand-side domestic drug programs.
- Washington should cease military funding for aerial fumigation and
other counternarcotics operations in the Andean region.
- The U.S. should withdraw military and private contractors involved
in Plan Colombia operations.
The Bush administrations Andean Regional Initiative, with its emphasis
on expanding antinarcotics operations, represents further mission
creep without clearly defined and attainable goals or even an exit
strategy. Washington should cease military funding for counternarcotics
operations in the Andean region and withdraw U.S. military and private
contractors involved in Plan Colombia. Instead, the U.S. should focus
on a new three-legged stool strategy: support for the Colombian peace
process, sound and sustained alternative development programs, and demand-side
domestic drug programs.
The militarized nature of U.S. assistance to Colombia, and to the drug
war in general, is undercutting the Pastrana governments peace process
and playing into the hands of hard-liners in all factions of the conflict.
There are alternatives to the military emphasis of U.S. policy. The governors
from southern Colombia have offered to involve local communities in widespread
manual eradication efforts and social development programs. Civil society
groups have also presented alternative proposals that include support
for the peace process, reforms to promote respect for human rights, and
rural development strategies coupled with gradual coca eradication programs.
U.S. assistance for Colombia should focus on reaching a negotiated settlement
to the conflict and strengthening democratic institutions. In particular,
additional support for the attorney generals office would strengthen
the Colombian governments capacity to investigate and prosecute
drug trafficking, kidnapping and homicide, and other human rights violations.
Some argue that U.S. assistance will help improve the Colombian Armys
human rights record, but the evidence suggests otherwise. In 2000, many
in Congress voted for the $1.3 billion Plan Colombia package, because
it included human rights conditionalities. However, shortly before leaving
office, President Clinton invoked a national security waiver, allowing
delivery of military aid to the Colombian Army despite Bogotás
failure to meet any of the congressional human rights requirements. The
Colombian government, particularly the attorney generals office,
has recently taken some steps to arrest members of the paramilitaries
and go after their financial backers. Yet, the Pastrana government lacks
a coherent strategy to cut military-paramilitary links, as demonstrated
by Bogotás failure to dismiss many high-level military officials
implicated by their connections to irregular forces.
The Bush administration is currently considering the renewal of the
Andean Trade Preferences Act (ATPA), and supporters argue that these trade
preferences will serve to provide economic alternatives to drug trafficking
in the Andes. However, such claims are overly optimistic. ATPA renewal
alone will not address the severe economic inequalities in the region,
which engender both social unrest and drug production for the international
market. The Bush administration should work with Andean governments to
support serious poverty reduction and rural development strategies. Such
collaboration would ultimately do more to achieve U.S. goals than an escalated
investment in the regions security forces.
Alternative development programs can, potentially, be an important tool
both in combating the poverty of coca growing regions and in sustaining
eradication efforts. To be effective, such programs should involve the
local population in their design and implementation, include market studies
to ensure that alternative crops will provide a steady income for farmers,
and ensure that farmers have access to adequate post-harvest facilities
and transport. In addition, Washington should establish alternative development
programs prior to beginning eradication efforts. This would go a long
way toward discouraging coca replanting or the transfer of cultivation
to new areas.
Finally, the U.S. must do more to address the drug problem at home.
A RAND study in the early 1990s found that drug treatment is the most
cost-effective method of drug control. Yet the U.S. still does not adequately
fund drug treatment programs. The White House Office of National Drug
Control Policy reports that 57% of hard-core drug users, nearly 300,000
people, do not have access to treatment. Although the Bush administration
has launched a state-by-state treatment gap analysis and has promised
a $1.6 billion increase in funding for drug treatment, this increase is
still unlikely to be sufficient to address the existing treatment gap.
No one seeking treatment should be turned away.
Washington should step back and reevaluate its drug control priorities.
Current supply-side drug control programs are likely to further involve
the U.S. in the Colombian quagmire and exacerbate political violence and
instability in the Andes region without having a significant impact on
the flow of drugs to the United States.
Gina Amatangelo <GAmatangelo@wola.org>
is a Fellow at the Washington Office on Latin America, specializing in
international drug control programs in the Andes region.
Sources for More Information
Organizations
Accion Andina
Bolivia
Voice/Fax: (591) 444-6705
Email: andina@albatros.cnb.net
The Andean Information Network
Bolivia
Voice/Fax: (591) 422-4384
Email: paz@albatros.cnb.net
Website: http://www.scbbs-bo.com/ain/
Center for International Policy
1755 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Ste. 312
Washington, DC 20036
Voice: (202) 232-3317
Fax: (202) 232-3440
Email: cip@ciponline.org
Website: http://www.ciponline.org/
Just the Facts website: http://ciponline.org/facts/
Latin American Working Group
110 Maryland Ave. NE, Box 15, Ste. 203
Washington, DC 20002
Voice: (202) 546-7010
Fax: (202) 543-7647
Email: lawg@lawg.org
Website: http://www.lawg.org/
Transnational Institute
The Netherlands
Voice: (3120) 662-6608
Fax: (3120) 675-7176
Email: tni@tni.org
Website: http://www.tni.org/
Washington Office on Latin America
1630 Connecticut Ave. NW, Second Floor
Washington, DC 20009
Voice (202) 797-2171
Fax: (202) 797-2172
Email: wola@wola.org
Website: http://www.wola.org/
Websites
Drug Enforcement Administration
http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/
Lindesmith CenterDrug Policy Foundation
http://www.lindesmith.org/
Office of National Drug Control Policy
http://www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov/
U.S. Department of State
http://www.state.gov/g/inl/rls/fs/index.cfm?docid=3419
U.S. Southern Command
http://www.southcom.mil/home/
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