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U.S. to Widen Colombian Involvement
AP • Reuters ^ | 02/05/2002 8:34 PM EST | By ANDREW SELSKY

Posted on 02/05/2002 7:21:58 PM PST by Bronco Buster

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - A top-level Bush administration delegation unveiled plans Tuesday to widen United States involvement in Colombia's civil war, including providing training, weapons and aircraft to Colombian troops to protect a pipeline carrying U.S. oil.

Until now, U.S. military aid to Colombia has been limited mostly to attempts to wipe out cocaine- and heroin-producing crops which finance leftist rebels and their right-wing paramilitary foes.

But with Colombia's 38-year-old conflict killing about 3,500 people every year and stunting the potential of this resource-rich, strategically located country, the officials say Washington needs to do more.

"We are committed to help Colombians create a Colombia that is a peaceful, prosperous, drug-free and terror-free democracy," Undersecretary of State Marc Grossman told a news conference.

The U.S. officials drove through the streets of this Andean capital in bulletproofed vans to meetings with President Andres Pastrana and other top officials.

In a city that has been the scene of recent bomb attacks, the Americans were escorted by a truckload of Colombian troops in full combat gear.

The projected U.S. military involvement in Colombia falls short of the American role in Central America's wars during the 1980s - when the United States trained and equipped Salvadoran counterinsurgency troops and aided Contra rebels who battled Nicaragua's Sandinista government.

But critics of the new U.S. proposal see mission creep in the evolving American aid program here.

Colombian Defense Minister Gustavo Bell applauded the proposals by the delegation, which also included Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs Otto Reich and the chief of U.S. military operations in Latin America, Maj. Gen. Gary Speer. (AP) Undersecretary of State Marc Grossman speaks to reporters during a news conference at the...

The plan faces potential opposition in Congress, where some members fear U.S. troops could become involved in combat and reject tighter links to a military with a poor human rights record.

But one of the visiting U.S. officials, in a briefing with foreign correspondents, said the Sept. 11 terror attacks on New York and Washington might spur U.S. lawmakers to approve President Bush's request.

The plan calls for $98 million to train and equip a Colombian army brigade to protect the Cano-Limon oil pipeline. It carries oil belonging to Los Angeles-based Occidental Petroleum and other companies from the country's second-biggest oil field, in Colombia's humid eastern plains, to the Caribbean coast.

Rebel bomb attacks on the 480-mile-long pipeline put it out of commission for 266 days last year, crippling crude oil production.

Much of the $98 million would go for aircraft for the troops, the U.S. officials said, although specific plans have not been drawn up yet.

The Bush administration will also argue that the United States needs to assure a reliable flow of oil from Colombia, closer to U.S. shores than the volatile Middle East, U.S. officials said.

Washington is also seeking funding for training more Colombian counternarcotics troops, in addition to the roughly 3,000 who have been undercutting rebel and paramilitary financing by wiping out their cocaine-and-heroin-producing crops.

In Washington on Tuesday, three respected human rights groups charged that Pastrana's government has failed to meet human rights conditions for continued U.S. military aid.

Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and the Washington Office on Latin America accused Colombian government forces of extensive collaboration with an illegal right-wing paramilitary group that has been killing suspected rebel collaborators.

One of the visiting U.S. officials said some of the reports' findings appeared to be outdated, but studied nevertheless. In addition to pipeline protection, the United States is preparing to assist Colombia in combatting kidnapping, Grossman said. Most of the 3,000 abductions each year in Colombia are carried out by rebels for ransom.

Washington also plans to rebuild some of the police stations that have been leveled by rebel attacks, leaving 192 municipalities in Colombia without a permanent police presence, a U.S. official said. Funding for the rebuilding is already available and doesn't need Congress' approval, the official explained.

Copyright © 2001-2002 The Excite Network, Inc. All rights reserved.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: columbia; wodlist
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To: Bronco Buster, Black Jade
I remember reading last week that in the next couple of years, Columbia might have to start importing oil. That should be interesting....
81 posted on 02/22/2002 6:58:02 PM PST by Aaron_A
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To: Black Jade
"Wall Street takes a meeting with Colombian rebels - June 1999" - interesting. NYSE Chairman Richard Grasso pictured smiling and hugging a Marxist rebel like they're long lost friends.
82 posted on 02/22/2002 7:03:04 PM PST by lakey
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To: lakey
It is brilliant political theater—and it also plays to a U.S. audience.

The sorts who believe in the "saving grace of Western Materialism" anyway.

Pressing machine guns into market plow-shares using the sheer starch of their Brooks Brothers shirts.

83 posted on 02/22/2002 7:22:08 PM PST by Askel5
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To: Askel5

Sniff - Who would have thought

Pretend You're A President:

The money started with donations to Spitz Channell's National Endowment for the Preservation of Liberty (NEPL). Then it was wired from NEPL's account at Palmer National Bank to the account of IBC, a Washington, D.C., public relations company formed by Republican operative Richard Miller at another Washington bank. Next, IBC wired the money to I.C. in the Cayman Islands, which then transferred a majority of it to the Swiss bank account used by North's "Enterprise" to fund the Contras.

84 posted on 02/22/2002 9:02:04 PM PST by Uncle Bill
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To: Black Jade
Bump.
85 posted on 02/22/2002 9:20:12 PM PST by mafree
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To: Chapita
For the same reason we put the product in our gas tanks! Ha!

I guess the next question is , just how much of OP's product, that US troops will be protecting, is going into our gas tanks?

86 posted on 02/22/2002 9:25:16 PM PST by ohmage
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To: Uncle Bill; ThanksBTTT
Weird about the disconnect between Clinton and Bush on the Swiss banking.
87 posted on 02/22/2002 9:26:55 PM PST by Askel5
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To: ohmage
see #72!
88 posted on 02/22/2002 10:12:16 PM PST by Chapita
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To: Black Jade
BTTT!!!!!
90 posted on 02/23/2002 2:30:32 AM PST by E.G.C.
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To: Chapita
see #72!

Well, yeah.

But the question remains. How much of OP's product, the product that American forces are being deployed to protect,is destined for our, the American taxpayers, use?

91 posted on 02/23/2002 1:26:05 PM PST by ohmage
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To: Black Jade
Could it be that by emphasizing the Marxist/Drug lord/Civil insurrection, the gubmint doesn't have to get involved in any em-bare-assing explanations about supporting Occidental Petroleum's not so politically correct effort to get the oil out from under the Indians?

I mean how would it look to all his earth first devotees if Gore was linked to exploiting an indigenous people?

92 posted on 02/23/2002 4:23:16 PM PST by ohmage
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To: ohmage
Makes no more difference than the amount of Saudi crude is earmarked for the USA!
93 posted on 02/23/2002 5:55:48 PM PST by Chapita
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To: Chapita
I'm gonna hafta sleep on that one. It might make more sense in the A.M.
94 posted on 02/23/2002 6:53:46 PM PST by ohmage
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To: ohmage
Consider the circumstances in this country if the oil producers stop the flow of oil! This country would be in critical condition if the oil supply dried up!

For all those who bad-mouth the oil industry, do you realize the alternative?

95 posted on 02/23/2002 11:23:43 PM PST by Chapita
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To: CurlyDave
I think the growers make very little from the crop. I've seen reports of $100 - $300/kilo US for the coca paste.

People on the ground there say we are dropping about 1/2 of the agent orange on areas that grow little or no coca. Just an effort to move the indigenous tribes out of the oil companies way.

96 posted on 02/24/2002 3:37:17 AM PST by steve50
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Comment #97 Removed by Moderator

Comment #98 Removed by Moderator


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