Sunday, 10 March, 2002
Powell:
No US Combat Role In Colombia
David
Gollust
State
Department
7
Mar 2002 01:03 UTC

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Secretary of
State Colin Powell told a Congressional panel Wednesday the Bush
administration is considering an expansion of U.S. military aid to
Colombia to help the government battle leftwing insurgents. That would
require a change in the law from Congress limiting U.S. aid to
counter-narcotics efforts.
Mr. Powell says there
no scenarios under consideration that would involve an active combat
role by U.S. forces in Colombia. But he said the administration is
considering asking Congress to change the ground-rules, and expand
U.S. assistance beyond counter-narcotics help, in light of last
month's breakdown of the peace process between the Bogota government
and insurgents led by the leftwing guerrilla group FARC.
Appearing
before a House of Representatives subcommittee, Mr. Powell said the
circumstances of the Colombian conflict have changed with the failure
of President Andres Pastrana's peace initiative and his decision to
revoke the safe-havens granted to the guerrillas.
He said Colombian
democracy is fighting for its survival against both insurgents and
narco-traffickers and said it is "reasonable" for the
administration to be re-examining its aid policy.
"The president
has made no decisions and has received no recommendations but it may
be necessary for us to give the government of Colombia additional
support that is outside the counter-narcotics basket in order that
they are able to deal with their threat to their survival as a nation,
this threat to their economic well-being," added Mr. Powell. "And
once we have completed this review, we will come up to the Congress
and ask for whatever we believe is necessary. Right now we are staying
within the limit of the law. But is clear that the kinds of things
that we are being asked to provide to assist the Colombian government,
such as more intelligence information, things of that nature, will
quickly run into the wall, the legislative wall that is there."
Mr. Powell was
responding to comments from Democratic House member Jose Serrano of
New York, who warned of a Vietnam-style U.S. involvement in Colombia.
Mr. Serrano also
questioned the administration's characterization of FARC and other
Colombian guerrillas as terrorists especially in the
emotionally-charged atmosphere following last year's terror attacks in
the United States. "There's not a single American who says we
should not get rid of every terrorist," he said. "But now it
seems to some that the word terrorist could be at times loosely-used
to allow us involvement that we should be analyzing in different ways.
This is a civil war. You and I grew up with the situation militarily
[Vietnam] where there was a civil war that we got involved in. And we
honor all the folks that are there. But we spend so much time now
wondering, you know, what was the involvement and what the involvement
should have been. All that to say, Mr. Secretary, that we have to be
careful to [not] get involved in Colombia in a civil war that we can't
get out of."
Mr. Powell told the
congressman he has "no doubt" that the inclusion of FARC on
the U.S. list of foreign terrorist groups is justified, noting its
recent hijacking of a Colombian airliner and the kidnapping and murder
of a legislator.
The U.S. terrorist
list also includes the leftist ELN faction and the rightwing
paramilitary organization, the AUC, which has often operated in
parallel with government forces and been linked to human rights
abuses.
The secretary
said President Pastrana has been told, - as will his successor to be
elected later this year - that if the paramilitaries are given a free
hand, it will be "destructive" of U.S. efforts to assist the
government.
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