Testimony
of Marc Grossman, Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs, April
10, 2002
Testimony
of Ambassador Marc Grossman,
Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs
before the
House Appropriations Committee's Subcommittee on Foreign Operations
April 10, 2002
U.S. Assistance to
Colombia and the Andean Region
Thank you for inviting
me to testify before you today on our policy in Colombia. Colombia matters
to the United States. Congress has been a key partner in our efforts to
help Colombia defend its democracy from the demons of narcotrafficking,
underdevelopment, human rights abuses, and terrorism.
Many of you have
traveled to Colombia. I thank you for your engagement. For those who are
considering travel to Colombia, I urge you to go. There is no better way
to understand the commitment of the Colombian people to defending their
democracy. Your visits make clear everything America stands for -- democracy,
security and prosperity -- both in the U.S. and in Colombia.
I also thank you
for the bipartisan consensus shown in House resolution 358, passed after
President Pastrana's February 20 decision to end the former demilitarized
zone; your appropriation last January of funds to carry out the Andean
Counterdrug Initiative; and your approval of the Plan Colombia Supplemental
in July 2000. We support your action on the Andean Trade Preferences Act,
and hope that the Senate will soon enact it into law.
On March 21, the
Administration asked the Congress for new authorities. The terrorist and
narcotics problems in Colombia are intertwined. These new authorities
would allow us to:
-- address the problem
of terrorism in Colombia as vigorously as we currently address narcotics;
and
-- help the government of Colombia address the heightened terrorist risk
that has resulted from the end of the demilitarized zone.
These new authorities
would not mean that we would stop our human rights vetting of all Colombian
military units receiving U.S. assistance or that we would exceed the 400
person cap on U.S. military personnel providing training in Colombia,
nor the 400 person cap on U.S. civilian contractors.
We believe that these
new authorities will give us the ability to help the government of Colombia
address the multi-faceted threats to its security, democracy and prosperity.
I look forward to discussing this proposal with you.
HEMISPHERIC VISION:
DEMOCRACY, PROSPERITY AND SECURITY
We can be proud of
the hemispheric consensus in favor of democracy, rule of law and human
rights, open markets and social progress.
United States leadership
has been essential to creating and promoting this consensus, which was
ratified at the Quebec City Summit of the Americas last April. At that
Summit President Bush said: "We have a great vision before us: a
fully democratic hemisphere, bound together by good will and free trade.
That is a tall order. It is also the chance of a lifetime and it is the
responsibility we all share."
At Quebec, 34 democratically-elected
heads of state and government agreed on:
-- a democracy clause
which makes democratic government a requirement for participation in the
summit process;
-- a 2005 deadline
for the Free Trade Area of the Americas; and
-- an approved action
plan to promote economic prosperity, protect human rights, and fight drug
trafficking and organized crime.
There is no more
important - or more challenging -- task than building responsive democratic
institutions, competitive markets, effective legal systems and sound educational
and social systems throughout the hemisphere. In many countries it will
take years to overcome decades of protectionist economic policies, military
misrule and lack of social investment. However, as President Bush recently
said, "A dream of free markets and free people, in a hemisphere free
from war and tyranny. That dream has sometimes been frustrated -- but
it must never be abandoned."
This hemispheric
dream of democracy, prosperity and security for every citizen, presented
by President Bush, faces its most difficult challenge in the hemisphere's
second oldest democracy -- Colombia.
What good will these
principles be if they are trampled in Colombia?
COLOMBIA: ASSAULT
ON DEMOCRACY
Colombia's 40 million
inhabitants and its democracy are under assault by three narcoterrorist
groups -- the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), National
Liberation Army (ELN) and the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC).
The three groups
-- with a combined force of over 25,000 combatants -- regularly engage
in massacres, kidnappings, and attacks on key infrastructure. The U.N.
believes that as many as 6,000 of the FARC's combatants are under 18 years
of age. The FARC and AUC are involved in every facet of narcotics trafficking,
including cultivation, processing, and transportation. The income they
derive from narcotics -- estimated at over $300 million a year -- has
been key to their expansion -- both in numbers and armament -- over the
last ten years.
All three groups
seek a lawless, anarchic environment in which they can prey on innocent
civilians and legitimate business activities.
The terrorist assault
on Colombia's democracy saw the AUC kill two Colombian legislators over
the last twelve months, while the FARC kidnapped six Colombian legislators,
including presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt. The three terrorist
groups assassinated 12 mayors in 2001. FARC efforts to disrupt the March
10 legislative elections failed, but the terrorist group will undoubtedly
try to interfere with the May 26 presidential elections as well.
COLOMBIA: ASSAULT
ON PROSPERITY
ELN and FARC bombings
of the key Caño Limón oil pipeline cost the government of
Colombia almost $500 million in lost revenue last year -- equal to almost
one-third of Bogota's spending on health for its citizens. FARC strikes
against the country's power grid in February left 45 towns, including
two departmental capitals, without electricity for days. The FARC also
attempted twice to blow up a dam near Bogota, actions which - if successful-
could have killed thousands of civilians. Fortunately, Colombian security
forces thwarted both attempts.
The FARC and ELN
also represent a danger to the $4.3 billion in direct U.S. investment
in Colombia. They regularly attack U.S. interests, including the railway
used by the Drummond Coal Mining facility and Occidental Petroleum's stake
in the Caño Limón oil pipeline. Terrorist attacks on the
Caño Limón pipeline also pose a threat to U.S. energy security.
Colombia supplied 3% of U.S. oil imports in 2001, and possesses substantial
potential oil and natural gas reserves.
COLOMBIA: ASSAULT
ON SECURITY
Terrorist attacks
on Colombia's security have resulted in saw over 3,000 Colombians killed
in 2001. Another 2,856 were kidnapped, with the ELN, FARC and AUC responsible
for almost 2,000 victims. Among the kidnap victims were 289 children,
the youngest of whom was only three years old.
The Colombian authorities'
arrest of Brazilian narcotrafficker Luis Fernando da Costa in April 2001
at a FARC military camp confirmed extensive FARC involvement in the drug
trade, and led to the recent U.S. indictment of the Commander of the FARC's
16th front on drug-related charges.
In the former demilitarized
zone, the Colombian military recently found two large FARC-run cocaine
laboratories and 7.4 metric tons of cocaine. Similarly, AUC Commander
Carlos Castaño has publicly admitted that the AUC obtains 70% of
its income from narcotics. FARC and AUC activities in southern Colombia
have been a major obstacle to our aerial eradication and alternative development
programs, especially in Putumayo and Caqueta.
The FARC, ELN, and
AUC also threaten regional stability. The FARC regularly uses border regions
in Panamá, Ecuador, Brazil and Venezuela for arms and narcotics
trafficking, resupply operations, and rest and recreation. Conflicts between
the FARC and AUC in northwest Colombia have led to limited refugee inflows
into Panamá's Darien region. Venezuela and Ecuador have experienced
similar problems. The insecurity created by the FARC, AUC, and ELN creates
a haven for criminal activity that affects Colombia's neighbors.
Since 1992, the FARC
and ELN have kidnapped 51 U.S. citizens and murdered ten. The threat also
carries into the U.S. Illegal drugs caused 50,000 drug-related deaths
and $160 billion in economic losses in the U.S. in 2000. Colombia supplies
90% of the cocaine consumed in the U.S., and it is estimated that approximately
60% of the heroin entering the U.S. is of South American origin, which
is primarily Colombia. It is also a significant source of heroin.
COLOMBIAN RESPONSE
TO GROWTH IN TERRORIST VIOLENCE
In 1999, President
Pastrana took the initiative in responding to the crisis undermining Colombia's
democracy, prosperity and security with the launch of the six-year, $7.5
billion Plan Colombia. This plan recognized that Colombia's narcotics,
political, terrorist and economic problems are interrelated, creating
a vicious downward cycle. To break these links, it called for substantial
social investment, judicial, political and economic reforms, modernization
of the Colombian Armed Forces, and renewed efforts to combat narcotrafficking.
Pastrana also began
peace talks with the FARC, providing the group with a 16,000 square mile
demilitarized zone to facilitate negotiations. At the same time, he sought
to improve ties with the U.S.
U.S. SUPPORT FOR
PLAN COLOMBIA
The United States
shares Plan Colombia's vision of a democratic Colombia free from the scourges
of narcotics and terrorism. U.S. support has been a key component of the
plan. With your support, since July 2000, the U.S. has provided Colombia
with $1.7 billion to combat narcotics trafficking and terrorism, strengthen
democratic institutions and human rights, foster socio-economic development,
and mitigate the impact of the violence on Colombian civilians. Our assistance
to Colombia using Plan Colombia funds is limited to support of counternarcotics
activities.
Take our focus on
counternarcotics activities aimed at breaking the financial support of
the narcoterrorist groups. The government of Colombia extradited 23 Colombian
nationals to the U.S. in 2001, an unprecedented level of cooperation.
We trained, equipped, and deployed the Colombian Army's counternarcotics
brigade, which destroyed 818 base laboratories and 21 HCL laboratories,
and provided security for our aerial eradication operations in Southern
Colombia. Operating as part of a Colombian Joint Task Force (JTF-South),
we judge it the best brigade-sized unit in the Colombian military. It
has served as a brigade operations model with respect to joint operations,
proper use of helicopters, intelligence-driven missions, and respect for
human rights. Moreover, we dispensed enough herbicide to spray a record
potential 84,000 hectares of coca cultivation last year, up from 58,000
in 2000, and have set a goal of 150,000 hectares in 2002.
I know there is an
on-going debate about the impact of our eradication efforts on total coca
cultivation in Colombia. The CIA's Crime and Narcotics Center and ONDCP
say total coca cultivation in Colombia increased from 136,000 to 170,000
hectares in 2001. In contrast, the government of Colombia estimates that
coca cultivation fell 27,000 hectares during the same period, dropping
from 163,000 hectares to 136,000 hectares. The conflicting numbers reflect
the differing methodologies used. ONDCP has asked an independent team
of experts to analyze the two approaches. We await the findings and recommendations
of this panel that will determine how coca estimates will be done in the
future.
We have also engaged
in efforts to ensure the security of Colombians. Through Colombia's Ministry
of Interior, we have funded, since May 2001, a program that has provided
protection to 1,676 Colombians whose lives were threatened, including
human rights workers, labor activists, and journalists. The U.S. government-funded
Early Warning System helps alert Colombian authorities to threats of potential
massacres or other human rights abuses, enabling them act to avert such
incidents. To date, the EWS has issued 106 alerts and the U.S. -- working
with non-governmental organizations and international agencies -- has
provided assistance to 330,000 Colombians displaced by violence since
mid-2001. Lastly, our program to demobilize child soldiers has helped
272 children to re-integrate into society.
To strengthen Colombia's
democracy, we have implemented programs to help the government of Colombia
reform its administration of justice and strengthen local government.
We have opened 18 Casas de Justicia, which provide cost-effective legal
services to Colombians who have not previously enjoyed access to the country's
judicial system. We are currently working to set up a Casa de Justicia
in San Vicente de Caguan, the main urban area in the former demilitarized
zone. Similarly, our program to help municipalities improve their financial
management, fight corruption, and boost community participation has completed
six Social Investment Fund projects in southern Colombia. We are also
helping the Prosecutor General's Office set up human rights units throughout
the country to facilitate the investigation and prosecution of human rights
abuses.
Our alternative development
program in southern Colombia has encountered difficulties but we are making
adjustments to overcome the security and other constraints we face. We
remain committed to alternative development. AID Assistant Administrator
Adolfo Franco will present you our revised strategy in detail later today.
HUMAN RIGHTS
Human rights concerns
are a central element in our Colombia policy. In meetings with senior
Colombian civilian and military officials, U.S. officials regularly stress
the need for Colombia to improve its human rights performance. During
my visit to Bogota last February, I emphasized to President Pastrana that
the Colombian military must take additional actions to sever any links
between military personnel and paramilitary forces. I also met with the
leading presidential candidates and made clear our expectation that they
too be fully committed to improving human rights. In late March, Curt
Struble, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs,
and Scott Carpenter, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy,
Human Rights and Labor, traveled to Bogota to underscore the importance
we attach to human rights. Chief of Staff of the Army General Eric Shinseki
and Acting CINCSOUTH Major General Gary Speer have also traveled to Colombia
and delivered string human rights messages to their counterparts in the
Colombian Armed Forces.
Human rights are
an essential element in most of our training programs in Colombia. The
counternarcotics brigade that we trained and equipped has compiled an
excellent human rights record to date. These programs are an integral
part of the government of Colombia's efforts to professionalize the Colombian
military and to develop a new human rights culture within the Armed Forces.
They deserve our continued support.
Our human rights
message is making a difference. President Pastrana and Armed Forces Commander
Tapias have repeatedly denounced collusion between elements of the Colombian
military and the paramilitaries. The Colombian military captured 590 paramilitaries
and killed 92 in combat last year. Eight military personnel, including
two colonels and a lieutenant colonel, were charged in civilian courts
with collaborating with paramilitaries or with committing gross human
rights violations in 2001. A senior Colombian naval official's career
has effectively ended because of allegations that he collaborated with
paramilitaries.
Still, too many Colombians
continue to suffer abuses by state security forces or by terrorist groups
acting in collusion with state security units. Those responsible for such
actions must be punished. The establishment of the rule of law and personal
security for all Colombians cannot happen if human rights abuses and impunity
for the perpetrators of such crimes continue to occur.
NEW SITUATION REQUIRES
NEW AUTHORITIES ADJUSTMENTS
On February 20, President
Pastrana ended the demilitarized zone and the government of Colombia's
peace talks with the FARC. The immediate catalyst for Pastrana's action
was the FARC's hijacking of a civilian aircraft and its subsequent kidnapping
of the President of the Peace Commission in the Colombian Senate. Pastrana's
decision also reflected the FARC's stepped-up attacks on military and
police targets, its bombings of key economic infrastructure and its refusal
to participate in good faith in peace talks after Pastrana had renewed
the zone on January 20.
Since February 20,
the Colombian military has reoccupied the main urban areas in the former
zone, while the FARC has continued its terrorist violence. President Pastrana
has announced plans to increase Colombia's defense budget to cover the
cost of heightened military operations, and to add 10,000 soldiers to
the army. He also requested additional military aid from the U.S. to help
cope with the increased terrorist threat. This request includes the removal
of the restrictions on the use of military assets provided by the U.S.
for counternarcotics purposes.
Just as we supported
President Pastrana's management of the peace process with the FARC, we
believe it is critical that the U.S. help Colombia deal with the surge
in violence that has followed the end of the demilitarized zone. We answered
Pastrana's immediate request for help by providing increased intelligence
support on terrorist actions, expediting the delivery of helicopter spare
parts already paid for by the government of Colombia, and assisting the
Colombians with eradication activities in the former zone.
We are also acting
to address the Colombian people's broader needs as they defend their democracy
from terrorist violence. In the counterterrorism supplemental submitted
on March 21, we are seeking new, explicit, legal authorities that would
allow our assistance to Colombia, including assistance previously provided,
to be used "to support a unified campaign against narcotics trafficking,
terrorist activities, and other threats to its national security."
These new authorities recognize that the terrorist and narcotics problems
in Colombia are inextricably intertwined in their threat to Colombia's
security, prosperity and democracy. If authorized, we will continue to
assist Colombia's counternarcotics activities while also being able to
aid their counterterrorism effort.
The new authorities
will not resolve all the difficulties that Colombia faces. The military
assistance we have provided to Colombia is geared toward a limited, counternarcotics
mission. Expanding the authorities for the use of aircraft and other assets
to cover terrorist and other threats to Colombia's democracy does not
ensure that Colombia will be able to address these multiple threats in
the short-term. However, if approved, they will give us the flexibility
we need to help the government of Colombia attack this hydra-headed threat
more efficiently and more effectively, in the shortest possible time,
with resources already in Colombia.
Our request for new
authorities does not signify a retreat from our concern about human rights
nor signal an ill-guided U.S. commitment in Colombia. Our proposal expressly
states that we will continue to do human rights vetting of all Colombian
military units receiving U.S. training or equipment and will maintain
the 800 person cap on U.S. military personnel and contractors providing
training and other services in Colombia.
In addition to new
legal authorities, we are also seeking $35 million in the counterterrorism
supplemental to help the Colombian government protect its citizens from
kidnapping, infrastructure attacks and other terrorist actions. Our $35
million request is broken down as follows:
-- $25 million in
Non-proliferation, Anti-terrorism, Demining and Related Programs (NADR)
funding for anti-kidnapping training and equipment for the Colombian police
and military;
-- $6 million in
Foreign Military Funds (FMF) funding for training for Colombian military
units protecting the key Caño Limón oil pipeline; and
-- $4 million in
International Narcotics Control Law Enforcement (INCLE) funding to help
organize, train, equip and deploy Colombian National Police units that
will provide security for the construction of reinforced police stations
to enable the police to reestablish a presence in conflicted areas.
In the longer-term,
we are asking for $439 million in INCLE funds in our FY-03 budget request
to sustain our Plan Colombia programs, as well as $98 million in FMF funds
to train and equip Colombian military units protecting the Caño
Limón oil pipeline. The $439 million request includes $275 million
for the Colombian military and police, and $164 million for democracy
programs, alternative development, assistance to vulnerable groups, and
promotion of the rule of law. These funds, together with the terrorism
supplemental, will be crucial as the next Colombian government works to
improve security, build effective democratic institutions and foster economic
growth.
PEACE PROCESS
As I mentioned earlier,
the U.S. government supported President Pastrana's peace efforts with
the FARC. We made clear to the government of Colombia our concerns about
FARC abuse of the demilitarized zone, but maintained that management of
the process was the Pastrana Administration's responsibility. I want to
reiterate that despite the breakdown of the FARC process due to the FARC's
bad faith, the U.S. government remains supportive of peace processes aimed
at halting terrorist violence and reincorporating irregular combatants
into Colombia's political, economic and social fabric. In this context,
we are encouraged by the current talks between the ELN and the government
of Colombia, and hope that they will soon produce a viable, lasting peace
accord.
COLOMBIAN COMMITMENT
The U.S. is committed
to helping Colombia in its fight against terrorism's assault on its democracy,
prosperity and security, but Colombians must take the lead in this struggle.
U.S. support will be contingent on the government of Colombia taking the
steps needed to mount an effective campaign against terror. These will
include Colombian commitments to develop a national political-military
strategy, boost the resources devoted to security, implement economic
reforms, improve human rights protection, and sustain vigorous and effective
counternarcotics programs. We have already engaged the leading Colombian
presidential candidates on these issues, and will hold more intensive
talks with the president-elect after Colombia's presidential elections.
CONCLUSION
Mr. Chairman, members
of the Committee, your support will be crucial in the days ahead as you
discuss our proposal for new and supplemental funding request for our
assistance to Colombia, as well as our FY-03 budget request. I look forward
to maintaining a dialogue with you as we work together to help provide
Colombia's democracy the tools it needs to build a secure, prosperous
and democratic life for its citizens. The people of Colombia must not
be denied the opportunity to enjoy the benefits of a hemisphere united
by open markets, democratic governments, respect for human rights, and
the rule of law. Thank you.
As of April 12, 2002,
this document was also available online at http://usinfo.state.gov/admin/011/lef406.htm