Statement
of Brian Sheridan, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations
and Low-Intensity Conflict, February 29, 2000
BRIAN E.
SHERIDAN
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR SPECIAL OPERATIONS AND LOW INTENSITY
CONFLICT
UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
HOUSE COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS SUBCOMMITTEE ON FOREIGN OPERATIONS, EXPORT
FINANCING AND RELATED AGENCIES
February 29. 2000
STATEMENT FOR THE RECORD
I am pleased to have the opportunity to testify before this Subcommittee
to discuss the Department of Defense's perspective on the growing Colombian
drug threat as well as our integrated programs designed to assist the
Government of Colombia in its efforts to address this scourge.
As you are aware, drug abuse is an undeniable threat to our national
security that is measured in thousands of lives lost and costing our country
billions of dollars annually. Reducing the supply of drugs on our streets
is an integral component of our National Drug Control Strategy and the
Department of Defense (DoD) plays a key supporting role in creating the
opportunity for law enforcement agencies, both our own and those of foreign
nations, to interdict the flow of drugs into our country. DoD is committed
to this counterdrug mission. The programs I will outline today were developed
in conjunction with US Southern Command, our interagency partners and
the Government of Colombia, and form the core of a sound, responsive,
and timely assistance package that will significantly enhance Colombia's
ability to conduct effective counterdrug operations.
Over the past two years Colombia, specifically the area east of the Andes,
has become the center of the cocaine trade, largely as a result of successful
interdiction and eradication efforts in Peru and Bolivia. The remoteness
of eastern Colombia and the lack of government control in large areas
of this region has precluded Colombian interdiction operations to the
point that the expansion of coca growing areas, especially in the Putumayo
Department, has progressed virtually unchecked. Most of the world's coca
is now grown in Colombia and over eighty percent of the cocaine consumed
in the US is manufactured in Colombia. The United States, the nation with
the greatest cocaine demand, currently consumes over 200 metric tons annually
from the Andean region.
Source Zone Programs
To disrupt illegal cocaine cultivation and production throughout the
source zone, DoD, working with host nations and our interagency partners.
has developed and selectively implemented a threat based, intelligence
driven, counterdrug interdiction strategy which has focused on air, riverine/coastal,
and ground programs. DoD has worked closely with source zone nations to
improve their organic air interdiction capability by funding upgrades
to their aircraft that conduct counterdrug missions. To support the detection
and monitoring (D&M) of airborne traffickers, the Department has fielded
Relocatable Over-the-Horizon Radars (ROTHR), and deployed ground based
radars along with airborne tracker aircraft equipped with air-to-air radars.
Our counterdrug riverine and littoral efforts have provided equipment
and training support to source zone nations, thereby facilitating effective
operations along the vast river networks of the Amazon basin, a major
supply route for precursor production chemicals. Finally, DoD's ground
interdiction assistance has concentrated on training selected military
units, consisting of human rights-vetted personnel, in the light infantry
tactics they require to support law enforcement interdiction and eradication
operations. These source zone programs have been enhanced through the
development of intelligence and command and control networks. These efforts,
in conjunction with law enforcement and eradication programs, have proven
to be successful in both Peru and Bolivia, however, the conditions necessary
to implement a coordinated response throughout the Colombian cultivation
and cocaine production regions have not been met - until now.
Plan Colombia
Colombian President Andres Pastrana has developed a comprehensive and
integrated approach to address Colombia's current problems. This plan,
known as "Plan Colombia," would strengthen the Colombian economy
and democracy while fighting narcotics trafficking. Further, this plan
demonstrates that Colombia is moving forward aggressively, exercising
its political will to address, and ultimately solve, domestic problems
that have persisted for decades. The US has a vital material interest
in the success of this plan. We must now step forward with the Government
of Colombia by enhancing our current strategy, based on proven source
zone interdiction programs. This effort is responsive to Plan Colombia
and consistent with current US policy.
Colombian Supplemental Source Zone Enhancements
The proposed fiscal year 2000 supplemental request will provide the resources
necessary to promote essential facets of the Department's assistance to
Colombian interdiction efforts. We feel that the supplemental is a balanced
and executable plan -- not without challenges which I will address later
-- that is necessary to attack the strategically vulnerable aerial cocaine
transportation network while expanding ground interdiction and eradication
operations into the densest coca cultivation areas of the Putumayo region.
Let me outline for you how this supplemental funding would enhance each
of our baseline counterdrug programs in Colombia in support of our overall
source zone strategy.
Air Interdiction
Colombia requires aircraft that can track drug traffickers engaged in
aerial smuggling. The supplemental will fund the installation of air-to-air
radars in two Colombian aircraft. These radars will provide the Colombian
Air Force the organic ability to conduct terminal aerial intercepts of
drug smugglers. Aerial intercepts are intricate operations and require
adequate ground based coordination. Therefore, the supplemental will also
fund the upgrade of the Colombian Air Force radar command and control
center as well as additional ground based radars to assist in detecting
and sorting aircraft operating in eastern Colombia. Critical to this air
interdiction effort are supplemental initiatives, under State Department
authority, that will upgrade Colombian Air Force counterdrug aircraft
for the air intercept mission. The supplemental also requests funding
for US Customs Service airborne early warning aircraft upgrades to ensure
that these crucial platforms will continue to be available for the source
zone interdiction mission.
Basing airborne D&M aircraft, as well as aerial intelligence collection
platforms, close to the historical airborne smuggling routes is of the
utmost importance to the successful implementation of the integrated strategy
in Colombia. For this reason, funding for the forward operating location
(FOL) at Manta, Ecuador, is included in the supplemental. General Wilhelm
will expound on the operational requirements; however, I want to ensure
that you understand that the Department views the completion of the site
upgrades to the Manta FOL as a critical component of the overall source
zone effort.
Ground Interdiction
The supplemental funding focuses extensive resources on improving Colombia's
counterdrug ground interdiction programs. The Department has completed
training of a counterdrug battalion that is now operational in the Putumayo
region. The supplemental will support the training and equipping of two
additional counterdrug battalions that will be operational by the end
of this calendar year. Funding, if appropriated, will also be used to
develop a suitable counterdrug brigade headquarters to oversee the operation
of the three counterdrug battalions.
The Colombian National Police (CNP) will be conducting counterdrug interdiction
and eradication missions in remote regions of the country where the coca
growing fields are located. Therefore, the counterdrug battalions will
require adequate airlift to move troops to support the CNP. The required
helicopter lift is provided for under State Department authority, however.
DoD will use proposed supplemental funding to establish the necessary
Colombian Army aviation support infrastructure. Enhanced counterdrug intelligence
collection efforts are also required to develop and plan counterdrug operations.
Consequently, the supplemental will provide sufficient funding in this
area to further enhance the intelligence programs that already serve as
a foundation for our source zone strategy.
All these programs that I just outlined build on our current strategy
- no change in DoD policy is required to execute the programs funded by
this supplemental. There is nothing new here for DoD. However, there will
be challenges to confront in the course of our efforts to attack the center
of the cocaine industry in eastern Colombia. It will not be easy, but
it is worth the effort. Let me share with you my concerns.
DoD Concerns
Colombian Military Organization
First, the Colombian military, by their own admission, is not optimally
structured and organized to execute sustained counterdrug operations.
They are heavy on "tail" and short on "tooth." They
need to better coordinate operations between the services and with the
CNP. The military has limitations based on resources, training practices,
lack of joint planning and operations. The restructuring of the military
is essential if Colombia is to have continuing operational success against
the drug threat. The Colombian military needs help and we plan to use
a small portion of supplemental funding towards this end.
Human Rights
I am also concerned, as are many others in Congress, about human rights.
The practices and procedures that the US government has put in place,
often at the behest of concerned members of Congress, and the example
set by the small number of our troops training Colombian forces has had
an impact, as have President Pastrana's reforms. This is a success story.
While we must remain vigilant, and there is undoubtedly room for improvement,
I am concerned that if extensive conditional clauses are included in the
supplemental appropriations language, that we could inhibit or mitigate
the overall effectiveness of US assistance to Colombian. We need to work
together, Congress and the Administration, to address this concern. I
am also alarmed by the reported dramatic increase in human rights violations
attributed to both the paramilitaries and insurgents - this is symptomatic
of Colombia's crisis in general and, as I see it, a call for action. The
Colombian government needs the resources and training to address this
problem and the supplemental represents a significant contribution on
the part of the US.
Counterdrug vs. Counter Insurgency
Lastly, let me address the "targets" of this supplemental package,
and our source zone strategy as a whole. The targets are the narco-traffickers,
those individuals and organizations that are involved in the cultivation
of coca and the subsequent production and transportation of cocaine to
the US. The Colombian military will use the equipment and training that
is provided by this supplemental request, in conjunction with the assistance
that has already been delivered, to secure perimeters around CNP objectives
-- coca fields and cocaine labs -- so that the CNP can safely conduct
interdiction and eradication operations. Only those armed elements that
forcibly inhibit or confront these joint military and CNP operations will
be engaged, be they narco- traffickers, insurgent organizations, or paramilitaries.
I know that many are concerned that this aid package represents a step
"over the line," an encroachment into the realm of counterinsurgency
in the name of counterdrug. It is not. The Department has not, and will
not, cross that line. While I do not have the time to elaborate on all
of the restrictions, constraints, and reviews that are involved in the
approval of the deployment of US military personnel on counterdrug missions,
in Colombia and elsewhere, it suffices to say that it is comprehensive.
I personally look not only at who is deploying and what they are doing,
but at the specific locations to which they are going. Furthermore, each
and every deployment order states, in no uncertain terms, that DoD personnel
are not to accompany host nation personnel on operational missions. This
will not change. As I have said, this supplemental does not require a
change in US policy. Is there risk to US personnel providing counterdrug
support?
Yes there is. Is the risk increased as a result of the programs being
enhanced by the supplemental? The answer is no.
The Department of Defense enthusiastically supports this supplemental.
US Southern Command and my office participated extensively in its formulation.
It integrates fully our source zone strategy, affording the opportunity
to enhance those counterdrug programs that have proven successful in Peru
and Bolivia. President Pastrana has asked for international support to
address an internal problem that has international dimensions -- fueled
in part by our country's demand for cocaine. It is time to move forward
and, I hope, with congressional support, that we can do so soon.