Statement
of Committee Chairman Rep. Tom Davis (R-Virginia), hearing of the
House Government Reform Committee: "The War Against Drugs and Thugs:
A Status Report on Plan Colombia Successes and Remaining Challenges,"
June 17, 2004
Good morning. I want to welcome everyone to todays oversight
hearing on Plan Colombia, an important component of U.S. foreign
and counternarcotics policy. Today well examine the U.S.
Governments support and contributions to the progress being
made in Colombia in fighting drug trafficking and international
crime, and in improving economic and social conditions.
Since
its inception in 1999, Plan Colombia has been an integrated strategy
to meet the most pressing challenges confronting the country todaypromoting
the peace process, combating narcoterrorism, reviving the economy,
and strengthening the democratic pillars of society. The combined
efforts of several of our government agencies, who are here testifying
today, are providing assistance to meet these challenges and improve
the stability and future of Colombia.
Not
only is Colombia one of the oldest democracies in our hemisphere,
but it also is home to three terrorist groups who fund their guerilla
activities with drugs smuggled into the U.S. for American consumption.
Colombia is a significant source of cocaine and heroin for the
U.S. market. As many of us are well aware, the drug trade has
a terrible and destructive impact on Americans through addiction,
drug-related crimes, and death. Because drug trafficking and the
guerilla insurgency have become intertwined problems, Congress
has granted the U.S. expanded authority and increased flexibility
to fight narcoterrorism and reduce the flow of illicit drugs into
the U.S.
I
led three congressional delegations to Colombia last year and
can say firsthand that our significant investment, after years
of effort, is beginning to see returns on the time, money, and
resources spent in Colombia. Together with the strong commitment
of President Alvaro Uribe and historic levels of support from
the Colombian people, U.S. involvement is beginning to hit narcoterrorists
where it hurts.
Some
European left wing politicians and human rights groups claim the
Uribe Administration has failed to honor commitments on human
rights. Theyve also criticized new Colombian anti-terrorism
laws passed in December. But I think the view from Bogotá
looks very different, and I think the European left may be guilty
of clinging to an overly romantic, naïve opinion of the guerillas.
The mask is off the Lone Ranger. These are not idealistic liberators;
theyre thugs and terrorists, funded by the illicit drug
trade.
The
fact is, President Uribe continues to enjoy unprecedented support
from the Colombian people because his no-nonsense strategy is
producing results. Hes popular because Colombians feel safer.
Men, women, and children once afraid to hit the road to visit
family and friends for fear of kidnapping or worse are now doing
so. A publicly recognized state presence now extends to towns
and villages that for decades had been rebel territory.
We
are seeing tremendous results in illegal crop eradication, and
Plan Colombias efforts have produced record reductions in
coca production and in the destruction of drug labs. Net coca
production in Colombia dropped from 355,347 acres in 2002 to 280,071
acres in 2003, a stunning 33 percent decline from the peak-growing
year of 2001. Interdiction efforts by the Government of Colombia
have increased significantly and each week brings news of new
seizures of cocaine and heroininterdictions that are usually
the result of U.S. supplied intelligence. Eradication, coupled
with increasingly successful interdiction efforts, is a key to
our war on narcoterrorism, reducing profitability and slowly but
surely leading farmers to abandon coca in favor of other, legitimate
crops. Ultimately that, in turn, will mean less cocaine on American
streets.
Criminals
who have remained at large for years are being captured and extradited
to the U.S. for prosecution. Colombia extradited 90 suspects to
the United States in the first 16 months of the Uribe Administration
quite an accomplishment considering that five years ago
it offered up just one of its citizens to the U.S. justice system.
The extraditions illustrate the unprecedented cooperation and
partnership between our two nations, and the fact that public
opinion on extradition in Colombia has changed, due largely to
the political will and persistence of President Uribe.
Last
month Attorney General Ashcroft announced the indictment of nine
top leaders of Colombias largest drug cartel, an organization
responsible for as much as half of all the cocaine smuggled into
the United States. This cartel had exported more than 1.2 million
pounds of cocaine to the U.S. through Mexico since 1990, a load
worth more than $10 billion. To put that number in perspective,
its approximately the combined annual budgets of the FBI,
DEA, and Bureau of Prisons.
Our
continued support of Colombias unified campaign against
drug trafficking and terrorist activities and their effort to
obtain democratic security is a wise investment. Although U.S.
assistance to the Colombian Government has led to meaningful signs
of success under the strong leadership of President Uribe, challenges
do remain. Complete realization of U.S. policy goals requires
a concerted Colombian strategy and effort sustained by continuous
U.S. assistance. Our panels of witnesses today will provide an
update on the current status of U.S.-Colombian programs, progress
that has been made in recent years, and an assessment of remaining
challenges in the war against narcoterrorism. I look forward to
our discussion today, and I again want to welcome our witnesses
and their important testimony.
As
of June 18, 2004, this document was also available online at http://reform.house.gov/GovReform/Hearings/EventSingle.aspx?EventID=1093