State
Department Fact Sheet: Civilian Contractors and U.S. Military Personnel
Supporting Plan Colombia, May 22, 2001
FACT
SHEET: CIVILIAN CONTRACTORS AND U.S. MILITARY PERSONNEL SUPPORTING PLAN
COLOMBIA
When it approved
funding in support of the programs of the Colombian Government (known
as Plan Colombia) in July 2000, the United States Congress also placed
limits on the number of U.S. military personnel and U.S. citizen civilian
contractors to support Plan Colombia: 500 permanent and temporary duty
U.S. military personnel and 300 U.S. citizen civilian contractors (see
note 1). The U.S. Embassy in Bogota closely monitors those limits. Although
personnel levels vary as projects are begun, implemented and then completed,
the Embassy carefully ensures that the ceilings are not exceeded. Reports
are provided by the Executive Branch to the Congress on a regular basis
covering the numbers and activities of all U.S. military and contractor
personnel in Colombia.
U.S. programs in
support of Plan Colombia are undertaken by U.S. civilian government employees,
U.S. military personnel, and non-U.S. civilian contractors. (note 2).
CIVILIAN CONTRACT PERSONNEL
Activities encompass
a broad range of programs (note 3), some of which have been underway for
many years, while others have been initiated or expanded to support Plan
Colombia. Three agencies (State, USAID and DOD) account for the overwhelming
majority of U.S. government activities in Colombia using civilian contractors.
State Department
U.S. anti-narcotics
programs in Colombia seek to eliminate the cultivation of opium poppy
and coca leaf, as well as the trafficking of illicit drugs and their chemical
precursors. Toward these objectives, U.S. assistance is provided to the
Government of Colombia to strengthen its capabilities to disrupt and dismantle
drug trafficking organizations, destroy the cocaine and heroin processing
industries, and prevent the diversion of licit chemicals into illicit
channels. Many of these activities, including aerial spraying, pre-date
Plan Colombia.
The aerial spraying
program in Colombia is conducted by the Colombian National Police (CNP)
with support from the State Department's Bureau of International Narcotics
and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL), the American Embassy's Narcotics Affairs
Section (NAS) and United States citizen, third country national and Colombian
personnel contracted by the State Department with DynCorp Aerospace Technologies.
As of late March
2001, there were just over 100 U.S. citizen civilian contractors with
Dyncorp in Colombia, the majority of whom were in place well before the
legislation in support of Plan Colombia was enacted. An approximately
equal number of third country nationals and Colombian citizens are also
employed under this contract. These contractors work on counternarcotics
projects with the Antinarcotics Directorate (DIRAN) and air wing of the
Colombian National Police, and also support the Aviation Brigade of the
Colombian Army.
Generally, twelve
of the pilots in the aerial spraying program, flying OV-10 aircraft, are
U.S. civilian contractors, approximately six of whom are in Colombia on
any given day. The pilots of the other spray aircraft (T-65 single engine
airplanes) are employed by the Colombian National Police and are not U.S.
citizens.
Spray aircraft are
accompanied by escort helicopters that carry combined U.S. contractor
and Colombian National Police crews, and by search and rescue helicopters
which also carry combined crews. On a typical mission U.S. civilian contractors
accompany the spray operation in these helicopters as pilots and medics,
but not as gunners. These contractors provide support for Colombian National
Police counternarcotics and law enforcement operations and do not have
a counterinsurgency role. Currently, there are four U.S. civilian contractors
in Colombia working as helicopter pilots. There is one contractor pilot
in each escort aircraft and two DynCorp contractor pilots and two SAR
personnel in the search and rescue aircraft. The co-pilots and gunners
are members of the Colombian National Police.
All U.S. contractor
support to the Colombian aerial spraying program contains an integral
training component with a goal of completely nationalizing the program.
Deliveries in late 2001/early 2002 of nine new T-65 spray aircraft will
require additional training and logistical assistance from civilian contractors.
The current goal is to phase out U.S. support for the aerial spraying
mission two years after arrival of these additional aircraft.
The State Department
contract with DynCorp also supports the 33 UH-1N helicopters supplied
to the Colombian Army to provide airmobility for the three counternarcotics
battalions. Approximately 25 U.S. citizen contractors provide training
and logistical support to the UH-1Ns, but they do not fly in counternarcotics
missions.
United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
The U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) currently has eleven U.S. civilian contractors
based in Bogota working on social and economic development and administration
of justice programs in support of Plan Colombia. These numbers have been
as high as 16 and are expected to reach 35 by the end of 2001. The contractors
are engaged in alternative development, democracy building, including
expanded administration of justice and human rights activities, and managing
the displaced persons program, as well as providing internal administrative
support. As these grow and new programs in local governance, anti-corruption
and support for the peace process are implemented, USAID will make greater
use of contractors, primarily through Colombian, U.S. and international
NGOs.
Department of Defense
(DOD)
DOD employs U.S. citizen civilian contractors to carry out several programs
in support of Plan Colombia. DOD requires these contractors due to shortages
of military personnel in specific technical areas or where specialized
expertise is needed.
Approximately thirteen
U.S. citizen civilian contractors provide technical support to the Colombian
army at several radar sites and another sixteen U.S. civilian contractors
provide information for force protection and counterdrug operations.
Four civilian contractors
are now in Colombia to provide advance support for the first delivery
of UH-60L (Blackhawk) helicopters. These contractors will provide logistical
support, training and maintenance for the 14 Blackhawks being supplied
to the Colombian Army's counternarcotics battalions. The number of these
contractors will increase in the coming year to support these helicopters
as they are delivered.
The average number
of U.S. citizen civilian contractors working on State Department, USAID
and DOD programs supporting Plan Colombia on any given day has been in
the range of 160-180 persons.
U.S. MILITARY PERSONNEL
The primary focus
of Department of Defense activities in Colombia, through the United States
Military Group (MILGP), is counternarcotics with the provision of training,
equipment, infrastructure development, intelligence support, detection,
and monitoring information to Colombian armed forces units engaged in
counterdrug operations. This assistance is to increase the capabilities
of Colombian land, sea, and air security forces to detect and interdict
narcotrafficking operations and to assist the Colombian National Police
(CNP) in its eradication and law enforcement mission. These military personnel
(as well as civilian contractors described above) are supervised by the
MILGP at the U.S. Embassy in Bogota.
The most significant
recent activities for U.S. military personnel have been training and equipping
the second and third counternarcotics battalions of the Colombian Army;
completing training and equipping the Colombian counternarcotics brigade
headquarters; and providing design, contract, and oversight services for
a variety of Colombian Army aviation infrastructure projects to support
the UN-1N, Huey-II, and UH-60 helicopter programs.
The largest single
category of U.S. military personnel now in Colombia are approximately
90 Special Forces trainers. Their training of the third counternarcotics
battalion is planned to be completed in late-May 2001, after which they
will depart. Other short-term U.S. military training teams are in Colombia
to work with the military and police. One U.S. military Staff Judge Advocate
officer was assigned to the Milgroup for six months to support human rights
training, develop rules of engagement and assist in the professionalization
of the Colombian military legal corps. MILGP staffing also includes administrative
and support personnel.
The total number
of U.S. military trainers has typically been between 60 to 100 persons
for variable periods of time depending on the assignment. The average
number of all U.S. military personnel on any given day (both permanent
and temporary duty military personnel) in Colombia to support Plan Colombia
has been in the range of 200. In mid-March 2001, for example, there were
183 permanent and temporary U.S. military personnel in support of Plan
Colombia.
Notes:
(1) Title III, Chapter
2, of the Emergency Supplemental Act, 2000, as enacted in the
Military Constructions Appropriations Act, 2001, P.L. 106-246.
(2) Plan Colombia
is defined by Section 3204(h) in the legislation as "...the plan
of the
Government of Colombia instituted by the administration of President Pastrana
to combat drug production and trafficking, foster peace, increase the
rule of law, improve human rights, expand economic development, and institute
justice reform."
(3) U.S. programs
include the provision of training, equipment, infrastructure
development, funding, aviation support and expertise to the Government
of Colombia and Colombian civil society in the areas of alternative development,
interdiction, eradication, law enforcement, institutional strengthening,
judicial reform, human rights, humanitarian assistance for displaced persons,
local governance, anti-corruption, conflict management and peace, the
rehabilitation of child soldiers, and preservation of the environment.
As of May 24, 2001,
this document was also available online at http://usinfo.state.gov/regional/ar/colombia/fact09.htm