Statement
of Brian Sheridan, assistant secretary of defense for special operations
and low-intensity conflict, September 21, 2000
BRIAN
E. SHERIDAN
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR SPECIAL OPERATIONS AND LOW INTENSITY
CONFLICT
UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
COMMITTEE ON INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS SUBCOMMITTEE ON WESTERN HEMISPHERE
September 21, 2000
STATEMENT FOR THE RECORD
I am pleased to have the opportunity
to testify before this Committee to discuss the implementation of the
Department of Defense's portion of the Fiscal Year 2000 supplemental appropriation
that supports the Government of Colombia's execution of Plan Colombia.
Drug abuse is an undeniable
threat to our national security; one that is measured by the thousands
of lives lost in our country every year and that costs 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 demand for illegal drugs
in the United States, specifically for cocaine and heroin, is met primarily
from the growing fields and production laboratories in Colombia. The vast
sums of money that this illegal activity provides have served to exacerbate
current domestic issues facing the people of Colombia. The U.S. and Colombian
Governments, and our citizens, share a common objective to reach our specific
national goals - to reduce drug abuse in our own country and to bring
peace and stability to Colombia. A significant reduction in the flow of
illegal drugs to the US, with the corresponding reduction in the supply
of "easy money" which supports both guerillas and illegal self-defense
forces operating in Colombia, serves the national interests of both our
countries. For these reasons, it is absolutely necessary that the U.S.
continue to support Colombia in its effort to reduce the production and
transport of cocaine and heroin that is destined for the US.
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 southern 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
ninety percent of the cocaine consumed in the U.S. is manufactured or
passes through Colombia. The United States, the nation with the greatest
cocaine demand, currently consumes over 200 metric tons annually from
the Andean region.
DoD has been supporting Colombian
counterdrug efforts for over ten years. The additional funding provided
by the FY00 Emergency Supplemental will allow the Department to build
on past programs, in short, to accelerate the implementation of the efforts
in Colombia that ultimately proved to be successful in Peru and Bolivia.
The supplemental is a balanced and executable plan that will not require
an appreciable increase in the number of U.S. military personnel present
in Colombia. This effort is responsive to Plan Colombia and consistent
with current U.S. policy. Furthermore, these programs, in coordination
with other interagency efforts, form the core of a sound, responsive,
and timely assistance package that will significantly enhance Colombia's
ability to conduct effective counterdrug operations.
Let me briefly outline the
Department's programs. Before I do so however, let me raise a cautionary
note regarding the timing of the execution of the programs and delivery
of equipment associated with this increased support for Plan Colombia.
While the funding was appropriated in July of this year, several reporting
requirements were mandated which precluded immediately obligating the
funding. As a result, most of the supporting contracts are just now being
submitted for review by the Department and many of the dates reflect only
our best estimate of the expected delivery date.
SUPPORT FOR THE PUSH INTO
SOUTHERN COLOMBIA Counternarcotics Battalion Support
The Department has commenced
training the second Colombian counternarcotics battalion using members
of the U.S. 7th Special Forces Group. This training is scheduled to be
completed in the December 2000 time frame. The third battalion is currently
scheduled to begin training in early 2001. These battalions will give
the Colombian Army a complete counterdrug brigade in the Putumayo/Caqueta
region to engage what is the world's largest coca cultivation center.
Plans include positioning counternarcotics battalions at Tres Esquinas
and Larandia.
Counternarcotics Brigade Headquarters
The establishment of a counterdrug
brigade headquarters is sequenced to support the strategic and tactical
operation of the counterdrug Brigade located in southern Colombia. Department
support for this program is scheduled to begin in the first quarter of
fiscal year 2001. Allocated funding will provide for training, communications
equipment, computer needs, facility modification, and similar requirements.
The counternarcotics brigade headquarters is scheduled to be operational
in February 2001.
Army Aviation Infrastructure
Support
The Colombian Army does not
have the infrastructure necessary to support the number and mix of helicopters
that will be provided by the Department of State using emergency supplemental
funding. DoD will fund a variety of critical aviation infrastructure needs
to support the UH-1N, UH-1H Huey II and UH-60 helicopters that are required
to provide mobility for the counternarcotics battalions. This program
will include funding for electrical utilities and road infrastructure,
aviation fuel storage and fueling systems, security improvements, parking
aprons and helicopter pads, a maintenance hanger, an operations facility,
and a taxiway. DoD has conducted several site surveys and hosted conferences
to facilitate planning for this challenging requirement. Support contracts
are expected to be awarded in the first quarter of fiscal year 2001 and
continue through 2002.
Military Reform
For some time the Department
has been managing a contractor led endeavor to provide the necessary assistance
to Colombia to support the government's effort to restructure its military
establishment so it can successfully engage the drug threat throughout
the country. The focus of this effort is not tactical but organizational
in nature, centered at the Minister of Defense level and the uniformed
services of Colombia. The contractor's efforts have focused on restructuring
and improving military planning, logistics support for ground and air
operational assets, development of counternarcotics military doctrine,
development of counternarcotics military strategy, new concepts on recruitment
and conscription, development of an integrated intelligence capability,
improved computerization and command and control, and similar initiatives.
The program will also support efforts to promote human rights and effect
judicial reforms. This is an on-going effort and is subject to periodic
review. Supplemental funding will be utilized to extend this program should
it prove to be necessary.
Organic Intelligence Capability
The intelligence collection
capability in the region will be enhanced to support operations by the
counternarcotic battalions. This program will provide the counternarcotics
battalions with a combination of airborne and ground tactical intelligence
capabilities to directly assist in the planning and execution of counterdrug
operations. It is scheduled to begin in the third quarter of fiscal year
2001 and be sustained for an extended period of time.
SUPPORT FOR INTERDICTION EFFORTS
Tracker Aircraft Modification
In the first quarter of fiscal
year 2001, DoD will provide for the modification of two Colombia Air Force
C-26 Merlin aircraft by installing APG-66 air-to-air radars, Forward Looking
Infrared Radars (FLIRs), and communications equipment. The completed aircraft
will give Colombia an organic capability to terminally track and intercept
illegal smuggling aircraft that move the cocaine from the HCl labs in
southeastern Colombia to the Colombian coasts for transshipment to the
United States. These modified aircraft will replicate the terminal radar
interceptor that supported the Peruvians in their successful air denial
operation against the Peru-to-Colombia air bridge. The aircraft modifications
should be completed in the summer of 2001.
AC-47 Aircraft Modifications
Commencing in the first quarter
of fiscal year 2001, the Department will support the installation of a
FLIR in one of the three operational Colombian AC-47 aircraft. The FLIR
will greatly enhance the aircraft's ability to support night operations
against drug smuggling activities.
Funding will also support
modification of an additional Colombian DC-3, converting it into an AC-47
aircraft with FLIR, night vision cockpit, and fire control systems. This
will be the 5th AC-47 in the Colombian inventory. These planes have been
used repeatedly by the Colombian military to strafe drug trafficking aircraft.
The aircraft upgrades are scheduled to be completed in the third quarter
of fiscal year 2001.
Ground Based Radar
The contract for the installation
of a ground-based radar at Tres Equinas, Colombia that will provide positive
air control for the counternarcotics brigade helicopters and fixed-wing
aircraft that operate in the region is scheduled to be awarded in the
first quarter of fiscal year 2001. The Tres Equinas radar will provide
improved detection and monitoring of smuggling air activity in the Putumayo
region of Colombia, where over 70% of Colombia's coca cultivation occurs.
The program includes the upgrade of an existing TPS-70 owned by DoD, and
the installation costs for installing the radar at Tres Esquinas. The
radar site is scheduled to be operational in October of 2001.
Radar Command and Control
The DoD supported radar command
and control program will provide Colombia a modern and operationally effective
system, located in Bogota, which will be capable of monitoring multiple
radar sites throughout Colombia. It will support positive control of Colombian
Air Force air interdiction operations throughout Colombia. The current
system is outmoded and needs to be replaced. The contract will be awarded
in the first quarter of fiscal year 2001 with completion expected in the
first quarter of fiscal year 2002.
Andean Ridge Intelligence
Collection
This ongoing program supports
Colombia with critical intelligence against drug smuggling activities.
It provides for collection sites located in critical areas throughout
the drug cultivation and trafficking regions.
Colombian Ground Interdiction
The Colombian ground interdiction
program is still in the initial planning stages. Supplemental funding
will be used to initiate a Colombian program to control drug smuggling
on the major roads across the Andes and those roads feeding the northern
coast and western coast cocaine transshipment regions. This funding will
start the process of Colombia regaining control of their major roads,
which currently are routinely utilized by the drug trafficking forces.
Road control is important since it can help control cocaine and precursor
chemical smuggling across the Andes and to/from major ports. As reference,
there are 4 or 5 major roads across the Andes and these highways feed
the road network located west of the Andes. Vehicle traffic on the highways
west of the Andes serves as the principal mode of moving chemicals and
cocaine to/from the northern coast and western coast cocaine ports and
transshipment regions.
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 southern Colombia. It will not be easy, but it is worth the effort.
Let me share with you my concerns.
DoD Concerns
Colombian Military Organization
The Colombian military has
limitations based on resources, training practices, lack of joint planning
and operations. They need to better coordinate operations between the
services and with the Colombian National Police (CNP). The restructuring
of the military is essential if Colombia is to have continuing operational
success against the drug threat. The Colombian Congress has given President
Pastrana authority to implement a number of reform measures now under
review by the Ministry of Defense; those reforms will make the Colombian
military a more modern, professional and effective force. The Colombian
military needs help and, as was previously outlined, we plan to use a
small portion of supplemental funding towards this end.
Human Rights
I am also concerned, as are
members of Congress, about human rights. The human rights practices and
procedures that the U.S. government has put in place, in response to legislative
enactments, and the example set by the small number of our troops training
Colombian forces has had an impact, as have President Pastrana's reforms.
Human rights violations imputed to the armed forces have dropped by 95%
over the last five years, to fewer than two percent of the total violations
in 1999. Armed forces cooperation with the civilian court system in prosecuting
human rights violations committed by military personnel has improved.
Some military officers accused of collaboration with or tolerance of illegal
self defense force activities have been dismissed, while others face prosecution.
The armed forces have demonstrated greater aggressiveness recently in
seeking out and attacking illegal self-defense forces. Clearly, the Colombian
Armed Forces have come a long way, yet no one would dispute that more
must be done. I am also alarmed by the reported dramatic increase in human
rights violations attributed to both the illegal self-defense forces and
insurgents - this is symptomatic of Colombia's crisis in general and,
as I see it, a call to 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 U.S.
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 or opium
poppy and the subsequent production and transportation of cocaine and
heroin to the US. Only those armed elements that forcibly inhibit or confront
counterdrug operations will be engaged, be they narco-traffickers, insurgent
organizations, or illegal self-defense forces.
I know that some are concerned
that we are being drawn into a quagmire. Let me assure you, we are not.
There are numerous restrictions, constraints, and reviews that are involved
in the approval of the deployment of U.S. military personnel on counterdrug
missions in Colombia. Suffice it to say, the process is comprehensive,
involving reviews by the Embassy in Bogota and U.S. Southern Command in
Miami as well as the Joint Staff and the Office of the Secretary of Defense.
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, the execution of this increased support
does not require a change in U.S. policy. Is there risk to U.S. personnel
providing counterdrug support? Yes, there is. However, we are aggressively
working to minimize that risk.
In summary, the Department
of Defense supports this additional assistance for Colombia. U.S. 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.
As of September 23, 2000,
this document was also available online at http://usinfo.state.gov/regional/ar/colombia/sheridan21.htm
and at http://www.house.gov/international_relations/wh/colombia/sheridan.htm