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In Michigan,
a high
school
basketball
coach was
charged in
May with
supplying
cocaine and
ecstasy to a
17-year-old
who died
after
ingesting
the drugs.
In
Illinois,
two men
await trial
for their
role in
selling
heroin to a
26-year-old
who later
died of an
overdose.
For months,
police in
Ohio have
searched for
the
whereabouts
of an
11-year-old
missing
after her
mother
overdosed on
drugs. In
one small
Texas town,
police have
made more
than 200
drug arrests
of high
school-age
students,
and since
January two
teenagers
have died of
heroin
overdoses.
Everyday,
tragedies
like these
are playing
out with
horrible
consequences
for families
and
communities
all across
our country.
More
Americans
die annually
as a result
of drug
overdoses
than the
number of
those killed
on 9/11. Just
as worrisome
are the
links
between
violent
crime and
the drug
trade.
Thousands
more
Americans –
mostly the
young - are
murdered and
maimed in
gangland-style
disputes
over deadly
narcotics,
disputes
that spill
into the
streets of
our cities
and towns
with bloody
results.
The ease
with which
international
drug
traffickers
have access
to our
country to
peddle these
deadly
narcotics
also has
significant
and adverse
consequences
for our
neighbors in
the Western
Hemisphere.
An estimated
90 percent
of the
cocaine and
50 percent
of the
heroin
consumed
here is
produced in
Colombia – a
country now
entering the
fourth
decade of a
murderous
conflict
pitting the
central
government
against drug
traffickers
and their
allies.
By 1998 an
area in
Colombia
equal in
size to the
state of
California
was
effectively
off-limits
to the
central
government
as left-wing
insurgents
allied with
drug cartels
created a
rival
government
in the
jungle. By
then,
Congressional
Republicans
and
then-President
Bill Clinton
were
sufficiently
alarmed
about
sky-rocketing
drug use in
America and
the specter
of a
heavily-armed
narco-state
developing
in this
hemisphere
that
together we
forged a new
counter-narcotics
policy.
What emerged
was
something
called Plan
Colombia.
This
ambitious
multi-year
program
sought to
help
Colombia
beef up its
police and
military
forces,
begin an
aerial
spraying
program to
eradicate
thousands of
acres of
coca plants,
ease U.S.
trade
restrictions
to promote
alternative
sources of
income for
the people
of Colombia,
and fund
other
economic and
social
development
programs to
revive an
economy in
free-fall.
What has
been
achieved by
Colombians
with
assistance
from the
U.S. is
truly
remarkable.
Since 2001,
cocaine
production
in Colombia
is down by
22 percent;
seizures of
cocaine
bound for
the U.S. are
up by
two-thirds;
Colombian
opium poppy
cultivation
is down by
68 percent,
from 6,540
hectares in
2000 to
2,100 in
2004;
kidnappings
in Colombia
are down by
76 percent;
terrorist
attacks are
down by 61
percent; and
the homicide
rate – an
astonishing
14,000 last
year - is
down 40
percent.
Economic
growth
averaged 5
percent over
the period
and hit a
high of 6.8
percent in
2006. The
poverty rate
is down
from 60
percent to
45 percent.
Despite
these
successes,
Plan
Colombia is
encountering
growing
resistance
from the new
Democratic
majority in
Congress.
Critics on
the left
oppose U.S.
funding for
security
assistance
to beef up
capabilities
of the
Colombian
police and
military.
With more
than $5
billion in
U.S.
assistance
since 1999,
the central
government
has steadily
and
effectively
extended its
reach into
the
countryside
and driven
the
paramilitary
units and
the
left-wing
insurgents
out of their
former
strongholds.
Many of
those that
remain have
retreated
into the
jungles and
continue to
terrorize
the
population
and provide
security for
drug
cartels,
albeit on a
smaller
scale.
As the
central
government
has regained
control of
the country,
something
very
important
has begun to
happen.
Thousands
of
Colombians
are feeling
safe enough
to publicly
speak out
about the
atrocities
they endured
in years
past and to
seek justice
against the
perpetrators.
Dozens of
powerful
Colombians,
including
members of
Congress,
high-ranking
officials,
and others
have been
implicated
in testimony
with having
ties to
paramilitary
groups.
President
Uribe and
the military
command have
repeatedly
said that
they will
not tolerate
collaboration
between
military
officials
and members
of
paramilitary
organizations.
Unfortunately,
U.S. critics
of Plan
Colombia
have eagerly
seized on
these
scandals as
proof that
U.S. policy
has failed.
But exactly
the opposite
is true.
Rather than
push away
the
Colombians
during this
difficult
period,
America
should
embrace our
ally and
help it
through the
process of
rebuilding.
As Democrats
in Congress
move forward
in the
months ahead
to make
changes to
Plan
Colombia,
they would
do well to
keep in mind
that
reducing our
commitment
to Colombia
has
implications
on our home
front.
Denying the
Colombian
navy the
assistance
to purchase
maritime
patrol
aircraft
will
undermine
its ability
to interdict
drug
shipments
bound for
America,
such as the
seizure in
April of 17
tons of
cocaine off
its Pacific
Ocean
coastline,
the largest
in history.
Denying the
Colombian
National
Police
access to
helicopters
and other
U.S.
equipment
will only
benefit the
violent
left-wing
insurgents
and their
paymasters
in the drug
cartels and
undermine
the
successful
efforts to
eradicate
opium
poppies in
the high
altitudes of
this
mountainous
country.
Holding
hostage the
pending Free
Trade
Agreement
with
Colombia
because of
what critics
claim is a
failure by
the
Colombian
government
to protect
trade
unionists
will
undermine
Colombia’s
economy and
begin the
downward
spiral of
America’s
closest ally
in South
America.
We will feel
the effects
of these
disastrous
policies on
our
streets.
Without an
effective
counter-narcotics
strategy in
the Western
Hemisphere,
the number
of U.S.
deaths from
overdose and
drug-related
killings
will again
rise, and
the
floodgate of
narcotics
will open
even wider
with a
deluge of
heroin and
cocaine
aimed
squarely at
our kids.
Let us hope
that
Congress
will put
behind it
the
ideological
disputes of
the past and
act to
protect us
here at home
by helping
the people
of Colombia
protect
themselves
and their
country.
--###--
Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen
represents
the 18th
District of
Florida in
the U.S.
House of
Representatives.
She serves
as Ranking
Republican
on the House
Foreign
Affairs
Committee. |