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DATE=1/21/2000 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=COLOMBIA / US (L) NUMBER=2-258302 BYLINE=JIM RANDLE DATELINE=PENTAGON CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Top U-S officials are in Colombia working out details of a proposal to greatly increase military and other aid to the troubled nation. But a critic of U-S drug policy says the one-point-6 billion-dollar plan is more likely to increase bloodshed than cut cocaine exports to the United States. V-O-A's Jim Randle reports a-soon-to-be-released C-I-A report says more cocaine than ever is growing in Colombia. TEXT: The U-S delegation includes Secretary of the Army Louis Caldera and deputy Drug Policy Chief Thomas Umberg. The officials say the aid package is designed to help Colombian forces regain control of the major coca-producing areas in the southern part of the country. Coca is refined into cocaine in clandestine laboratories for shipment to the United States and other nations. Washington hopes training two more battalions of Colombian troops to attack and seize drugs and laboratories and providing dozens of helicopters to move the soldiers around the rugged countryside will be an effective part of a strategy to cut the flow of illegal drugs out of Colombia over the next 18 months. The U-S Congress must still consider the proposal and authorize the aid. The discussion comes as U-S officials say the Central Intelligence Agency is putting the finishing touches on a report that shows the number of hectares planted in illegal crops in Colombia has increased sharply over the past few years, in spite of drug control efforts. Critic Larry Birns says the aid package is misguided because it will `further militarize' and `broaden and deepen' U-S involvement in Colombia's overlapping wars against leftist guerrilla groups and drug cartels. Mr. Birns heads the `Council on Hemispheric Affairs' in Washington, a private group that monitors and analyzes U-S policies in Latin America. Current U-S policy allows anti-drug actions, but forbids fighting political insurgents in Latin America. But experts say it nearly impossible to make such distinctions in Colombia's jungles because some rebels finance their military operations by collecting massive fees to protect drug operations. Mr. Birns says in this complex, dangerous situation, U-S aid could boost the level of violence, and suck American troops into a morass. /// Birns act /// I then see more and more trainers being sent down from the United States. One could envisage that the guerrillas will go after these trainers and kill a few. That will further enrage the United States, thus escalating U-S involvement, and we will be involved in a battle with a well- trained, well-deployed 15-thousand member guerilla force. That sounds to me like big problems. /// end act /// U-S officials have said to the extent that the guerrilla groups are benefiting from the drug trade, they could be subject to attack by the newly-trained and equipped anti-drug forces. Fighting in Colombia has taken at least 30-thousand lives in the last 36 years. (Signed) NEB/PT (Signed). 21-Jan-2000 15:02 PM EDT (21-Jan-2000 2002 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .