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DATE=1/24/2000 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=CLINTON- COLOMBIA (L-ONLY) NUMBER=2-258381 BYLINE=DAVID GOLLUST DATELINE=WHITE HOUSE CONTENT= VOICED AT: /// EDS: CLINTON-PASTRANA MEETING AT 2:30 PM EST /// INTRO: Colombian President Andres Pastrana meets with President Clinton at the White House Tuesday on a Washington visit aimed at lining up support for a massive increase in U-S aid to Colombia. The Clinton Administration is asking Congress for one-point-six billion dollars over two years to help the Bogota government, which is besieged by drug traffickers and leftwing insurgents. V-O-A's David Gollust reports from the White House. TEXT: The Colombian leader's schedule includes meetings with House Speaker Dennis Hastert and other top leaders of Congress of both parties. And Administration officials say they hope the two-day visit will help overcome opposition to the big increase in aid to the Bogota government. The aid package would include the provision of more than 60 helicopters to help Colombian security forces reassert control over the southern part of the country where the production and trafficking of cocaine has flourished under protection of leftwing insurgents. Opponents of the Administration plan, including some leading Congressional Democrats and human rights advocates, say the aid package will draw the United States farther into Colombia's civil war, in which government forces and allied paramilitary groups are accused of widespread rights violations. But briefing reporters here, Clinton spokesman Joe Lockhart insisted again the U-S aid is targeted only against the drug traffickers and he expressed confidence the Administration can get the aid moving to Colombia within a few months: /// LOCKHART ACTUALITY /// We haven't done a vote count. But fighting drugs and narcotics has enjoyed bipartisan support in the past and we expect to get bipartisan support on this plan early this year when Congress takes it up. /// END ACT /// The administration plan also includes funds to train and equip special anti-drug units of the Colombian security forces, to step up the eradication of drug crops, and to strengthen the Colombian judiciary system. Officials here say that partly because of increasingly-effective anti-drug efforts in neighboring countries, Colombia has become the supply source or transit point for 80-percent of the illicit cocaine entering the United States. The Administration aid package is to be the U-S contribution to the more than seven-billion dollar national recovery strategy - called "Plan Colombia" - - outlined by President Pastrana at the U-N General Assembly last September. U-S aid to Colombia has risen sharply since Mr. Pastrana took office in 1998 after the drug-tainted administration of former President Ernesto Samper -- making Colombia third-largest American aid client after Israel and Egypt. (Signed) NEB/DAG/TVM/gm 24-Jan-2000 16:15 PM EDT (24-Jan-2000 2115 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .