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DATE=5/2/2000 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=CLINTON-COLOMBIA (L) NUMBER=2-261908 BYLINE=DAVID GOLLUST DATELINE=WHITE HOUSE CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: President Clinton - urging support for increased U-S aid to Colombia -- has warned that other democracies in Latin America could be toppled if the Colombian government loses its struggle with drug traffickers. V-O-A's David Gollust reports from the White House. TEXT: The president has used his strongest language to date in defending his request for one-point-six billion dollars to help train and equip Colombian security forces in the battle against drug traffickers. The aid package is under attack by some in Congress who contend it could drag the United States into a Vietnam-style quagmire in Colombia. But in an address to the private Council of the Americas at the State Department, Mr. Clinton said recent successes against the drug trade in Peru and Bolivia show that that the administration's approach can succeed. He praised the sacrifice of [Colombian] President Andres Pastrana, and others in Colombia who have risked - or lost --their lives in standing up to drug criminals. He warned of far-reaching harm in the [Western] hemisphere if the drug war is lost: /// CLINTON ACT /// We must not stand by an allow a democracy elected by its people, defended with great courage by people who have given their lives, to be undermined and overwhelmed by those who literally are willing to tear the country apart for their own agenda. And make no mistake about it. If the oldest democracy in South America can be torn down, so can others. /// END ACT /// The administration aid package is intended as the U-S contribution to the broader seven-point-five billion dollar reconstruction plan developed by President Pastrana. The U-S aid is to be used exclusively in anti-drug operations and training, even though critics - including many members of Mr. Clinton's own Democratic party - argue that the drug war cannot be separated from the Bogota government's long-running struggle with leftwing insurgents. The package has strong support among majority Republicans, and Congressional leaders say they expect approval by both houses in a matter of weeks. In his Council of the Americas address, Mr. Clinton also said he expects Congress to finish work by the end of the month on his Caribbean basin and African trade bills, which will greatly reduce U-S trade barriers to goods from those regions. He also said the refusal by Congress two years ago to extend his powers to conclude expedited trade deals with hemisphere countries - the so -called "fast track" authority - has not slowed progress toward a Free Trade Zone of the Americas. He said he is gratified that both likely nominees in the presidential race - Democrat Al Gore and Republican George W. Bush -- support a hemispheric free trade area, and said if it does not come into being as planned in 2005 it will not be the fault of the U-S executive branch. (Signed) NEB/DAG/gm 02-May-2000 15:56 PM EDT (02-May-2000 1956 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .