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THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary (Cartagena, Colombia) ________________________________________________________________________ For Immediate Release August 30, 2000 FACT SHEET Cooperation Between the United States and Colombia on Counter-Drug Programs The increased U.S. assistance for Colombia provided in the Emergency Supplemental Act, as enacted in the Military Construction Appropriations Act of 2001, includes substantial funding for counter-drug programs. The major counter-drug components of this initiative are: -- $442 million for support to counter-drug operations in the coca-growing regions of southern Colombia, to include the training and equipping of three special counter-narcotics battalions of the Colombian Army that will provide security for law enforcement operations by the Colombian National Police; -- $466 million for enhancement of the capability to interdict shipments of illicit drugs from the Andean region, to include radar, aircraft and airfield upgrades and support for counter-drug intelligence gathering in Colombia; -- $116 million for direct support to the Colombian National Police, to include equipment and operating expenses needed to expand the illicit crop eradication program targeting coca and poppy fields. U.S. assistance for Colombian counter-drug programs is fully in line with our $18.5 billion National Drug Control Strategy, which outlines a comprehensive attack on the illicit drug trade. Its goals and related programs include eliminating production at the source, interdicting drug shipments and prosecuting traffickers, and reducing U.S. domestic consumption through $6 billion worth of prevention, treatment, and rehabilitation programs. This increased assistance for Colombia also reflects significant recent trends in the Andean source zone. Andean net coca cultivation and potential cocaine production continued to decline in 1999 and are now at the lowest levels since 1987. Overall Andean net coca cultivation declined to 183,000 hectares in 1999, four percent less than the 1998 figure, and 15 percent less than in 1995. Potential cocaine production fell to 765 metric tons, a drop of seven percent from the 1998 figure,