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DATE=2/24/2000 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=SENATE-COLOMBIA (L) NUMBER=2-259531 BYLINE=DAVID SWAN DATELINE=CAPITOL HILL CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: President Clinton's request for a major package of anti-drug aid to Colombia is meeting a skeptical early reception on Capitol Hill. Among other things, the issue has been complicated by charges of ties between the Colombian military and right-wing death squads. V-O-A's David Swan reports. TEXT: The White House is trying to convince Congress to approve a two-year, one-point-six billion dollar effort to help Colombia stem the flow of narcotics. At a Senate hearing (Thursday) Deputy Secretary of State Thomas Pickering said the government in Bogota has the will to fight the traffickers. He also tried to assure senators the (U-S) administration is concerned about human rights. /// PICKERING ACT /// Complicity by elements of Colombia's security forces with the right-wing militia groups called paramilitaries remains a serious problem. /// END ACT /// That issue was raised by the group "Human Rights Watch." The organization reports three Colombian army brigades have close links to paramilitary forces accused of atrocities against civilians. Colombia's ambassador to Washington, Luis Moreno, testified his government is confronting the problem. /// MORENO ACT /// We're investigating these allegations of links between military personnel and illegal armed groups. And we will continue to take strong legal action against any individuals found to have such links. /// END ACT /// But many senators remain unconvinced. Democrat Patrick Leahy denounced what he calls a sordid human rights record by the (Colombian) army. /// LEAHY ACT /// So I can not support this military aid without strict conditions to ensure that military personnel who violate human rights or who aid or abet the paramilitaries are prosecuted in civilian courts. The Colombian military courts have shown time and again that they're unwilling to punish their own (soldiers). /// END ACT /// Other lawmakers asked if the Clinton administration's anti-drug effort is simply election-year politics -- or if the United States will be pulled deeper into Colombia's bloody drug wars. There was one especially heated exchange between Republican Senator Ted Stevens and General Charles Wilhelm, the U-S military commander in the region. /// STEVENS - WILHELM ACT /// (Stevens) Who's going to go in if this blows up? We've got 800 (Americans) people on the ground (in Colombia). Tell me this is not a Vietnam again. (Wilhelm) Sir, it is not a Vietnam again. I spent 1965, 66, 69 and 70 in Vietnam and I think I'll know it when I see it happening again. When I go Colombia I do not feel a quagmire sucking at my boots. /// END ACT /// General Wilhelm also said he sees no institutional ties between the Colombian army and the death squads but he can not rule out what he calls "local collusion." (Signed) NEB/DS/ENE/gm/latam 24-Feb-2000 15:10 PM EDT (24-Feb-2000 2010 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .