----- Original Message -----
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, September 20, 2000 11:24 AM
Subject: [STOPNATO.ORG.UK] Colombia: U.S. 'Outsourcing A War' With Military, CIA
Mercenaries


STOP NATO: ˇNO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/daily/detail/0,1136,35000000000114913,00.html


'Civilian army' of Americans helps fight Colombia's
drug war

By PEDRO RUZ GUTIERREZ and E.A. TORRIERO
Sun-Sentinel (Florida)
Web-posted: 12:33 a.m. Sep. 19, 2000

Part 3



   FLORENCIA, Colombia -- The hotshot pilot swoops
down at 200 mph in his Vietnam-era crop duster,
gliding only 50 feet over the coca valleys he has been
hired to destroy.
   The U.S. Army veteran earns $90,000 a year tax-free
as a civilian pilot, but he understands the downside
of this job very well. More than once, he's had to
dodge bullets from peasants and guerrillas trying to
protect Colombia's multibillion-dollar cocaine trade.
   This is one pilot who won't mind giving up a big
paycheck should his working conditions continue to
deteriorate. "If we start getting into a civil war,
I'm out of here," said the pilot, whose employer has
ordered its workers not to talk to the media.
"Americans will be targeted."
   For now, though, he is part of a growing civilian
army hired by Uncle Sam to help fight Colombia's war
on drugs, to be financed largely by $1.3 billion in
U.S. aid. Daredevil pilots with military experience,
retired top brass and former Green Berets are all part
of the effort as the first $300 million in aid heads
to Colombia next month.
   Expertise in intelligence and law enforcement is a
must. Fluency in Spanish and knowledge of
counter-terrorism, jungle warfare and
counter-surveillance is a plus. While there are limits
to the number of American military people who will be
involved in training Colombian troops, there are fewer
restrictions on how many U.S. civilians can be hired
by defense contractors. Hundreds of Americans, lured
by hefty salaries for hazardous work, will play a key
role battling guerrillas and traffickers who live off
the illicit drug trade.
   "Every pirate, bandit -- everyone who wants to make
money on the war -- they're in Colombia," said one
congressional aide in Washington, who said he would
speak candidly only if he were not identified. He
described efforts to snare contracts as a
"free-for-all."
   "This is what we call outsourcing a war," he said.
Much of the effort, however, will come from companies
very familiar to the U.S. government. At least a dozen
U.S. firms are lining up to bid on Uncle Sam's foreign
venture.
   Pay is high, but so are the risks. The crash of a
U.S. Army spy plane that killed five American soldiers
last summer underscored the potential for casualties.
Relatives, including those of Capt. Jose Santiago Jr.
of Orlando, dispute the official Army version of pilot
error and suggest a rebel missile could have shot down
the reconnaissance plane.
   Three civilian pilots of Reston, Va.-based DynCorp.
and EAST Inc., under contract with the State
Department, have died in plane crashes since 1997.
   DynCorp did not return telephone calls asking for
information on its Colombia activities.
   DynCorp. has up to 30 pilots and crews in charge of
fumigating coca fields with glyphosate, a stronger
version of the household weedkiller Roundup.
   The company's presence has grown from only a few
pilots several years ago to more than 60 workers at
the Larandia military base near here.
   It is difficult to predict how many Americans will
become a part of the Colombian conflict.
   Up to 100 Special Forces and Navy SEALs already are
teaching Colombia's new military-led counter-narcotics
battalions. U.S. workers operating ground-radar
stations and civilian coca-spraying crews provide
aircraft maintenance at Colombian bases.
   On any given day, 150 to 250 Americans are helping
in Colombia's drug war.
   Soldiers as trainers
   That number will grow to 500 U.S. troops and 300
civilians under new caps that can be increased by the
president.
   American officials say that the U.S. military will
not be directly involved in operations, and the U.S.
soldiers will act solely as trainers.
   And much of the contract work for non-military help
will be given first to U.S. companies, which will
parcel the work to Colombian subcontractors.
   Of the $120 million in U.S. non-military aid in the
next three years, more than two-thirds of the
contracts will go to U.S. firms or charity groups.
   Americans will supervise projects to overhaul
Colombia's maligned justice system, teach farmers to
grow alternative crops to coca and opium, and relocate
Colombians fleeing the civil war.
   "We are not talking about a large American presence
on the ground," said a senior U.S. aid official in
Washington who would speak only on background.
"Frankly, we think the Colombians are better suited to
do the jobs that have to be done."
   But American firms are cashing in. Bell-Textron and
United Technologies' Sikorsky Aircraft have signed to
deliver 18 new UH-60 Blackhawks and 42 "Super" Huey II
helicopters.
   Orders are pending for at least 14 more by the
Colombian Defense Ministry, making the windfall for
the helicopter makers in excess of $600 million.
   Military Personnel Resources Inc., a Virginia-based
military-consultant company run by retired U.S.
generals, already is advising the Colombian armed
forces. Other U.S firms have started peddling
nighttime surveillance gear, riverboat technology,
aircraft maintenance services and other wares.
   While U.S. companies are leading the rush, foreign
companies also are looking to benefit.
   Israeli Defense Industries is trying to sell
observation technology to the Colombian Air Force to
outfit its Vietnam-era OV-10 "Bronco" planes, the same
ones leased by the U.S. in fumigation raids.
   But it is the growing U.S. presence that has
critics from Bogotá to Washington calling the American
aid package a prelude to another Vietnam debacle, with
U.S. forces being lured into combat.
   Already, some of the people working for private
U.S. contractors are near the front lines.
   MPRI, for example, has a former brigadier general,
six retired colonels and several former officers in
Colombia to help reorganize the Colombian armed forces
under an 18-month Department of Defense contract worth
$800,000.
   Founded by former U.S. Army Chief of Staff Gen.
Carl Vuono in 1987, MPRI has about $60 million in
contracts worldwide with more than 400 employees who
sell their expertise while "capitalizing on the
experience and skills of America's best seasoned
professionals," according to a company profile. Vuono
brings a wealth of experience to the job, having led
the U.S. Army's Panama and Gulf War operations.
   DynCorp. has at least several dozen pilots and
ground-support workers operating under close guard at
Colombian military bases, according to one of the
company pilots.
   They fly missions to eradicate coca fields with
Colombian police and military helicopters alongside to
provide cover.
   DynCorp., a Fortune 500 company, is one of the
largest defense contractors in the United States, with
strong ties to the CIA and other federal agencies. It
has projected sales worth up to $2.5 billion in
defense work and commercial ventures by next year.
   The trend toward using private contractors and
hired guns to carry out U.S. foreign policy is not
new. But it's a trend that's growing.
   DynCorp., MPRI and other defense contractors have
provided services in the world's hot spots from Bosnia
to the Persian Gulf.
   Their contracts are supervised by the U.S. Defense
or State department.
   Defense experts say that this so-called outsourcing
is not only cost efficient, it helps shield U.S.
lawmakers from criticism if Americans are killed or
injured.
   "The military tends to view the civilian
contractors as a lot less confrontational way of doing
business," said Chris Hellman, a senior analyst at the
Center for Defense Information in Washington. "It's
perceived as a more benign presence."
   Defense contractors say their aim is not to fight
another country's battles. "We're very transparent,"
said retired Army Gen. Ed Soyster, an MPRI spokesman
and former head of the U.S. Defense Intelligence
Agency. "We're having (the Colombians) restructure,
refocus and demonstrate correct processes."
   'Old boys' club'
   Soyster would not discuss an MPRI evaluation of
Colombian forces earlier this year, but said, "What we
do is set them up so that what they do, they do it
efficiently."
   But critics charge that there isn't a lot of
oversight in the bidding for the profitable overseas
projects.
   "It's an old boys' club," said the congressional
aide, who has monitored Colombia funding. "All these
generals get hired (by consultants) and do nothing."
   Soyster, however, defended his company's mission,
saying it adheres to "uncompromising principles of
integrity, honor, courage, loyalty and selfless
service."
   Like many contractors, MPRI makes its work quite
public.
   It has a 10,000-name database and has ongoing
recruiting at U.S military bases. Several months ago,
it advertised for "highly qualified and experienced
American military officers and senior noncommissioned
officers" for its Colombia-U.S. "working group."
   Less forthcoming about its activities is Eagle
Aviation Services and Technology Inc. of Patrick Air
Force Base, where fumigation pilots are trained by the
State Department's Bureau of Narcotics and
International Law Enforcement's air division.
   The company, also known as EAST Inc., is
incorporated in several states but refuses to discuss
its role in Colombia because it sees it as classified.
State Department officials have said EAST is concerned
for the safety of its personnel.
   EAST Inc. has placed ads in Ag Pilot, a magazine
for crop dusters, to hire pilots for fumigation work
in Colombia's fields. One ad read: "Highly experienced
Ag pilots for year-round positions.
   Based in Florida, will work in Central and South
America. (Job requires) ability to speak Spanish and
converse in a clear and understandable manner to a
variety of native speakers."
   At the Larandia military base 40 miles south of
here, American pilots live in virtual seclusion.
   They venture out sometimes for a meal or a drink
but only with armed Colombian soldiers and police in
tow.
   Mostly, American pilots fly fumigation missions in
daylight and darkness. They work in three-week shifts
and then often shuttle back to the United States for a
week off.
   Colombian choppers fly cover for the American
pilots. But increasingly, the Americans are becoming
targets for the rebels.
   Two American pilots flying Vietnam-era OV-10
Broncos in the rebel-infested Caqueta province last
month aborted their spraying mission when they
encountered gunfire.
   Even so, one pilot thinks the tide will turn once
the full force of the U.S. commitment takes place.
   The rebels, he said, will lose their willpower.
   Yet, he also predicts the Colombian pilots aren't
prepared for battle either. "They want us to fight
their war for them."


__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Send instant messages & get email alerts with Yahoo! Messenger.
http://im.yahoo.com/


______________________________________________________________________
To unsubscribe, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Start Your Own FREE Email List at http://www.listbot.com/links/joinlb


Reply via email to