http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-081801cap.story



Foreign Pilots Hired to Boost U.S. Drug War


By T. CHRISTIAN MILLER , Times Staff Writer

BOGOTA, Colombia -- The State Department has directed its largest private
contractor in Colombia to hire foreign pilots to fight the drug war, an order
that helps get around Congress' attempt to keep the U.S. from slipping
further into this country's messy civil war.

Last year, Congress limited to 300 the number of civilian contract workers
participating in U.S.-financed drug-eradication efforts in Colombia. But in a
little-noticed decision, the State Department only counts U.S. citizens
toward that limit.

As a result, more than 400 civilians already are working for private
contractors under the U.S. anti-drug program. The largest employer is
DynCorp, which has 335 civilians on the payroll. Fewer than a third are U.S.
citizens, the contractor's chief of operations here said Friday.

An estimated 60 to 80 U.S. citizens work for other contractors, including
Bell Helicopter Textron, Sikorsky Aircraft, Northrop Grumman and Lockheed
Martin.

A senior aide to Sen. Patrick J. Leahy, the Vermont Democrat who has been at
the forefront of the battle over U.S. assistance to Colombia, acknowledged
that the language passed by Congress specified that the cap applied to
"United States individual civilians" and that the State Department is not
obliged to include foreigners in its reports to Congress.

"Legally, they may be within the law," said the aide, Tim Reiser. "But in
terms of congressional interest in being informed on what U.S. money is being
used for, that is of interest to Congress and it's something that the
Congress should be informed about."

State Department officials say they are not required to inform Congress that
they have ordered DynCorp to hire as many as 50 pilots from Guatemala, Peru,
Colombia and other countries to transport Colombian army forces into
cocaine-growing zones.

The pilots, most of them former Central and South American air force members
who fly the most dangerous anti-drug missions here, also are hired to reduce
the risk that an American would be shot down and killed in the drug war,
according to U.S. Embassy officials.

"I'm under no illusion what it would mean to have an American shot down here,
and no one in the U.S. is," Ambassador Anne W. Patterson said in a recent
interview with reporters.

U.S. lawmakers have long worried that the effort to eradicate cocaine will
draw the U.S. deeper into Colombia's four-decade-old civil war. Both leftist
rebels and right-wing paramilitary groups fight to protect the coca crops
that are their primary source of revenue.

Lawmakers contacted Friday accused the State Department of circumventing
congressional intent to limit American involvement in the conflict.

The issue goes to the heart of congressional critics' fears about Plan
Colombia, which was launched last year with a $1.3-billion American
contribution: that U.S. involvement will slowly escalate, as happened in
Vietnam.

The situation also has historical echoes, touching on controversies
surrounding congressional limits on the number of U.S. military advisors in
El Salvador during the 1980s and Reagan administration efforts to evade them.

"This seems to be a loophole around the cap, a way to get around them," said
Rep. Janice D. Schakowsky (D-Ill.), who has sought to eliminate the use of
private contractors in the region since a U.S. firm was involved in the
accidental downing of a private airplane by the Peruvian military in April.
That incident resulted in the deaths of an American missionary and her infant
daughter.

"Every time we find out more about what goes on in Colombia, a dozen more
questions are raised," Schakowsky said. "Most members of Congress interpreted
the cap to mean we will limit to a total of 300 personnel, no matter what
their nationality is."

Private contract workers, who do everything from flying crop dusters to
transporting troops to staffing radar stations, long have been controversial.
Some lawmakers fear that the U.S. is conducting foreign policy through
private companies without adequate public accountability.

Even some of those who have closely followed the debate over Plan Colombia
were surprised to learn of the State Department's practice.

"Nobody knows about this in Washington," said Adam Isacson, an expert on
Colombia at the Center for International Policy, a left-leaning Washington
think tank. "If anybody is still concerned about mission creep, this will
make them all the more worried."

The State Department's International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
Bureau, which is overseeing the bulk of the U.S. effort in the region, early
on debated whether to count the foreign employees.

At one point, according to an embassy official who was present at the
discussion, the State Department acknowledged the sensitivity of the issue
and initially discussed being "totally virtuous" and counting the foreign
employees in its reporting to Congress. The official and several others
interviewed requested that their names not be used, in keeping with State
Department policies.

The department subsequently decided to not count foreign employees after what
the official called a "hotly debated" discussion. It became apparent by the
middle of this year that there would be nearly 300 U.S. citizens working on
the program in Colombia by December.

The official added that the State Department discussed the issue with members
of Congress before reaching a final decision, but did not specify which
lawmakers were consulted.

The issue came up again recently when the Bush administration, responding to
State Department fears about reaching the cap by December, tried to remove
all limits on U.S. personnel as part of the aid package for the Andean region
for the coming fiscal year.

House lawmakers compromised, instead allowing a total of 800 U.S. military
and civilian personnel in Colombia. The Senate has so far insisted on
maintaining the civilian cap at 300, with a separate cap of 500 U.S. military
personnel.

State Department officials defended the move to not count foreign employees,
especially since many are Colombians working as secretaries and drivers and
in other low-level jobs traditionally given to host country citizens.

These officials noted that if the Colombians were not tallied, the U.S.
program would not reach the 300-worker cap even including the Peruvians,
Guatemalans and other Latin Americans recruited to transport troops into
conflict zones where leftist guerrillas and narco-traffickers are defending
cocaine fields.

DynCorp officials interviewed Friday acknowledged that the State Department
had specifically directed them to hire the foreign pilots as part of a
five-year, $200-million contract to fumigate drug crops in Colombia.

"That was customer-directed," said the DynCorp director in Colombia, who
declined to be identified for safety reasons.

But the director also said that part of the reason for hiring foreign
nationals is the lack of qualified personnel in the U.S. Another factor is
that the Latin American pilots speak fluent Spanish.

The lack of fluency among contract workers contributed to the April incident
in Peru that killed Veronica Bowers of the Assn. of Baptists for World
Evangelism and her 7-month-old daughter, Charity.

Some Central American pilots who interviewed for jobs with DynCorp told The
Times that they were asked whether they had combat experience. DynCorp
officials said military experience played no special role in their hiring
decisions.

"They were looking for pilots with 3,000 hours of flying experience and war
combat," said an ex-member of the Salvadoran air force who interviewed with
DynCorp nearly a year ago. "When we were flying for El Salvador during the
war, we did it for patriotic values, to defeat communism. Now, it's for
money."


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Special correspondent Alex Renderos contributed to this report.

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