HON. RON PAUL
OF TEXAS
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Tuesday, April 25, 2006
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Mr. PAUL. Mr. Speaker, I rise to introduce the following article detailing the complete failure
of Plan Colombia into the CONGRESSIONAL
RECORD. As the article points out, despite
more than 4 billion dollars being sent to
Colombia to fight the war on drugs, the coca
crop grew by 21 percent last year. After six
years of massive wealth transfers from U.S.
taxpayers to the Colombian government, not
only has no progress been made, but in fact
things are getting worse. Unfortunately, with
the way things are done in Washington, this
failure of Plan Colombia will likely result in
calls for even more money to be tossed in the
black hole of the drug war. It would be far better
to learn from our mistakes and abandon
the failed Plan Colombia.
[From the Houston Chronicle, April 16, 2006]
COCA CROP JUMPS DESPITE U.S. AID
(By John Otis)
BOGOTA, COLOMBIA. — In a blow to the
United States anti-drug campaign here,
which cost more than $4 billion, new White
House estimates indicate that Colombias
coca crop expanded by nearly 21 percent last
year.
2006 Ron Paul 24:3
Figures released late Friday by the Office of National Drug Control Policy indicate Colombian
farmers last year grew 355,680 acres
of coca, the raw material for cocaine. That
represents a jump of nearly 74,000 acres from
2004 even though U.S. funded cropdusters destroyed
record amounts of coca plants in
2005.
2006 Ron Paul 24:4
Washington has provided the Bogota government with more than $4 billion, mostly in
anti-drug aid since 2000 for a program known
as Plan Colombia — which was supposed to
cut coca cultivation by half within six years.
2006 Ron Paul 24:5
Yet according to the new figures, more coca is now being grown here than when Plan
Colombia started. This is going to turn
heads on Capitol Hill, said Adam Isacson, a
Colombia expert at the Center for International
Policy in Washington and a longtime
critic of U.S. counterdrug strategies in
Latin America.
2006 Ron Paul 24:6
Youre talking about $4.7 billion spent on Plan Colombia, and this is all we have to
show for it?
2006 Ron Paul 24:7
The Bush administration downplayed the significance of the coca crop survey, an annual
study of parts of Colombia carried out
by the CIA using satellite imagery and on-
the-ground inspections.
2006 Ron Paul 24:8
Rather than an increase in the crops size, the higher numbers may reflect a more thorough
job of surveying the Colombian countryside,
the White House said in a news release.
2006 Ron Paul 24:9
The statement said the area of Colombia sampled for the 2005 coca estimate was 81
percent larger than in 2004.
2006 Ron Paul 24:10
Because of this uncertainty and the significantly expanded survey area, a direct
year-to-year comparison (of the size of the
coca crop) is not possible, said the statement.
2006 Ron Paul 24:11
However, when year-to-year drug crop comparisons have reflected positive trends,
U.S. officials have loudly touted the numbers
as clear proof of success.
2006 Ron Paul 24:12
In 2002, for example, the CIA survey showed a drop in coca production and White
House drug czar John Walters declared:
These figures capture the dramatic improvement.
. . . Our anti-drug efforts in Colombia
are now paying off.
2006 Ron Paul 24:13
But some U.S. officials and drug policy analysts claim that Colombia has likely been
producing far more coca over the past five
years than the CIA surveys have indicated.
2006 Ron Paul 24:14
The cultivation numbers, wherever they seem to be headed, need to be taken with a
grain of salt, said Joy Olson, director of the
Washington Office on Latin America, a think
tank. In reality, coca cultivation and cocaine
production exceed the official estimates,
perhaps by wide margins.
2006 Ron Paul 24:15
Whats more, she said, cheap, potent cocaine remains readily available on U.S.
streets, indicating that the drug war in Colombia
is having little real impact.
2006 Ron Paul 24:16
Some U.S. officials have forecast a gradual reduction in assistance for Colombia, starting
in 2008. This year, Washington will send
about $750 million in aid to Colombia, the
source of 90 percent of the cocaine sold on
U.S. streets.
2006 Ron Paul 24:17
The centerpiece of the U.S. anti-drug strategy here is a controversial aerial-eradication
program in which crop-dusters, escorted by
helicopter gunships, bombard coca plants
with chemical defoliants. But the program
costs about $200 million annually and many
critics say the money would be better spent
elsewhere. The idea of eradication is to persuade
peasant farmers to give up growing
coca and to plant legal crops. But funding by
the U.S. and Colombian governments for
crop-substitution programs pale in comparison
to the eradication budget and most efforts
to develop alternatives have failed.
2006 Ron Paul 24:18
Part of the problem is that coca is often grown in remote jungles and mountains that
are controlled by Marxist guerrillas, contain
few roads or markets, and have almost no
government presence. Thus, even as crop-
dusters have killed off record amounts of
coca, farmers stay a step ahead of the spray
planes by pushing deeper into the wilderness
to grow more.
2006 Ron Paul 24:19
In 2000, Colombian farmers attempted to grow about 450,000 acres of coca, about one-
third of which was wiped out by the spray
planes, according to U.S. government figures.
Last year, by contrast, they tried to
grow a whopping 780,000 acres. People with
no economic alternatives have not been deterred
by fumigation, said Isacson of the
Center for International Policy. Fumigating
an area is no substitute for governing
it.
2006 Ron Paul 24:20
Despite the rise in coca cultivation, Anne Patterson, a former U.S. ambassador to Colombia
who heads the State Department bureau
that runs the eradication program, told
a congressional hearing in Washington last
month that the Bush administration was
considering stepping up the crop-dusting
campaign.
2006 Ron Paul 24:21
Beyond the drug war, Patterson said, the overall U.S. aid program has benefited Colombia
in ways we had not anticipated.
2006 Ron Paul 24:22
She cited better security conditions in the cities and the countryside, where the number
of kidnappings and murders has dropped, as
well as recent blows to the nations narcotics
traffickers and guerrilla groups.