Bush in Colombia to focus on drug war
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -- U.S. President George W. Bush aims to highlight the benefits of American drug-fighting aid in Colombia and boost a conservative Latin American leader with a brief, security-laden stop in the Andean nation.
Bush's four-hour stay Monday in the seaside city of Cartagena to see Colombian President Alvaro Uribe marks the final stop of a three-day Latin American trip.
"Colombia is making progress in the fight against terrorists who traffic in illegal drugs," Bush said Saturday in a radio address previewing the visit. "America is standing with the Colombian government to oppose the drug trade that destroys lives in our countries and threatens the stability of our hemisphere."
That very drug trade -- and the deadly Marxist insurgent groups that control it -- led to extraordinary security measures for Bush's visit.
About 15,000 Colombian security forces, backed by combat helicopters, radars on the lookout for hostile planes or missiles, and submarines and battle ships prowling the waters, were deployed to protect the American president.
Despite the relative peace of the former Spanish fort compared with other parts of the country, Bush and Uribe weren't going into the walled city; they were meeting at a colonial estate on an island just off the coast. Officials even banned the sale of alcoholic drinks for 24 hours and gave workers the day off.
Washington has given billions in U.S. military aid for Colombia to combat cocaine production and the leftist rebels that finance themselves through drug trafficking, kidnapping and extortion. White House aides hinted in advance of the trip that, as Uribe hopes, more money could be in the cards after the $3.3 billion (euro2.53 billion), five-year package expires in 2005.
Under that Plan Colombia program, the United States gives Colombian forces training, equipment and intelligence to root out drug traffickers and destroy coca crops.
As part of a broader effort to improve the U.S. image in Latin America, Bush was expected to highlight the progress the American generosity has helped purchase. The trip was also meant as a high-profile statement by Bush of his commitment not to neglect the region as he wages a global campaign against terrorists, officials said.
Indeed, in the two years since Uribe came to power, some measure of stability has been restored. The White House sees the reduced crime rates and kidnappings that have given many Colombians new hope as at least in part an American success story.
However, though Plan Colombia has helped reduce the coca crop and jail scores of traffickers, it has failed to visibly reduce cocaine production or keep cocaine off U.S. streets.
Colombia's 40-year civil war pits leftist rebel groups -- the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known by its Spanish acronym FARC, and the smaller National Liberation Army, known as the ELN -- against a handful of right-wing paramilitary factions and government forces, killing an estimated 3,500 people every year.
The leftist rebels hold dozens of hostages, including Colombian politicians, government soldiers and three American military contractors seized in early 2003 after their plane crashed in a southern rebel stronghold.
There was also an economic component to the Bush-Uribe meetings. Both were interested in advancing negotiations on an Andean free-trade pact that would also include Peru and Ecuador.
Bush was arriving in Colombia from a weekend summit of Pacific rim leaders in Santiago, Chile. While there, he met with other Latin American leaders including Mexican President Vicente Fox and Chilean President Ricardo Lagos in an effort to mend relations damaged by the Iraq war.
Also in Cartagena, Bush planned a public appearance with major league baseball players from Colombia. He was to end the day in Texas, where he was spending the rest of the week and the Thanksgiving holiday at his ranch.
Copyright 2004 The Associated Press.