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Testimony:

Before the Caucus on International Narcotics Control, U.S. Senate:

United States General Accounting Office:

GAO:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 9:30 a.m. EDT:

Tuesday, June 3, 2003:

Drug Control:

Financial and Management Challenges Continue to Complicate Efforts to 
Reduce Illicit Drug Activities in Colombia:

Statement of Jess T. Ford, Director 
International Affairs and Trade:

GAO-03-820T:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-03-820T, testimony before the Caucus on 
International Narcotics Control, U.S. Senate 

Why GAO Did This Study:

The United States has been providing assistance to Colombia since the 
early 1970s to help reduce illicit drugs. In 1999, the Colombian 
government introduced Plan Colombia¾a program that, among other 
things, proposed reducing illicit drug activities by 50 percent over 6 
years. In fiscal years 2000-03 alone, the United States provided more 
than $2.5 billion in counternarcotics assistance. Despite this aid, 
Colombia remains the world’s leading producer and distributor of 
cocaine and a major source of the heroin used in the United States.

This testimony discusses the status of U.S. counternarcotics 
assistance to the Colombian Army and for a U.S.-supported Colombian 
police aerial eradication program. It also addresses challenges 
Colombia and the United States face in sustaining these programs.

what GAO Found:

In fiscal years 2000-03, the United States provided about $640 million 
in assistance to train and equip a Colombian Army counternarcotics 
brigade and supply the army with 72 helicopters and related support. 
Most of this assistance has been delivered and is being used for 
counternarcotics operations. 

In recent years, the Colombian National Police aerial eradication 
program has had mixed results. Since 1995, coca cultivation rose in 
every year until 2002 and opium poppy cultivation remained relatively 
steady until 2001. But, for 2002, the U.S. Office of National Drug 
Control Policy reported that net coca cultivation in Colombia 
decreased 15 percent and net opium poppy cultivation decreased 25 
percent—the second yearly decline in a row. U.S. officials attributed 
this success primarily to the Colombian government’s willingness to 
eradicate coca and poppy plants without restriction. 
 
Although the U.S.-supported counternarcotics program in Colombia has 
recently begun to achieve some of the results envisioned in Plan 
Colombia, Colombia and the United States must continue to deal with 
financial and management challenges. Neither the Colombian Army nor 
the Colombian National Police can sustain ongoing counternarcotics 
programs without continued U.S. funding and contractor support for the 
foreseeable future. According to U.S. embassy officials, these 
programs alone may cost up to $230 million per year, and future costs 
for some other programs have not been determined. Because of overall 
poor economic conditions, the government of Colombia’s ability to 
contribute more is limited, but the continuing violence from 
Colombia’s long-standing insurgency limits the government’s ability to 
institute economic, social, and political improvements. Moreover, 
Colombia faces continuing challenges associated with the need to 
ensure it complies with human rights standards and other requirements 
in order for U.S. assistance to continue. As GAO noted in 2000, the 
total costs of the counternarcotics programs in Colombia were 
unknown. Nearly 3 years later, the Departments of State and Defense 
have still not developed estimates of future program costs, defined 
their future roles in Colombia, identified a proposed end state, or 
determined how they plan to achieve it. 

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-820T.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click 
on the link above. For more information, contact Jess T. Ford at (202) 
512-4268 or FordJ@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Caucus:

I am pleased to be here to discuss GAO's work on U.S. counternarcotics 
assistance to Colombia. Today we will highlight the preliminary 
findings from our ongoing review of U.S. assistance to Colombia. Our 
draft report is with the responsible agencies for comment; we expect to 
issue a final report in mid-June. I will focus my comments on (1) the 
status of U.S. counternarcotics assistance to the Colombian Army in 
fiscal years 2000-03 and how this assistance has been used, (2) what 
the U.S.-supported Colombian National Police aerial eradication program 
has accomplished in recent years, and (3) what challenges Colombia and 
the United States face in sustaining these programs.

In 1999, the Colombian government introduced Plan Colombia--a 
$7.5 billion program that, among other things, proposed reducing the 
cultivation, processing, and distribution of illegal narcotics by 50 
percent over 6 years.[Footnote 1] A key component of the Colombian-U.S. 
counternarcotics strategy was the creation of a Colombian Army 2,285-
man counternarcotics brigade, for which the United States agreed to 
provide helicopters to help it move around southern Colombia to reduce 
cocaine production and trafficking. Closely allied with this objective 
was U.S. support for the Colombian National Police's aerial eradication 
program to significantly reduce, if not eliminate, coca and opium poppy 
cultivation.[Footnote 2]

Summary:

In fiscal years 2000-03, the United States provided about $640 million 
to train and equip the Colombian Army counternarcotics brigade and 
supply the army with 72 helicopters and related training, maintenance, 
and operational support. Most of this assistance has been delivered and 
is being used for counternarcotics operations. However, some problems 
were encountered. For example,

* After a successful first year of operations, the brigade's results 
dropped off in 2002. U.S. and Colombian officials attribute this, in 
part, to coca growers and producers moving out of the brigade's range 
in southern Colombia. In late 2002, with U.S. assistance, the Colombian 
Army reorganized the brigade and gave it authority to operate anywhere 
in the country. This change, according to U.S. embassy and Colombian 
Army officials, will improve the brigade's ability to conduct 
operations against high-value, drug-trafficking targets, such as 
cocaine production laboratories and the leadership of insurgent groups 
involved in drug-trafficking activities. One of the brigade's retrained 
battalions has been operating in Narino department since early May 
2003.

* Some initial impediments slowed the delivery and operational use of 
the helicopters. The start of entry-level helicopter pilot training was 
delayed 5 months while the United States determined who would provide 
and fund the training. The delivery of 25 UH-II helicopters was delayed 
5 months while the United States and Colombia decided what type of 
engine to use in the aircraft. U.S. funding for the brigade's 
operations was slowed for a total of about 5 months in 2002 because the 
Department of State did not meet congressional deadlines for reporting 
on Colombia's progress in addressing human rights violations.

U.S. assistance to support the helicopters provided as part of Plan 
Colombia was originally planned to end in 2006 with the Colombian Army 
taking over the responsibilities of operating and maintaining the 
aircraft. However, U.S. embassy and Colombian officials stated that a 
continued level of U.S. assistance will be needed beyond this date 
because the army is not expected to have the personnel trained or the 
resources necessary. Although U.S. embassy officials stated that they 
have not officially estimated what this assistance level will be, they 
tentatively projected that it would cost between $100 million and 
$150 million a year to sustain ongoing counternarcotics programs. In 
addition, other recently initiated U.S. programs will require 
additional support.

In recent years, the Colombian National Police aerial eradication 
program has had mixed results. Since 1995, net coca cultivation rose in 
every year until 2002 and net opium poppy cultivation remained between 
6,100 to 7,500 hectares. But in recent months, the Office of National 
Drug Control Policy reported that:

* net coca cultivation in Colombia decreased 15 percent in 2002, from 
169,800 hectares in 2001 to 144,450 hectares, and:

* net opium poppy cultivation in Colombia decreased 25 percent in 2002, 
from 6,500 hectares in 2001 to 4,900 hectares--the second yearly 
decline in a row.

U.S. embassy officials attributed this recent success primarily to the 
current Colombian government's willingness to spray coca and poppy 
plants without restriction in all areas of the country. However, since 
at least 1998, U.S. embassy officials have been concerned with the 
rising U.S. presence in Colombia and the associated costs of the aerial 
eradication program. At the time, the embassy began developing a 3-year 
plan to have the Colombian National Police assume control over the 
program; but, for various reasons, the police never agreed to the plan. 
Since then, contractor involvement and the associated costs have 
continued to rise, and the Colombian National Police are not yet able 
to assume more control of the aerial eradication program. In fiscal 
year 1998, U.S. embassy officials reported that the costs for the U.S. 
contractor, fuel, herbicide, and related support totaled $48.5 million. 
For fiscal year 2003, U.S. embassy officials estimated that the 
comparable costs totaled $86.3 million. Much of this increase occurred 
between fiscal years 2002 and 2003 to support the additional spray 
aircraft, multiple operating locations, and the anticipated 
continuation of spray operations throughout Colombia. According to U.S. 
embassy officials, these costs are expected to remain relatively 
constant for the next several years.

Although the U.S.-supported counternarcotics program has recently shown 
some of the results envisioned when Plan Colombia was first introduced, 
Colombia and the United States continue to face financial and 
management challenges in sustaining programs in Colombia.

* Colombia's financial resources are limited. Neither the Colombian 
Army nor the Colombian National Police can sustain ongoing 
counternarcotics programs without continued U.S. funding and contractor 
support for the foreseeable future. According to U.S. embassy 
officials, ongoing programs alone may cost up to $230 million per year, 
and future costs for some other programs have not been determined.

* Colombia also continues to face challenges associated with its 
political and economic instability fostered by its long-standing 
insurgency and, for U.S. assistance to continue, the need to ensure 
that (1) the military and police comply with human rights standards, 
(2) the aerial eradication program meets certain environmental 
conditions, and (3) alternative development is provided in areas 
subject to aerial eradication.

Colombia is a longtime ally and significant trading partner of the 
United States and, therefore, its economic and political stability is 
important to the United States as well as the Andean region. Colombia's 
long-standing insurgency and the insurgents' links to the illicit drug 
trade complicate its efforts to tap its natural resources and make 
systemic economic reforms. Solving these problems is important to 
Colombia's future stability. On the other hand, recent world events--
from the global war on terrorism to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq--
have diverted scarce U.S. resources and made it paramount that the 
United States fully consider the resources committed to its overseas 
assistance programs. As we noted in 2000, the total costs of the 
counternarcotics programs in Colombia were unknown. Nearly 3 years 
later, the Departments of State and Defense have still not developed 
estimates of future program costs, defined their future roles in 
Colombia, identified a proposed end state, or determined how they plan 
to achieve it.

Background:

The United States has provided assistance to help reduce illegal drug 
production and trafficking activities in Colombia since the 1970s. Yet, 
Colombia is still the world's leading cocaine producer and distributor 
and a major source of the heroin used in the United States. According 
to State, Colombia provides 90 percent of the cocaine and about 40 
percent of the heroin entering the United States. The Drug Enforcement 
Administration reports that several billion dollars flow into Colombia 
each year from the cocaine trade alone, and this vast amount of drug 
money has helped the country's two largest insurgency groups--the 
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and the National Liberation 
Army--gain unprecedented economic, political, and social power and 
influence. The insurgents exercise some degree of control over 40 
percent of Colombia's territory east and south of the Andes where much 
of the coca is grown.

In an effort to address the influx of cocaine and heroin from Colombia, 
the United States has funded a counternarcotics strategy in Colombia 
that includes programs for interdiction, eradication, and alternative 
development, which must be carefully coordinated to achieve mutually 
reinforcing results. Besides assistance for the Colombian Army 
counternarcotics brigade and the Colombian National Police aerial 
eradication program, the United States has supported Colombian efforts 
to interdict illicit-drug trafficking along rivers and in the air as 
well as alternative development, judicial sector reform, and internally 
displaced persons programs. The Departments of Defense and State have 
provided most of the funding and State, through its Bureau for 
International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs and Narcotics 
Affairs Section in the U.S. Embassy Bogotá, oversees the program. In 
fiscal years 2000 through 2003, the United States provided more than 
$2.5 billion to Colombia for counternarcotics assistance. (See table 
1.) For fiscal year 2004, the administration has proposed an additional 
$700 million in aid.

Table 1: U.S. Counternarcotics Assistance to Colombia, Fiscal Years 
2000-03:

Dollars in millions.

Agency: State; Fiscal years: 2000[A]: $774.9; 
Fiscal years: 2001: $48.0; 
Fiscal years: 2001: 275.4; 
Fiscal years: 2003[B]: (estimated): $452.0; 
Total: $1,550.3.

Agency: DOD; Fiscal years: 2000[A]: 128.5;
Fiscal years: 2001: 190.2; Fiscal years: 
2001: 119.1; Fiscal years: 2003[B]: (estimated): 
149.9; Total: $587.7.

Agency: USAID[C]; Fiscal years: 2000[A]: 123.5; 
Fiscal years: 2001: 0; Fiscal years: 
2001: 104.5; Fiscal years: 2003[B]: (estimated): 
151.0; Total: $379.0.

Total; Fiscal years: 2000[A]: $1,026.9; 
Fiscal years: 2001: $238.2; Fiscal 
years: 2001: $499.0; Fiscal years: 2003[B]: 
(estimated): $752.9; Total: $2,517.0.

Source: Departments of Defense and State and the U.S. Agency for 
International Development.

[A] INCLUDES FUNDS APPROPRIATED FOR PLAN COLOMBIA THROUGH THE EMERGENCY 
SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS A] ct, Fiscal Year 2000 (Division B of P.L. 
106-246).

[B] Includes $93 million in Foreign Military Financing funds 
appropriated in the Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related 
Appropriations Act, 2003 (Division E, Title III of P.L. 108-7); 
$34 million appropriated to State and $34 million appropriated to 
Defense in the Supplemental Appropriations Act to Support Department of 
Defense Operations in Iraq for Fiscal Year 2003 (P.L. 108-11); and 
$37.1 million for Foreign Military Financing allotted from fiscal year 
2003 supplemental appropriations.

[C] In fiscal years 2000-03, State transferred $375 million to the U.S. 
Agency for International Development for alternative development, 
judicial sector reform, and internally displaced persons programs.

[End of table]

Following increased violence in Colombia during early 2002, the 
Congress provided "expanded authority" for the use of U.S. assistance 
to Colombia, which enabled the Colombian government to use the U.S.-
trained and -equipped counternarcotics brigade, U.S.-provided 
helicopters, and other U.S. counternarcotics assistance to fight groups 
designated as terrorist organizations as well as to fight drug 
trafficking. Similar authority was provided for fiscal year 2003 and is 
being sought for fiscal year 2004.

Assistance to the Colombian Army Has Been Delivered, but Problems Were 
Encountered:

U.S. assistance to the Colombian Army during fiscal years 2000-
03--$640 million for the counternarcotics brigade, 72 helicopters, and 
related support--has, for the most part, been delivered and is being 
used for counternarcotics operations. However, both the United States 
and the Colombian Army experienced some unanticipated problems that 
delayed the operational use of the helicopters. In addition, U.S. 
support will be needed for the foreseeable future to sustain 
operations.

Status of the Brigade:

The United States initially agreed to train and equip a Colombian Army 
counternarcotics brigade of three battalions and a total of about 2,285 
professional and conscripted soldiers. The United States provided the 
counternarcotics brigade with about $45 million in training and 
equipment--from weapons and ammunition to rations, uniforms, and 
canteens. The brigade's primary mission was to plan and conduct 
interdiction operations against drug-trafficking activities, including 
destroying illicit drug-producing facilities, and, when called upon, to 
provide security in insurgent-controlled areas where aerial eradication 
operations were planned. According to U.S. and Colombian officials, the 
brigade was highly effective in 2001--for example, it destroyed 25 
cocaine hydrochloride laboratories[Footnote 3]--but was less successful 
in 2002, when it destroyed only 4 such labs. U.S. embassy officials 
stated that the brigade became less effective because the insurgents 
moved their drug-producing activities, such as the laboratories, beyond 
the brigade's reach. In addition, according to these officials, the 
brigade became more involved in protecting infrastructure, such as 
bridges and power stations, and performing base security. Moreover, the 
aerial eradication program did not call on the brigade to provide 
ground security on very many occasions, essentially planning spray 
missions in the less threatening areas.

In August 2002, U.S. embassy and Colombian military officials agreed to 
restructure the brigade to make it a rapid reaction force capable of 
making quick, tactical strikes on a few days' notice. As part of this 
restructuring, the Colombian Army designated the brigade a national 
asset capable of operating anywhere in Colombia rather than just in its 
prior area of responsibility in southern Colombia. The newly 
restructured brigade consists of three combat battalions and a support 
battalion with a total of about 1,900 soldiers, all of whom are 
professional. Two of the combat battalions have been retrained. The 
third combat battalion should be retrained by mid-June 2003. This 
change, according to U.S. embassy and Colombian Army officials, will 
improve the brigade's ability to conduct operations against high-value, 
drug-trafficking targets, such as laboratories containing cocaine and 
the leadership of insurgent groups involved in drug-trafficking 
activities. One of the retrained battalions has been operating in 
Narino department since early May 2003.

Status of the Helicopters:

A key component of U.S. assistance for Plan Colombia was enhancing the 
brigade's air mobility. To do this, the United States provided the 
Colombian Army with 33 UH-1N helicopters, 14 UH-60 Black Hawk 
helicopters, and 25 UH-II helicopters.[Footnote 4]

* The 33 UH-1N helicopters were supposed to serve as interim aircraft 
until the UH-60 and UH-II helicopters funded under Plan Colombia were 
delivered. The UH-1Ns were delivered in stages between November 1999 
and March 2001. Since flying their first mission in December 2000, the 
helicopters have logged 19,500 hours in combat and have supported more 
than 430 counternarcotics brigade operations. Colombian Army personnel 
are qualified as pilots and mechanics, but many of the experienced 
pilots and mechanics who operate and maintain the aircraft are provided 
through a U.S. contractor.

* The UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters were delivered between July and 
December 2001 but did not begin support operations for the brigade 
until November 2002 because of a shortage of fully qualified Colombian 
Army pilots. Forty-two Colombian Army personnel have completed the 
minimum UH-60 pilot training, of which 13 have qualified as pilot-in-
command. U.S.-funded contract pilots fill in as pilots-in-command. In 
addition, a U.S.-funded contractor continues to maintain the 
helicopters and provide maintenance training.

* State procured 25 UH-II helicopters under Plan Colombia and planned 
to deliver them to the Colombian Army between November 2001 and June 
2002. However, they were delivered between March and November 2002 
instead because the Colombian military was considering whether to use a 
more powerful engine in the helicopters than the one usually installed. 
Ultimately it decided to use the more common engine. According to NAS 
officials, although some of the UH-II helicopters are being used for 
missions, all the helicopters will not be operational until June 2003. 
As of January 2003, 25 Colombian Army pilots had completed their 
initial training and 21 of these pilots are completing the training 
needed to qualify for operational missions. However, contractor pilots 
continue to supplement Colombian Army pilots and a U.S.-funded 
contractor continues to provide maintenance support.

Problems with Pilot and Mechanic Training:

Although all the U.S.-provided helicopters are in Colombia, a number of 
unanticipated problems in training Colombian Army pilots and mechanics 
to operate and maintain the helicopters were encountered. Some of these 
problems continue to limit the Colombian Army's ability to operate and 
maintain the aircraft. Primarily, the Colombian Army will have to 
continue to rely on contractor support because it will not have enough 
trained pilots-in-command and senior mechanics for the foreseeable 
future.

* When the United States agreed to provide the UH-60 and UH-II 
helicopters for the Colombian Army in July 2000, the assistance for 
Plan Colombia did not include any funds to train the Colombian pilots 
and mechanics needed to operate and maintain the helicopters. About 6 
months after passage of U.S. assistance for Plan Colombia, Defense 
agreed to provide the training and reported that it would transfer up 
to $20 million from other counternarcotics projects in Colombia to pay 
for it.

* A training plan was approved in mid-2001. Although the plan provided 
training for Colombian Army personnel to meet the minimum 
qualifications for a pilot and mechanic, it did not include the 
additional training necessary to fly missions in a unit or to become a 
senior mechanic. Basic training for 117 helicopter pilots--known as 
initial entry rotary wing training--began in November 2001 and is 
projected to be completed by December 2004. This training is intended 
to provide a pool or pipeline of pilots for more advanced training to 
fly specific helicopters. In addition, according to U.S. embassy 
officials, a new pilot takes an average of 2 to 3 years to progress to 
pilot-in-command.

* According to U.S. embassy and contractor officials, 105 out of 159 
Colombian Army personnel have completed the basic UH-60 and UH-II 
maintenance training and are taking more advanced training to qualify 
as senior mechanics. These officials told us that the remaining 54 
personnel will receive the contractor-provided basic training in the 
near future, but they did not know when it would begin. Moreover, these 
officials also told us that it typically takes 3 to 5 years for 
mechanics to gain the experience necessary to become fully qualified on 
specific helicopter systems, in particular the UH-60 Black Hawks.

* The Colombian Army Aviation Battalion is responsible for providing 
helicopters and other aircraft and personnel for all Colombian Army 
missions with an aviation component, including counternarcotics and 
counterinsurgency operations throughout Colombia. Information provided 
by the Colombian Aviation Battalion shows that it is staffed at only 80 
percent of its required levels and that, over the past several years, 
it has received between 60 percent to 70 percent of its requested 
budget for logistics and maintenance. The Colombian military's decision 
to continue using the UH-1N helicopters in addition to the UH-60 and 
UH-II helicopters will also make it more difficult for the Aviation 
Battalion to provide the numbers of personnel needed to operate and 
maintain the helicopters. State originally intended that the UH-1N 
helicopters would not be used after the UH-60 and UH-II helicopters 
were available to support operations.

* According to bilateral agreements between Colombia and the United 
States, the Colombian Army must ensure that pilots and mechanics who 
receive U.S. training be assigned to positions using their training for 
a minimum of 2 years. This has not always been the case. For example, 
although 19 Colombian Army personnel were qualified to serve as pilots-
in-command on UH-1N helicopters, only 1 pilot was assigned to serve in 
this position. The remaining pilots-in-command were provided by a U.S. 
contractor.

* Of the funds appropriated for fiscal year 2002, $140 million was used 
to support Colombian Army counternarcotics efforts. Most of this amount 
was used for U.S.-provided helicopter operations and maintenance, 
logistical, and training support. However, not all the funding could be 
released until the Secretary of State certified, in two separate 
reports to appropriate congressional committees,[Footnote 5] that the 
Colombian military was making progress meeting certain human rights 
conditions. Because State was late in providing these reports, the U.S. 
embassy could not use this funding for operations and training on two 
occasions for a total of about 5 months during 2002.[Footnote 6] These 
delays resulted in fewer counternarcotics operations and limited the 
training and experience Colombian Army pilots could obtain to qualify 
as pilots-in-command.

Continued U.S. Support Needed to Sustain Operations:

U.S. assistance to support the helicopters provided as part of Plan 
Colombia was originally planned to end in 2006 with the Colombian Army 
taking over these responsibilities. However, U.S. embassy and Colombian 
Army officials stated that a continued level of U.S. contractor 
presence will be needed beyond this date because the Aviation Battalion 
is not expected to have the personnel trained or the resources 
necessary. Although the embassy officials stated that they have not 
officially estimated what this assistance level will be, they 
tentatively projected that it would cost between $100 million and 
$150 million annually to sustain the U.S.-supported counternarcotics 
programs. Moreover, other recently initiated U.S. programs will likely 
require U.S. assistance and contractor support, but the long-term costs 
of sustaining such programs are not known.

Colombia's Aerial Eradication Program Has Had Mixed Results:

Since the early 1990s, State's Bureau for International Narcotics and 
Law Enforcement Affairs (through the U.S. Embassy's Narcotics Affairs 
Section (NAS) and the Office of Aviation) has supported the Colombian 
National Police's efforts to significantly reduce, if not eliminate, 
the cultivation of coca and opium poppy. However, for the most part, 
the net hectares of coca under cultivation in Colombia continued to 
rise until 2002, and the net hectares of opium poppy under cultivation 
remained relatively steady until 2001-02.[Footnote 7] In addition, the 
U.S. embassy has made little progress in having the Colombian National 
Police assume more responsibility for the aerial eradication program, 
which requires costly U.S. contractor assistance to carry out.

Recent Progress in Reducing Net Cultivation of Coca and Poppy:

As shown in figure 1, the number of hectares under coca cultivation 
rose more than threefold from 1995 to 2001--from 50,900 hectares to 
169,800 hectares--despite substantially increased eradication 
efforts.[Footnote 8] But in 2002, the Office of Aviation estimated that 
the program eradicated 102,225 hectares of coca--a record high. In 
March 2003, the Office of National Drug Control Policy reported for the 
first time since before 1995 a net reduction in coca cultivation in 
Colombia--from 169,800 hectares to 144,450 hectares--a 15 percent 
decline.

Figure 1: Net Hectares of Coca under Cultivation and Hectares 
Eradicated in Colombia, 1995-2002:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

As shown in figure 2, the net hectares of opium poppy under cultivation 
varied between 6,100 and 6,600 for the period 1995-98 but rose to 7,500 
hectares in 1999 and 2000. In 2001, the net hectares of poppy estimated 
under cultivation declined to 6,500 and, in 2002, further declined to 
4,900--nearly a 35 percent reduction in net cultivation over the past 2 
years.

Figure 2: Net Hectares of Poppy under Cultivation and Hectares 
Eradicated in Colombia, 1995-2002:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

U.S. embassy officials attributed the recent unprecedented reductions 
in both coca and poppy cultivation primarily to the current Colombian 
government's willingness to allow the aerial eradication program to 
operate in all areas of the country. They also noted that:

* the number of spray aircraft had increased from 10 in July 2001 to 17 
in January 2003;

* recently acquired spray aircraft can carry up to twice the herbicide 
as the older aircraft; and:

* as of January 2003, aircraft were flying spray missions from three 
forward operating locations--a first for the program.

The ability to keep an increased number of spray aircraft operating out 
of three bases was made possible, at least in part, because the U.S. 
embassy hired a contractor to work with the Colombian National Police 
to, among other things, help maintain their aircraft. As a result, the 
availability of police aircraft for the spray program increased. 
Moreover, in August 2002, the Colombian government allowed the police 
to return to a higher strength herbicide mixture that, according to 
embassy officials, improved the spray's effectiveness.[Footnote 9] 
These officials project that the aerial eradication program can reduce 
the amount of coca and poppy cultivation to 30,000 hectares and 5,000 
hectares, respectively, by 2005 or 2006, assuming the police continue 
the current pace and can spray in all areas of Colombia.

Colombian National Police Have Not Assumed Control over Aerial 
Eradication Operations:

As we reported in 2000,[Footnote 10] beginning in 1998, U.S. embassy 
officials became concerned with the rising U.S. presence in Colombia 
and the associated costs of the aerial eradication program. At the 
time, the embassy began developing a 3-year plan to have the Colombian 
National Police assume increased operational control over the program. 
But for various reasons, the police did not agree to the plan. Since 
then, contractor involvement and the associated costs have continued to 
rise and the Colombian National Police are not yet able to assume more 
control of the aerial eradication program.

As shown in table 2, in fiscal year 1998, the Office of Aviation 
reported that the direct cost for a U.S. contractor providing aircraft 
maintenance and logistical support and many of the pilots was $37.8 
million. In addition, NAS provided $10.7 million for fuel, herbicide, 
and related support, for a total of $48.5 million. For fiscal year 
2003, the comparable estimates for contractor and NAS-provided support 
were $41.5 million and $44.8 million, respectively, for a total of 
$86.3 million. Most of this increase occurred between fiscal years 2002 
and 2003 and is for the most part to support the additional spray 
aircraft, multiple operating locations, and the anticipated 
continuation of spray operations throughout Colombia. According to NAS 
and Office of Aviation officials, these costs are expected to remain 
relatively constant for the next several years.

Table 2: U.S. Support for the Aerial Eradication Program, Fiscal Years 
1998-2004:

Dollars in millions: 

Cognizant office: Office of Aviation; Fiscal 
years: 1998: $37.8; Fiscal years: 1999: $36.8; Fiscal years: 2000: 
$52.5[A]; Fiscal years: 2001: $38.0; Fiscal years: 2002: $38.2; 
Fiscal years: 2003 (estimated): $41.5; Fiscal years: 2004 (proposed): 
$45.0; Total: $289.8.

Cognizant office: Narcotics Affairs Section; 
Fiscal years: 1998: 10.7; Fiscal years: 1999: 14.1; Fiscal years: 
2000: 20.9; Fiscal years: 2001: 11.1; Fiscal years: 2002: 17.6; 
Fiscal years: 2003 (estimated): 44.8[B]; Fiscal years: 2004 
(proposed): 44.2; Total: $163.4.

Cognizant office: Total; Fiscal years: 1998: 
$48.5; Fiscal years: 1999: $50.9; Fiscal years: 2000: $73.4; Fiscal 
years: 2001: $49.1; Fiscal years: 2002: $55.8; Fiscal years: 2003 
(estimated): $86.3; Fiscal years: 2004 (proposed): $89.2; Total: $453.2.

Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau for International Narcotics 
and Law Enforcement Affairs and the Office of Aviation.

[A] Includes $20 million for additional spray aircraft.

[B] In addition, NAS paid $38.8 million for a contractor to support the 
Colombian National Police Aviation Service. NAS could not readily 
identify the proportion of this contract that is related to aerial 
eradication. NAS officials stated that they expect this expenditure to 
continue for the next 2 years and possibly up to 4 years.

[End of table]

The Colombian National Police do not provide funding per se for the 
aerial eradication program and, therefore, the value of its 
contributions is more difficult to quantify. In recent years, the 
police have provided helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft for spray 
mission support and the use of many of its facilities throughout 
Colombia. In addition, the police have about 3,600 personnel assigned 
to counternarcotics missions and estimate that 84 are directly 
supporting the aerial eradication program.

U.S. Efforts to Improve Police Capacity for Aerial Eradication:

To help the Colombian National Police increase its capacity to assume 
more responsibility for the aerial eradication program, NAS has 
initiated several efforts.

In February and March 2002, the Office of Aviation conducted an 
Aviation Resource Management Survey of the Colombian National Police 
Aviation Service. According to Office of Aviation officials, these 
surveys are intended to provide a stringent on-site assessment of 
flight operations from management and safety to logistics and 
maintenance. The survey team made a number of critical observations. 
For example,

* The Aviation Service's organizational structure, lines of authority, 
and levels of responsibility were not clear. Relying on an overly 
centralized command structure resulted in unnecessary delays and the 
cancellation of some planned aerial eradication missions because the 
commanding general could not be reached.

* The Aviation Service did not have a formal flying hour program to 
help forecast its budgetary requirements and enhance maintenance 
scheduling.

* About 35 percent of the maintenance staff were inexperienced. 
According to the survey team, this could result in improper maintenance 
procedures being performed, which could adversely affect flight safety 
and endanger lives.

* Management of items needing repair and control of spare parts were 
deficient. The survey team found 230 items awaiting repair--some from 
August 1998--and more than $4 million in UH-1H helicopter blades and 
parts stored outside and unprotected.

As a result of the survey, in July 2002, a NAS contractor (a $38.8 
million, 1-year contract with options for 4 additional years) began 
providing on-the-job maintenance and logistical training to the 
Aviation Service and helping the police address many of the issues 
raised by the Aviation Resource Management Survey team. Embassy 
officials noted that a more formal flying hour program has improved the 
availability rates of many of the Aviation Service's aircraft. For 
example, the availability rate of the Aviation Service's UH-II 
helicopters--often used to support aerial eradication missions--
increased from 67 percent in January 2002 to 87 percent in December 
2002. According to these officials, improved availability rates made it 
easier to schedule and conduct spray missions.

In addition, NAS has begun a program for training pilots to fly T-65 
spray planes and plans to start training for search and rescue 
personnel who accompany the planes. U.S. officials stated that the 
contractor presence should decline and the police should be able to 
take over more of the eradication program by 2006, when NAS estimates 
that coca and poppy cultivation will be reduced to "maintenance 
levels"--30,000 hectares and 5,000 hectares, respectively.

Financial and Management Challenges Continue to Complicate Efforts to 
Reduce Illicit Drug Activities:

The U.S.-supported counternarcotics program in Colombia has recently 
begun to achieve some of the results envisioned in 1999-2000. However, 
Colombia and the United States must continue to deal with financial and 
management challenges.

* Under the original concept of Plan Colombia, the Colombian government 
had pledged $4 billion and called on the international community to 
provide $3.5 billion. Until recently, Colombia had not provided any 
significant new funding for Plan Colombia and, according to U.S. 
embassy and Colombian government officials, anticipated international 
assistance for Plan Colombia--apart from that provided by the United 
States--did not materialize as envisioned. But because of overall poor 
economic conditions, the government of Colombia's ability to contribute 
more is limited.

* The Colombian government has stated that ending the civil conflict is 
central to solving Colombia's problems--from improving economic 
conditions to stemming illicit drug activities. A peaceful resolution 
to the long-standing insurgency would help stabilize the nation, speed 
economic recovery, help ensure the protection of human rights, and 
restore the authority and control of the Colombian government in the 
coca-growing regions. The continuing violence limits the government's 
ability to institute economic, social, and political improvements.

* For U.S. assistance to continue, Colombia faces continuing challenges 
associated with the need to ensure that the army and police comply with 
human rights standards, that the aerial eradication program meets 
certain environmental conditions, and that alternative development is 
provided in areas subject to aerial eradication.

Overall, neither the Colombian Army nor the Colombian National Police 
can sustain ongoing counternarcotics programs without continued U.S. 
funding and contractor support for the foreseeable future. According to 
U.S. embassy officials, these programs alone may cost up to 
$230 million per year, and future costs for some recently initiated 
programs have not been determined. In addition, we note that this 
estimate does not include future funding needed for other U.S. programs 
in Colombia, including other aerial and ground interdiction efforts; 
the police Aviation Service's U.S.-funded contractor; and alternative 
development, judicial sector reform, and internally displaced persons 
programs.

In recent years, world events--from the global war on terrorism to the 
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq--have diverted scarce U.S. resources and 
made it paramount that the United States fully consider the resources 
committed to its overseas assistance programs. As we noted in 2000, the 
total costs of the counternarcotics programs in Colombia were unknown. 
Nearly 3 years later, the Departments of State and Defense have still 
not developed estimates of future program costs, defined their future 
roles in Colombia, identified a proposed end state, or determined how 
they plan to achieve it.

Scope and Methodology:

In conducting our work, we reviewed pertinent planning, implementation, 
and related documentation and met with cognizant U.S. officials at the 
Departments of State and Defense, Washington, D.C.; the U.S. Southern 
Command headquarters, Miami, Florida; and the U.S. Embassy in Bogotá, 
Colombia. In Colombia, we interviewed Colombian military, police, and 
government officials and visited the Colombian Army bases at Larandia, 
Tolemaida, and Tres Esquinas and other sites in the primary coca-
growing regions of Colombia. In addition, we observed a Colombian Army 
counternarcotics brigade airlift operation and several aerial 
eradication missions.

We also discussed this testimony with cognizant officials from State's 
Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs and its 
Office of Aviation and State's Bureau for Western Hemisphere Affairs. 
They generally concurred with our treatment of the issues presented.

We conducted our work between July 2002 and May 2003 in accordance with 
generally accepted government auditing standards.

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee, this concludes my 
prepared statement. I will be happy to answer any questions you may 
have.

Contacts and Acknowledgments:

For future contacts regarding this testimony, please call Jess Ford at 
(202) 512-4268 or Albert H. Huntington, III, at (202) 512-4140. 
Individuals making key contributions to this testimony included Jocelyn 
Cortese, Allen Fleener, Ronald Hughes, Jose Pena, George Taylor, Kaya 
Taylor, and Janey Cohen. Rick Barrett and Ernie Jackson provided 
technical assistance.

FOOTNOTES

[1] For more information on U.S. assistance for Plan Colombia, see U.S. 
General Accounting Office, Drug Control: U.S. Assistance to Colombia 
Will Take Years to Produce Results, GAO-01-26 (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 
17, 2000). 

[2] The leaves of the coca plant are the raw ingredient of cocaine, and 
opium poppy is used to produce heroin. The aerial eradication program 
involves spraying the coca and poppy plants from low-flying airplanes 
with an herbicide that attacks the root system and kills the plant.

[3] The laboratories are used in the final stages of processing coca 
into cocaine and are considered high-value targets.

[4] Of the 33 UH-1Ns, 28 remain available for use by the brigade; 1 
crashed on a mission and 4 were transferred to support the aerial 
eradication program.

[5] Section 567 of the Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and 
Related Programs Appropriations Act, 2002 (P.L. 107-115). Specifically, 
the act provided that not more than 60 percent of the funds could be 
obligated until after the Secretary of State made a determination and 
certification that the Colombian military was (1) suspending members of 
the Colombian Armed Forces who have been creditably alleged to have 
committed gross violations of human rights, (2) cooperating with 
civilian prosecutors and investigators, and (3) severing links between 
the Armed Forces and paramilitary groups. In addition, the remaining 
40 percent of the funds could be obligated only after June 1, 2002, and 
after the Secretary of State made a second determination and 
certification with respect to the same conditions.

[6] According to U.S. embassy political section personnel, they 
encountered difficulties developing the information required to make 
the human rights determination and certification. The first report was 
issued on May 1, 2002--almost 2 months later than State's target date. 
The second report was issued on September 9, 2002--almost 3 months 
later than State's target date. 

[7] The estimates of net hectares of coca and opium poppy under 
cultivation are prepared annually by the U.S. Director of Central 
Intelligence, Crime and Narcotics Center. See U.S. General Accounting 
Office, Drug Control: Coca Cultivation and Eradication Estimates in 
Colombia, GAO-03-319R (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 8, 2003).

[8] The number of hectares eradicated is provided by the Office of 
Aviation and is based on the number of net hectares sprayed multiplied 
by an estimated "kill rate." Although many thousands of hectares of 
coca and poppy are killed, coca and poppy farmers often replant in the 
same or other areas, which helps explain why the number of hectares 
under cultivation often does not decline. 

[9] In March 2002, the previous Colombian government reduced the 
strength of the spray mixture because of environmental concerns.

[10] GAO-01-26.