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home > by publication type > news releases > U.S. Policy on ‘Drugs and Thugs’ in the Andes Cannot Achieve U.S. Regional Goals of Democracy, Prosperity, and Security, Concludes Council Commission
January 8, 2004
Council on Foreign Relations
January 8, 2004 - Over the past two decades the United States has spent billions of dollars and significant manpower in the Andes region to stem the flow of illegal drugs; assist local security forces in the fight against drugs, terror and insurgency; and promote free markets, human rights, and democracy. Yet the democracies of the Andean region—Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia— are still at risk, and the prospect of regional collapse is real and poses a serious threat to U.S. lives and interests.
This is the central finding of Andes 2020, a Center for Preventive Action initiative of the Council on Foreign Relations. The Commission was chaired by the Honorable John G. Heimann, former Comptroller of the U.S. Treasury and founding chairman of the Financial Stability Institute; and Lt. Gen. Daniel W. Christman (USA, Ret.), former Superintendent of the U.S. Military Academy, and now Senior Vice President for International Affairs of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Julia E. Sweig, Council Senior Fellow and Deputy Director of Latin America Studies, directed the project.
The Commission attempts to redress what it considers to be a major weakness of current U.S. policy as embodied in Plan Colombia and the Andean Counter-drug Initiative: an overly narrow focus on counternarcotics and security issues, and the relative absence of complementary, comprehensive, regionally-oriented strategies. The Commission does not call for more resources— the United States currently spends some $700 million per year in the region— but rather a recalibration of U.S. financial and political commitments to sustain American engagement beyond Plan Colombia’s expiration in 2005.
The Commission puts forth three objectives to rectify current policy. Determined action on these three strategic objectives will, over time, accomplish sustainable progress toward political, economic, and security goals that a policy focused mainly on supply-side counterdrug efforts cannot achieve:
I. The need to more equitably distribute political and economic resources and power in each country, with a commitment to strategic rural land reform.
II. The importance of greater participation by the international community on a range of diplomatic, political, economic, social, security, and humanitarian issues.
III. The recognition that regional problems require regional approaches and that greater cooperation among the Andean countries is essential.
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