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*Agencia de Noticias Nueva Colombia * News Agency New Colombia * Agence de nouvelles Nueva Colombia * Agenzia di Notizie Nueova Colombia E-mail: ann.col@swipnet.se
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[NOTE: How can one not acquire a "bunker-style mentality" when one works all day in a bunker like the U.S. embassy? When I visited the ambassador last year, I couldn't help but gasp at the fortifications. -DG] Officials in Washington said the expanded investigation has added to concern about the U.S. Embassy in Bogota, which already was under scrutiny because of what several officials described as a dangerous, bunker-style mentality that is hampering implementation of new policy initiatives. WASHINGTON POST Saturday, 14 August 1999
U.S. Widens Drug Probe At Embassy In Bogota Mission's Postal System May Have Been Conduit For Contraband SmugglingBy Douglas Farah and Serge F. Kovaleski
The investigations began after the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Division charged the wife of the officer in command of the U.S. military's counter-drug efforts in Colombia with shipping cocaine to the United States via the seldom-inspected government mail system. The new inquiries were triggered during a follow-up review of embassy mailing records and have not led to criminal charges. But U.S. officials described the inquiries as particularly embarrassing, because Colombia produces 80 percent of the world's cocaine and most of the $289 million in annual U.S. aid to the South American country goes to combat drug trafficking. Officials in Washington said the expanded investigation has added to
concern about the U.S. Embassy in Bogota, which already was under scrutiny
because of what several officials described as a dangerous, bunker-style
mentality that is hampering implementation of new policy initiatives.
"Their performance has been very poor," said one official who deals with Colombia on a regular basis. "They are shutting down -- they seem unable to drive forward with any new policy initiatives. It is an embassy that sees itself as being under siege and it is acting like that."
Several months ago, the inspector general's office in the State Department began a congressionally requested review of the department's Colombia program, according to congressional and State Department officials. The review centers on millions of dollars in U.S. aid given to the Colombian
National Police over the past two years. Most of the money has gone to
the police air wing, including about 40 helicopters and a handful of fixed-wing
aircraft. The review is focusing on whether the State Department followed
congressional guidelines.
"We have a very important embassy that has a lot of serious internal problems, and that is something we can't afford," said a congressional staffer who deals with Colombia issues. "It is just too important a country to allow ourselves to be embarrassed like this."
While acknowledging mailing the packages, Laurie Hiett has denied knowing what was in them. Her chauffeur, Jorge Alfonso Ayala, told U.S. investigators that Hiett abused cocaine, a charge she also has denied. Hiett's husband has been cleared of any knowledge of the scheme, but he asked to be reassigned and has left Colombia, U.S. military officials said. Col. Hiett was in charge of the estimated 200 U.S. troops in Colombia involved in training Colombian security forces for counter-drug operations and protecting three large radar bases used primarily to track drug flights, one of the most important commands in Latin America. The Pentagon declined to reveal where he has been reassigned. Knowledgeable sources said that among the people currently under investigation,
one embassy employee is suspected of having a cocaine habit.
"They have been taking a hard look at the place," said one source, who said the continuing inquiry is an effort by federal and military investigators to follow up leads that they developed in the course of the Hiett probe.
An embassy spokesman in Bogota declined yesterday to comment on this story. Ambassador Kamman also had no comment. In recent weeks senior Clinton administration officials have visited
Bogota to express their growing concern over gains made by Colombia's leftist
insurgents, who derive much of their financing from protecting drug traffickers
and who have handed the military a series of devastating defeats in recent
weeks.
Barry R. McCaffrey, the Clinton administration's drug policy director, said last week Colombia was in an "emergency situation" and has recommended that the U.S. invest another $1 billion in counter-drug efforts in the Andean region, with about half of it going to Colombia.
One recently retired embassy employee who knew the Hietts well said the colonel had stopped taking his wife to social functions and told friends that her behavior had become an embarrassment. "She was always a live wire, always hyper and she was a loose cannon," the source said. "She was initially invited to all social functions, but she would say the damnedest things, so for a long time the colonel had stopped taking her. She was always a potential embarrassment." In Bogota, a parent and a school staff member at an international school where Laurie Hiett had been a substitute teacher, had similar assessments. Fellow teachers "found her very erratic, and she had mood swings," the
parent said. "She was always very hyper and complained like crazy about
everything."
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