• Middle East and North Africa
    Reversing the Flow
    This publication is now archived. IntroductionImages of desperation along the U.S. Gulf Coast reversed the usual pattern of relief donations as nations around the world opened their hearts and wallets. Four Arab countries—Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates—pledged $100 million each. Kuwait, liberated from an Iraqi invasion by a 1991 U.S.-led coalition, offered an additional “in-kind” donation of $400 million worth of oil. Nations without deep pockets—or deep wells—also contributed to the relief efforts. Among them are countries that have been on the receiving end of U.S. disaster-relief assistance in recent years: Tsunami-ravaged Sri Lanka pledged $25,000; Honduras offered 134 rescue specialists; and Afghanistan offered $100,000. Foreign Donations for Katrina ReliefSource: U.S. State Department/Claire Calzonetti, cfr.orgMore detail: U.S. State Department Donors List; Foreign Policy
  • United States
    Interview with Laurence Simon on offers of international aid after Katrina
    After Hurricane Katrina struck the United States’ Gulf Coast, leaving an estimated $200 billion damage in its wake, countries from around the globe lined up to offer material aid, cash, and condolences. The packages of aid ranged from small to large—from sixty Thai doctors and nurses to 500,000 British military ration packs to four CH-47 Chinook helicopters from Singapore. All told, around ninety nations pledged some support. Many of them are flood-prone countries in the developing world, including Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, which are still reeling from their own natural calamities and hard-hit economies. Laurence Simon, director of the Programs in Sustainable International Development at Brandeis University’s Heller School for Social Policy and Management, says it may not be “appropriate for [the United States] to be accepting these genuine offers from the poorest countries.” “We could accept it graciously out of respect to the [hurricane] victims,” he says, “but we have to ask ourselves: Given the resources of the United States, might it be wiser to thank the poorest of the nations and encourage them to make use of these funds for the unmet needs of victims of the tsunami and poverty alleviation?” Simon, who has worked in international development, including disaster mitigation and recovery with Oxfam America, the United Nations Development Programme, and the World Bank since 1977, discusses the politics of aid distribution, the recovery efforts of last year’s tsunami versus Hurricane Katrina, and the world’s reaction to the United States ’ worst natural disaster in recent memory. What do you make of the outpouring of aid from all parts of the globe? I would expect many around the world were genuinely moved by the humanitarian crisis that’s materialized. Is this the first time emergency aid from the developing world has flowed into the United States following a natural disaster? I’m not aware of a precedent, not on this scale. Nor am I aware of any other instance when aid was offered by the poorest developing nations. In my experience working with disaster relief, aid usually flows from developed to developing nations; it’s quite unusual for developing nations to be offering assistance to us. Does it surprise you that so much aid was pledged from poorer nations? It does, especially by the amount of aid from countries like Sri Lanka, which is still struggling to recover from the tsunami. What was its offer to the United States? I had heard the offer was a contribution to American Red Cross; I think around $25,000, which may sound small to us but actually represents a significant financial contribution given the needs within Sri Lanka. Were these countries motivated more by shock or sympathy? I could not begin to try to speculate on their motivations. I think there is a very genuine concern for the plight of the people hurt by this. Also, I believe the poorest countries are moved by the fact that so many of the victims of Katrina are marginalized citizens within our own society.Should the United States be accepting aid from cash-strapped countries like Sri Lanka? Certainly, for a country as poor as Sri Lanka, if it had a unique contribution, it would be a nice gesture to receive it. Any contribution would be a significant one. But if it’s merely an offer of cash, yes, we could accept it graciously out of respect to the [hurricane] victims, but we have to ask ourselves: We are honored by this gesture, but might it be wiser to make use of these funds for the unmet needs of victims of the tsunami? I was a bit surprised [by Sri Lanka’s offer of aid] but more so by the statement I read from the [Bush] administration that these offers would be gratefully received. Still, I’m not sure it’s appropriate for us to be accepting these genuine offers from the poorest countries. Historically speaking, how much do politics enter the equation when offering aid? The United States has a long history of reaching out to countries hit by events of this magnitude and has been most generous, whether in slow disasters like drought or rapid ones like earthquakes. It’s been providing emergency relief despite its political positions or feelings. Take a recent example: The United States provided a very significant response to the hunger crisis [during the mid-1990s] in North Korea. We have given emergency relief to countries we don’t have diplomatic relations with over the past thirty years. We provided aid to Cambodia after the Pol Pot regime fell to Vietnamese troops. But doesn’t U.S. aid usually come with strings attached? Many people would argue there is often a political string attached and there’s expectation of some sort of payback. We still hear of “tied aid” where the recipient is obligated to buy American. But in disaster relief, I think the United States has been generous. It’s not as if a country is trying to buy some favors. What were your impressions of the U.S. response to last year’s tsunami? I think the initial reaction by [people in South Asia ] was a bit amazed, that is, that the United States’ initial response was so low, given the staggering need at the moment. But aid can be misunderstood. The United States, for instance, will need to make an assessment of what the needs are before it throws money or material aid to countries. Still, I think the United States was embarrassed by how little aid it offered initially. Is it generally more difficult to send material aid versus simply writing a check?Outside of cash, the delivery of emergency relief has always been very troubling. Commodities move slowly; it’s a matter of several months, not weeks, in almost every major effort. For instance, it’ll take usually six months for emergency food relief, once the international call is made. By that time, however, the famine situation or other emergencies on the ground are usually so far advanced that we’re already seeing tremendous death tolls. If cash is needed, obviously that could be provided more quickly. What about sending human resources? Cuba, for example, offered to send more than 1,000 doctors. If the United States accepts Cuba’s offer of doctors, there should be nothing to stop them from arriving in a day or two, other than, of course, diplomatic problems. How much closer can you get [than Cuba]? And no doubt Cuba would make good on its offer. It has one of the finest medical-health systems in the Western Hemisphere; these would be very qualified physicians. The other issue is what the need is. Do we actually need doctors from outside the United States? In any disaster-relief operation, you tend to be flooded immediately with personnel and things you don’t need. Sri Lankans, for example, have a refined health-care system and [after the tsunami] they began turning away offers of medical personnel because they felt they could cover their needs from within. Have countries—the United States included—ever refused emergency aid as a matter of pride? The United States has always prided itself on being able to fill its needs, and I think it realizes that this disaster is on a very large scale. But the United States has the resources and technology [to recover]. The major lesson, however, from disaster recovery that applies here is that we want the victims of a natural disaster, who are often the very poor, to be better off than there were before. No one should be reconstructing the conditions of poverty.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
    The G-8 Summit
    This publication is now archived. What’s on the G-8 Summit agenda?Climate change and aid to Africa will be the top priorities at this year’s Group of Eight (G-8) Summit in Gleneagles, Scotland, which will take place from July 6-8. These issues were selected by British Prime Minister Tony Blair, whose country holds the G-8 presidency this year. The G-8 consists of the world’s wealthiest industrialized countries--France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Great Britain, Canada, and the United States--plus Russia. Representatives from the European Union, as well as finance ministers from South Africa, India, China, and Brazil, will also attend the meeting. Why did Blair choose to focus on climate change?Scientists around the world have been raising alarms for years about incremental increases in the earth’s temperature, which they attribute to human activity. Emissions of so-called greenhouse gases, particularly carbon dioxide, rise into the earth’s atmosphere and reflect the sun’s heat back onto the planet, causing average global temperatures and sea levels to rise. Blair--whose government’s chief scientist called climate change a more pressing threat than international terrorism--wants G-8 countries to take the lead on reducing carbon dioxide emissions. What is the Bush administration’s position on the issue?That the phenomenon of the earth’s warming is not scientifically traceable to human activity, that future variations in climate are notoriously unpredictable, and that the economic pain that would be caused by strict limits on emissions is not justified. The U.S. government wants to focus on technological innovation to reduce its dependence on fossil fuels, which produce carbon dioxide when burned. G-8 countries account for some 47 percent of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions; the United States, with 5 percent of the world’s population, contributes about 25 percent of the world’s total emissions. The G-8 Summit will also address the issue of greenhouse-gas production with countries like India and China, whose pollution levels are rising with their rapidly growing economies. Is progress on this issue likely at the summit?Some experts say no. Seven of the G-8 nations have signed the 1997 Kyoto Protocol on climate change, which sets strict international limits on emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, and are attempting to meet its targets. The United States rejected the treaty, and Bush administration officials continue to question some of the science behind global warming. Blair’s focus on climate change at the G-8 is likely an effort to press the United States on the issue, but the U.S. resistance is real and unlikely to change, experts say. American negotiators have reportedly weakened language addressing global warming in G-8 documents, and many expect the summit to produce no new action on the subject. "They’ll work desperately to make it look like they’ve achieved something, but nothing will happen," says David Victor, director of the Program on Energy and Sustainable Development at Stanford University and an adjunct senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. What is the debate over aid to Africa?Blair and his chancellor of the exchequer, Gordon Brown, want the G-8 to agree on a plan to implement the U.N. Millennium Development Goals, which include cutting global poverty in half, reducing child mortality by two-thirds, providing primary education for all children, and halting the spread of AIDS by 2015. Britain is urging G-8 countries to give 0.7 percent of their gross domestic products [GDPs] toward these goals, and Blair has embarked on a whirlwind round of shuttle diplomacy leading up to the conference to secure the agreement of G-8 finance leaders. However, Bush has resisted this plan, saying the United States already gives millions in aid around the world.Africa is the special focus of this aid effort due to the dire need of many of its people. Africa is the only region of the world where average incomes are lower now than they were 30 years ago, according to U.N. statistics. Africa is home to 13 percent of the world’s population, and nearly one-third of the people worldwide who live in extreme poverty, or on less than one dollar a day. Thirteen million Africans have already died of AIDS, and another 26 million are infected with the virus, a figure that increases daily. What is the Bush approach?His administration is focusing much of its attention on its own, new approach to international development, the Millennium Challenge Account, which ties development aid to anti-corruption and good governance measures in the recipient countries. On June 30, Bush proposed additional aid spending for Africa, including $1.2 billion to reduce malaria deaths, $55 million to improve legal protections for African women against violence and sexual abuse, and doubling the amount the United States spends on girls’ education in Africa to $400 million. The United States gives 0.2 percent of its GDP in international aid each year, according to the Economist. Are the two issues of Africa aid and climate change intertwined?Yes. Experts say Africa is the continent most vulnerable to projected climate changes. Water levels across Africa have dropped by nearly a third since 1970, and 25 countries will suffer some sort of water shortage in the next two decades, according to a report from a coalition of environmental and aid organizations. Another report by the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization says that 65 developing countries risk losing $56 billion in crops as a result of climate change, which could limit rainfall, flood low-lying areas, cause drought, and spread new animal diseases and plant pests. Which other issues are under discussion at the summit?They include the following:Debt forgiveness for poor countries. Many poor nations spend crippling amounts of their national budgets to pay interest on international loans. Blair and Brown are pushing developed countries to forgive 100 percent of the debt owed by 62 developing countries to international institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. This effort, once seen as impossibly idealistic, has gained considerable momentum in the last few years. On June 11, in a pre-summit planning meeting with finance ministers, the G-7 countries (minus Russia) agreed to forgive the multilateral debt of 18 poor countries, mostly in Africa, in a deal worth some $40 billion. Critics point out, however, that this agreement covers only debt owed to international institutions, and not private lenders or national governments. They also say that any meaningful reform should include Western countries cutting domestic farm subsidies and lowering their trade barriers against African goods.Securing chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons material. In 2002, G-8 countries pledged $20 billion to dismantle nuclear weapons and help secure nuclear, chemical, and biological materials in Russia and the former Soviet Union. So far, the effort is still $3 billion short, and experts say it’s important that G-8 countries keep their focus on securing dangerous materials and keeping them out of the hands of terrorists.Terrorism. Experts on both sides of the Atlantic have been talking recently about the divide between how Europeans see terrorism--as essentially a law-enforcement issue best handled by the regular justice system--and how Americans view it, as an all-out war that requires a military approach. Experts say this disconnect has hampered cooperation on international cases.--by Esther Pan, staff writer, cfr.org
  • Foreign Aid
    FOREIGN AID: Millennium Challenge Account
    This publication is now archived. What is the Millennium Challenge Account (MCA)?A U.S. government program that gives development aid in the form of grants to poor countries that adopt economic and political reforms. On May 6, the Bush administration named the first 16 countries eligible to apply for MCA funds. What kinds of reforms are required?MCA funds will go to countries that enact market-oriented measures designed to open economies to competition, fight corruption, and encourage transparent business dealings. In addition, governments must invest in their citizens’ health care and education. How much money will the program provide?When President Bush announced the formation of the MCA on March 14, 2002, he said the United States would significantly increase foreign aid payments over the next three years, committing $1 billion to the MCA in 2004, $2.5 billion in 2005, and $5 billion in 2006. These funds are in addition to the foreign aid already given by the United States, which totals $12.6 billion in fiscal year 2004, according to the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). What are its goals?The MCA aims to encourage democratic governments and free-market economies. Often in the past, foreign aid was siphoned off by corrupt officials whose governments ignored the rule of law. "The idea was to come up with a new way of delivering foreign aid," saysCarol Graham, vice president and director of the governance studies program at the Brookings Institution. "[The United States] realized that giving aid to countries with bad policies didn’t work." How will progress toward reform be measured?By evaluating each country on 16 indicators in three categories. Each country’s score in each category must be above the median of all countries evaluated. This applies in all categories except inflation, which cannot exceed an annual rate of 20 percent.Good governance. This category encourages policies that experts say promote economic development: protecting civil liberties and human rights, having anopen, accountable, and non-corrupt political system, andupholding the rule of law.Public health and well-being. Thiscategory rates public welfare by measuring how much anation spends on health care and education, how many childrenfinish primary school, and how many citizens are immunizedagainst disease.Economic openness. This category takesinto account a country’s credit rating, annual rateof inflation, three-year budget deficit, trade barriers,and the number of days needed to start a business, whichis a measure of government corruption and red tape. How will those indicators be evaluated?The Millennium Challenge Corporation, the new independent agency that administers the MCA, will judge them using internationally accepted standards, according to the White House. Figures from the World Bank, for example, will be used to measure public expenditures on health care and education as a percentage of gross domestic product. The World Bank Institute, a research unit within the World Bank, will provide statistics measuring a country’s levels of accountability and corruption. Freedom House, a nonpartisan advocacy group, will provide measures of civil liberties and political rights including, among other things, press freedom and the treatment of political detainees. The MCC will use International Monetary Fund (IMF) figures to evaluate inflation and budget deficits. If a country doesn’t qualify for MCA funds, can it still receive U.S. aid?Yes. USAID, the main channel of U.S. foreign aid, gave $8.5 billion to poor countries around the world for health care, economic development, and democracy-building programs in 2003. The administration stresses that the MCA will complement, not replace, these existing aid efforts. "This is not compassion aid, food aid, or disaster assistance," says Kathleen Harrington, vice president for domestic affairs at MCC. "This is a policy reform directed at economic growth." Do other donors impose conditions on aid they provide?Yes. The IMF, which lends money to countries in financial crisis, makes borrowing countries sign a list of obligations--pledging to control budget deficits and curb inflation, for example--before lending funds. The World Bank’s so-called soft loan program, which lends to poor nations at greatly discounted interest rates, requires applicant countries to complete a Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) that lays out their plans for spending World Bank funds. The World Bank, IMF, and most donor countries now accept the PRSP as an application for aid money. Who runs the Millennium Challenge Corporation?The MCC is supervised by a board of directors made up of four Cabinet-level officials— the secretary of state, who is chairman of the board, the secretary of the Treasury, the U.S. trade representative, and the head of USAID--and four members of the private sector selected by the president. The CEO of the corporation, Paul V. Applegarth, was nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate. Which countries are eligible for MCA assistance? How will it work?After the MCC chooses which countries will receive MCA funds, MCC negotiation teams will travel to each country to meet with members of the government and civil society. Together, they will work out a plan, or "compact," that details how each country will spend MCA funds to increase its growth rate and reduce poverty, as well as benchmarks to measure its progress. Each compact will be reviewed by the MCC’s board of directors; once it is approved, Harrington says, the countries get their aid money. Which countries will benefit?The 16 nations announced May 6 are: Armenia, Benin, Bolivia, Cape Verde, Georgia, Ghana, Honduras, Lesotho, Madagascar, Mali, Mongolia, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Senegal, Sri Lanka, and Vanuatu.
  • Colombia
    First Steps Toward a Constructive U.S. Policy in Colombia
    Introduction and Executive Summary In November 1999, the Council on Foreign Relations and Inter-American Dialogue established an independent task force to review and offer recommendations on U.S. policy toward Colombia. The co-chairs of the task force have decided to issue this interim report to make an impact on deliberations in Congress, as well as respond to an immediate opportunity to shape the current debate about U.S. policy. We plan to publish a final report in June 2000 that will provide a more comprehensive and systematic examination of U.S. policy toward Colombia. That report will, for example, discuss the wider challenge of addressing a serious drug problem in which many countries-the United States included-are involved, and which calls for shared responsibility and joint action. On January 11, the Clinton administration put forward a bill that seeks an "emergency supplemental appropriation" to provide some $950 million in assistance to Colombia this fiscal year, and a total of $1.6 billion through fiscal year 2001. The administration's bill was formulated in the context of Plan Colombia, a mutually agreed framework between the Colombian and U.S. governments. The plan identifies the country's critical needs and makes clear that the Andean nation's interrelated problems-powerful insurgent and paramilitary forces, massive narcotrafficking, widespread human rights abuses, and deep economic recession-have reached crisis levels. It further indicates that the Colombian government is prepared to tackle these problems, and is committed to addressing all of them together. While the Colombian government is prepared to contribute $4 billion of the $7.5 billion the plan will cost, Colombia has also asked for immediate help from the international community. In response, the Clinton administration has put together a two-year aid package that emphasizes equipment and training for the military and police to carry out counter-narcotics operations. Other elements of Plan Colombia are supported to a much lesser degree. In focusing the aid package in this way, the administration recognizes the close linkages that have developed between Colombia's illegal narcotics industry and the country's insurgent and paramilitary forces. As such, it deals with key concerns for both the United States and Colombia. Security assistance aimed at reducing drug production and trafficking is but a piece of a broader effort that seeks to extend legitimate authority in the country. For this reason-coupled with the fact that such support would signal strong US commitment to help a troubled country at a critical moment-we urge Congress to move quickly and approve the administration's aid package. We also suggest that Congress make two adjustments in the proposed package: strengthen a regional approach to the drug problem, and improve Colombia's economic situation by enhancing its trade benefits. Although it will make a contribution, the administration's aid proposal responds only partially to the formidable policy challenge posed by Colombia. An effective package must get beyond the current emphasis on fighting drugs. The main emphasis should, rather, be on helping the Colombian government strengthen its capacity to protect its citizens and effectively exercise control and authority over its territory. But a lack of consensus within the U.S. government has made it difficult to focus on that overall objective in U.S. policy toward Colombia. As currently formulated, the bill is an essential first step, but more is required, both from Washington and Bogotá. With its proposal, the administration has affirmed that the stakes for the United States are high. We agree. We therefore urge the White House to develop an integrated, long-term plan that has a broader focus than merely the drug problem. The administration and Congress must recognize that a serious policy response to the challenges posed by Colombia implies a U.S. commitment to the country beyond the two-year period of the proposed bill. A successful approach will require high-level, sustained engagement, supported by a bipartisan majority in Congress, during at least a half dozen years. As part of a longer-term policy, the main focus in the security area should be on reforming Colombia's armed forces and making them more professional, thereby establishing the conditions under which the United States could provide effective military assistance. Training is particularly crucial to upgrade the military capability of the armed forces and improve their human rights performance. Professionalization would also enhance the Colombian government's moves toward a political solution to the conflict, and reinforce efforts to deal more successfully with both insurgent and paramilitary forces. Under no circumstances should U.S. combat troops be deployed in Colombia for military intervention. Levels of support above those reflected in the current bill should be considered for other critical areas in addition to security. Extension of current preferential trade arrangements for Colombia should benefit its economy. Special efforts are needed to improve the country's judicial system and help Colombia strengthen its ability to undertake alternative development strategies. The United States should encourage a multilateral approach, working in concert with Colombia's hemispheric partners, European friends, and relevant multilateral institutions. A more balanced U.S. policy (that is, one less narrowly focused on drugs) would make other governments and institutions more inclined to join in a common effort. Finally, Colombia's problems demand strong, focused leadership from Bogotá that reflects a Colombian commitment and national consensus behind a set of realistic policies. The United States can and should respond to Colombian initiatives in accordance with its own national interests. It cannot, however, solve Colombia's problems. Background: The Colombian Crisis and Opportunity Colombia is a profoundly troubled country, beset by crime and violence. Roughly 25,000 Colombians die each year, from diverse acts of violence. Armed conflict has killed more than 35,000 Colombians in the past decade. Colombia's 1.5 million displaced population is the third largest in the world, following Sudan and Angola. More than half of the world's kidnappings take place in Colombia. Human rights abuses are among the most dire in the hemisphere. The country's flourishing illegal narcotics industry is a major source of violence and, in addition, fuels the guerrilla insurgents and paramilitary forces. The Colombian government lacks effective control of nearly half of its territory. And Colombians are leaving the country in droves. Weak government institutions of government have made it impossible for Colombia to resolve these multiple problems and deal with their cumulative, long-term effect. So far, the institutions have not been able to prevent the problems from growing worse and pushing the nation into a continuing downward spiral. The country's armed forces, for example, are poorly trained and organized. They have never had the resources they need (equipment, intelligence, or training) to respond in a professional and sustained way to the insurgent and paramilitary forces. Colombia's weak justice system has made it difficult to prosecute criminals. Many who violate the law in Colombia have virtual impunity. The country's economic downturn in the past several years has further undermined the capacity of the government and the nation. Last year, as a result of some external shocks and inherited problems, the economy contracted by more than five percent-the worst slump since the 1930s. Colombia's unemployment rate, at twenty percent, is among the highest in Latin America, and has exacerbated longstanding social and economic inequities. Despite a slight upturn in early 2000, acute problems persist. At the same time, however, Colombia has a number of noteworthy advantages that it can draw on in attempting to reverse these tendencies and remedy its national problems. Most important, Colombia has an impressive record of civilian, constitutional government; democratic rule and practice are longstanding. Even under Colombia's current beleaguered circumstances, there is virtually no talk about replacing elected government with military rule. Moreover, Colombia has long been Latin America's best economic performer; it never defaulted on its debt, as every other major Latin American country did, in the 1980s. It was, until last year, together with Chile, the only country in the region whose bonds carried an investment grade rating. The presidency of Andrés Pastrana, which began in August 1998, offers an especially good opportunity to engage productively with the Colombian government. Pastrana's administration understands the problems confronting the country-and is committed to dealing with them by working with the United States, other friends of Colombia, and international organizations. President Pastrana has put highest priority on bringing the country's longstanding conflict to an end by trying to negotiate a settlement with the main insurgent group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). He has also demonstrated a continuing commitment to confront the illicit narcotics trade and to improve Colombia's human rights record. Despite some recent, modest signs of progress, there are serious questions about the willingness of the insurgent groups to make peace with the Colombian government. The groups have made few reciprocal gestures to Pastrana's initiatives, which have included temporarily granting the FARC formal control of a substantial, demilitarized zone in southern Colombia. There have been minimal indications that the groups are prepared to negotiate in good faith. Though Pastrana faces major obstacles, he still has a chance to succeed. Most Colombians back President Pastrana's goal of trying to secure peace through a negotiated settlement. To be sure, there have been doubts in Colombia about some elements of Pastrana's strategy. But Colombians, including their president, know that the prospects for a political solution to the country's conflict will be substantially enhanced through a serious effort to strengthen the state in many of its key functions, including professionalizing the armed forces and curtailing narcotics production. The many, longstanding Colombian strengths combined with the opportunity offered by President Pastrana make us hopeful that timely, well-targeted U.S. support can help the country deal more effectively with its myriad problems. U.S. Interests in Colombia Colombia's deterioration affects significant national interests of the United States. First, Colombia is the origin of some 80 percent of the cocaine consumed in the United States, as well as a growing share of the heroin. To be an effective partner against drugs, the Colombian state must regain authority and control in the country. Second, the deterioration continues to spread instability and conflict beyond Colombia's borders. There have been insurgent and paramilitary incursions into such neighboring countries as Panama, Venezuela, and Ecuador. A stronger Colombia means a stronger region and a stronger Western Hemisphere. Third, there is potential for even further deterioration of human rights and democracy in Colombia. The underpinnings for human rights protections and democratic institutions that have already been badly eroded may move closer to collapse. Reversing this tendency is crucial to creating a viable democratic future for Colombia. A setback for democracy in Colombia would be a serious reversal for the region as a whole. Finally, Colombia is an important economic partner for the United States. It is South America's fourth-largest economy and the fifth-largest U.S. export market in Latin America. Colombia should be able, in short order, to regain the economic dynamism that made it Latin America's best performer throughout much of the past several decades. But the continuing violence and lawlessness discourages national and international investment. A stronger government and society in Colombia would serve U.S. interests on many fronts. Colombians have taken a number of critical steps to address their multiple problems. External support would, however, make an important difference at this point. It would provide needed financial resources, which Colombia alone cannot make available, and would politically reinforce the Colombian government and give it greater capacity to marshal national and international support. Plan Colombia and the Clinton Administration Proposal Plan Colombia ("Plan for Peace, Prosperity, and Strengthening of the State"), a comprehensive framework developed and agreed to by the Colombian and U.S. governments in September 1999, outlines ways to restore peace and order in Colombia. It calls for an expenditure of $7.5 billion over a four-year period to pursue five broad goals: advance the peace process; strengthen the national economy; enhance the counter-drug strategy; promote justice system reform and protect human rights; and foster greater democratization and social development. Colombia will put up more than half of the total amount: $4 billion. The remainder is being sought from international sources, including the United States. To be sure, Plan Colombia is perhaps more a catalogue of problems than a coherent strategy for action. It does, however, succeed in setting out broad goals, making it clear that the Colombian government understands the multiple problems it faces, and expressing a strong commitment to deal with the problems in a sensible and forceful way. In response to Plan Colombia, the Clinton administration proposed on January 11, 2000, a package of support totaling $1.6 billion over two years. This sum would be directed mainly to helping Colombians destroy their coca-growing capacity in the southern part of the country, thereby attempting to remove or reduce a substantial source of revenue that fuels the main insurgency. The aid would train two counter-narcotics battalions (complementing the battalion trained in 1999), as well as provide funds for radar, aircraft and airfield upgrades, and improved anti-narcotics intelligence gathering. Other support would go to the Colombian National Police to eradicate more coca and poppy fields and to promote alternative employment and development programs for Colombian farmers. Modest assistance to foster the rule of law, human rights protections, and justice system reforms are included in the proposal as well. In our view, security should be the priority concern. Colombia is in the midst of a severe internal conflict, and it is hard to see how progress can be made on any front unless the state's enforcement and coercive capacity is substantially improved. The Colombian government needs to better protect its citizens. Preferably, the security component of the administration's bill would have been directly focused on professionalizing Colombia's armed forces. We believe that such an emphasis, done properly and carefully, would considerably assist President Pastrana's peace negotiations. A more capable and professional military would change the dynamic of the current conflict, strengthening the government and making the insurgents more inclined to negotiate in good faith. It would also eventually help counter and reduce the paramilitary forces, which have become stronger as the military has weakened. Any long-term plan should be framed in a way that makes sure a reformed military reinforces the ongoing peace process. Strict and consistent observance of human rights standards must be an integral part of any effort aimed at building Colombia's security forces. The country's current human rights situation is grave and disturbing. The situation will only improve, however, when Colombia has a more professional, better-trained military that is equipped to deal with threats posed to the country's citizens by violent forces, be they paramilitary or insurgent. In accordance with the conditions set forth in the Leahy amendment, Colombian military forces that work with U.S. trainers and receive U.S. equipment should continue to be thoroughly vetted and investigated for human rights abuses. Human rights safeguards help reinforce effective performance. Security assistance is a sensitive issue. Therefore we want to underscore why we believe the thrust of this recommendation will not risk the United States getting drawn into a quagmire. In the first place, the U.S. military personnel should absolutely not be engaged in combat in Colombia. The Colombians have to do this on their own; the U.S. role is to help give them greater capacity to do so. Second, a greater focus on training and professionalization-and less on providing military hardware-would be the best way to minimize the risk of a long, drawn-out involvement. Finally, ignoring the question of security assistance may well lead to even further deterioration, as well as conditions that would eventually make the prospect of military intervention more plausible. It is important to emphasize that, even if the Colombian armed forces were to achieve an acceptable level of professionalization and make significant progress in the security area, it would still be essential to pay serious attention to complementary areas. Priority should be given to improving the judicial system. Such a focus would contribute to positive, sustainable results in reducing violence and the drug trade, and in attracting foreign investors who favor a stable, orderly environment. Indeed, Colombia's economic well-being is absolutely critical, and in this area the United States can be more helpful. Perhaps even more important than providing increased assistance to the Colombian government to support employment programs is assuring Colombia greater access to U.S. markets for its products. Extending trade-related benefits to Colombia would have a positive impact on the country's prospects for higher growth and employment levels. A U.S. assistance program toward Colombia that is more balanced (i.e., one that goes beyond drugs), and shows commitment over the longer term, would be more attractive for other nations and international institutions to join. U.S. support should be put within a broader framework, consistent with the Pastrana administration's emphasis on pursuing peace. The nature and magnitude of Colombia's multiple problems make a genuinely multilateral approach vital. But the United States should take the lead. While the administration's proposal takes into account the regional nature of the drug problem, it would be helpful to give even more emphasis to this approach, including additional resources to help sustain successful alternative development strategies, especially in Peru and Bolivia. This is the only way to avoid what is often described as the "balloon effect," which has meant that the drug problem, at best, is displaced from one location to another. Ample evidence of this pattern can be found throughout the region and within Colombia itself. Within the framework of assistance, the United States and Colombia should work out a set of mutually agreed performance criteria and benchmarks that reflect the common enterprise. These should be aimed mainly at tracking progress on broad fronts of cooperation-military professionalization and human rights performance stand out-between the two countries. The criteria should serve a constructive purpose, help assure acceptable levels of transparency, keep the two countries fully engaged, and keep the key elements of Plan Colombia on course. Such a framework would also increase the likelihood that US assistance would be implemented as efficiently and effectively as possible. In moving forward with the administration package, the president and Congress need to recognize that a longer-term commitment involving additional resources will be required. In the next two years, the Pastrana government can make some important headway but cannot effectively remedy the country's problems. That is why it is so crucial to forge and sustain a bipartisan political consensus, in Washington and Bogotá, behind a coherent plan. Recommendations The administration's proposal responds to an emergency situation, expresses a strong U.S. commitment to Colombia, and complements other key elements of Plan Colombia. We believe it will help mobilize higher levels of commitment from the Colombian government and the private sector, and will catalyze and sustain multilateral efforts of support for Colombia. The United States, however, should proceed with great care. The current bill will give Colombia's security forces needed, added mobility. We believe, however, that in future legislation the United States should focus more broadly, going beyond fighting drugs by assisting efforts to further democratize Colombia, improve the economy, and promote human rights and the rule of law. It is also important to help Colombians address their country's longer-range institutional challenges. Urgent Decision Congress should approve passage of the administration's package for Colombia. Security assistance is a priority concern. Such approval should be conditioned on the human rights standards contained in the Leahy amendment. We recommend two adjustments to the package as currently formulated: First, to bolster a regional approach toward the drug problem, additional resources should be provided to Bolivia and Peru to help sustain their successful counter-narcotics efforts; Second, to show the continued economic partnership between the United States and the Andean nations, we should extend the Andean Trade Preferences Act (ATPA) this year. It is also important to provide Colombia and other Andean countries with the same benefits as those contained under the Caribbean Basin Initiative. Beyond the Current Bill We urge the administration and Congress to continue working closely with the Colombians to move forward on a plan to help reform and professionalize the country's security forces-so that they are more militarily effective and respect human rights. We urge the administration and Congress to give even higher priority over the longer term to supporting Colombia's efforts to remedy its social, economic, and institutional problems. Additional resources aimed at improving the country's judicial system are important. The United States should work to mobilize a consensus and sustain support for multilateral efforts to assist Colombia. The United States should support the UN Secretary General's special adviser on Colombia, as well as the promising group of European countries, currently led by Spain, to cover additional critical components of Plan Colombia. The United States must do more to curb its demand for drugs. Finally, the U.S. government, the administration, and Congress should recognize that advancing in any of these areas, either in the short or longer term, calls for a strong bipartisan consensus on U.S. policy toward Colombia. It also calls for the most effective and efficient implementation plan, carried out by senior and highly experienced U.S. officials.
  • Trade
    Promoting U.S. Economic Relations with Africa
    In 1997, Washington paid unprecedented attention to Africa and its continental rebirth. Both then-First Lady Hillary Clinton and then-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright toured the continent. President Clinton unveiled the “Partnership for Growth and Opportunity in Africa” to promote greater trade and investment in the region. Yet, this independent Task Force finds, recent initiatives to strengthen U.S. policy toward Africa fall short of what is required. It recommends a more comprehensive approach that integrates policy in the areas of foreign assistance, trade and investment, and debt reduction. The Task Force calls for the White House to promote economic relations more effectively, given the opportunities that Africa’s renewal offers, not only to African nations and the United States, but also the larger global community as well. The Task Force’s recommendations include: passing legislation to increase African access to U.S. markets; creating enterprise funds to mobilize greater U.S. private sector investment in Africa; establishing a U.S.-Africa Economic Forum and initiating plans for free-trade agreements with African countries or groups of countries; and designating a director for African affairs at the National Security Council to be responsible for African economic affairs and coordinating efforts under the “Partnership” program.
  • Foreign Aid
    Financing America's Leadership
    Relative to the average of the 1980’s, U.S. government spending on international affairs has fallen nearly 20 percent in real terms and will decline by as much as another 30 percent under budget-balancing plans proposed by the president and Congress. An Independent Task Force convened by the Brookings Institution and the Council on Foreign Relations was asked to assess the consequences of this trend and to make appropriate recommendations. In its Statement, the Task Force concludes that the cuts adversely affect the ability of the United States to protect and promote its economic, diplomatic, and strategic agendas abroad. Unless the trend is reversed, American vital interests will be jeapordized.