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Council On Hemispheric Affairs |
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Monitoring
Political, Economic and Diplomatic Issues Affecting the Western
Hemisphere |
Wednesday,
July 20, 2005
COHA MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESS
Washington Secures Long-Sought Hemispheric Outpost, Perhaps at the Expense of Regional Sovereignty
• On June 1, 2005 the Paraguayan National Congress entered into
an agreement with Washington that allows U.S. troops to enter into Paraguay
for an 18-month period.
• The troops will help train Paraguayan officials to deal with narcotrafficking,
terrorism, government corruption and domestic health issues.
• The agreement grants the U.S. troops legal immunity from possible
offenses committed during their stay.
• Washington has long sought similar immunity for its troops in the Southern
Cone, but Argentina and Brazil have firmly restricted granting such judicial
liberty to U.S. troops.
• Bolivian officials and its press are also speaking out against the
agreement, fearing the U.S. presence as a means to control the petroleum
and natural gas sources in their country.
• Though Asunción and Washington claim that the U.S. has no intentions
of establishing a permanent base in Paraguay, history shows a strange
resemblance between the current situation in Paraguay and the development
of the Manta base in Ecuador from a “temporary” facility
into a major base.
Paraguay and the United States
recently entered into an agreement that allows U.S. military personnel
to enter Paraguay to train officials
in counter-terrorism and anti-narcotrafficking measures. According
to the Head of Social Communication of the Paraguayan Armed Forces
Col. Elio Flores, these U.S. Special Forces units will be working with
the National AntiDrugs Secretariat, the Presidential Escort Regiment
and the Air Transport Brigade. The U.S. will also provide financial
assistance to help stabilize Paraguayan agencies which will be collaborating
with U.S. authorities and institute a military-led initiative to provide
health care services to the country’s poor in the northeast region
of Canindeyu. Jose Ruiz, Public Affairs officer for the U.S. Armed
Forces Southern Command office, told COHA that “some military
training will be operational in nature,” and the goal is to better
equip Paraguayans to deal with the threats of narcotrafficking, terrorism,
government corruption and poverty. A contingent of 500 U.S. troops
headed by seven officials arrived in Paraguay on July 1 with planes,
weapons, equipment and ammunition. This group is the first of at least
13 U.S. units set to enter Paraguay until the agreement expires December
31, 2006.
This agreement grants U.S. soldiers complete legal immunity from some
of their actions while they are in the country, affording them the
same privileges as diplomats as well as leaving them free from prosecution
for any damages inflicted on the public health, the environment or
the country’s resources. According to Servicio Paz y Justicia
(SERPAJ) Paraguay, the Paraguayan National Congress passed this resolution
allowing for the entry of U.S. forces with no debate, behind closed
doors and with the public largely unaware of the entire transaction.
Joining with SERPAJ, other human rights groups also have voiced their
concern, with U.S. military instructors being criticized by human rights
activists for having a history of teaching torture tactics to thousands
of Latin American mid-level military officers at the U.S.-based School
of the Americas since shortly after World War II.
A sense of outrage and concern has flared up from neighboring countries.
The U.S. forces are using the Mariscal Estigarribia airport base, which
underwent construction by the U.S. in 2000 to allow for the reception
of large numbers of troops and weapons and to also facilitate the landing
of B-52 and Galaxy planes. With the facility having a capacity to hold
16,000 troops and its proximity to the borders of Argentina, Brazil
and Bolivia, Paraguay’s South American neighbors are questioning
Washington’s intentions at Mariscal Estigarribia, fearing that
they may include more than just drugs and terrorism. Asunción’s
initiative with the U.S. is cloudy enough to put the reputation of
President Nicanor Duarte at serious risk. Presenting himself as a new
force in Latin America, Duarte had appeared to be dedicated to close
cooperation with the South American countries pursuing a policy of
autonomy from the U.S. Now, Duarte’s critics are questioning
his willingness to accommodate Uncle Sam, picturing him as the South
American equivalent of El Salvador’s President Antonio Saca.
Regional Powers Angered by Immunity Concession
The decision by the Paraguayan legislature to proceed with the agreement
came as a shock to Paraguay’s more powerful neighbors Argentina
and Brazil, who repeatedly have refused granting comparable immunity
to U.S. military officials. According to the Buenos Aires daily, El
Clarín, the inability of Paraguay to hold U.S. forces accountable
for their actions while in the region greatly undermines the power
of the International Criminal Court and the Paraguayan judicial system.
Particularly unnerving is the proximity of the Paraguayan base to the
highly controversial Triple Border Area, where the three countries
meet. Notorious for accusations brought against it for being a staging
ground for terrorist plots, this new arrangement is meant to give the
U.S. military a more justified presence in the eyes of many would-be
critics, and also could someday provide for a greater ease of entry
of U.S. forces into Argentina and Brazil.
U.S. military presence in Latin America has been a given since the
early twentieth century. It has come in many forms: covert and overt
military aid, installation and support of a number of military dictatorships,
training of military leaders who later were infamous for their cruelty,
economic bribes and a number of other atrocities. U.S. influence throughout
Latin America over the past century has led to the deaths of tens of
thousands of innocent civilians and the violent militarization of many
towns, cities and countries. Latin Americans are now extremely wary
of Paraguay’s unprecedented agreement to provide the U.S. with
legitimate, almost unquestioned authority so close to their own countries.
Bolivia’s
Raging Fears
Paraguay’s entente with Washington has also caused alarm in Bolivia,
whose border lies less than 250 km from the base at Mariscal Estigarribia.
La Paz fears that the U.S. will use the base to transport large amounts
of American-supplied weapons and personnel to Paraguay. The Bolivian
media investigating the U.S.’ burgeoning presence in the region
contends that Washington’s intentions are less directed to a
military mission than that of influencing access to its neighbor’s
natural resources. The Transnational Institute, an Amsterdam-based
scholar-activist organization, observed that the response of the Bolivian
press is understandable because there have been previous suspicions
of outside forces wanting to exercise military control over the natural
resources of the Chaco (Tarija) region.
Suspicion of the U.S. military in Latin America is nothing new. The
U.S. Army already has four Cooperative Security Locations (CSL), or
permanent military bases (formerly called Forward Operating Locations
(FOL), the Pentagon recently changed the terminology to imply a more “cooperative” effort),
located in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba; Aruba-Curaçao; Manta,
Ecuador; and Comalapa, El Salvador. Rumors have started that the Paraguayan
base at Mariscal Estigarribia could become the next U.S. CSL. Despite
Ruiz’s claims that the U.S. has “no plans of any kind” to
remain in the region permanently and create another CSL, regional observers
remain uneasy, recalling that the Pentagon initially used this same
rhetoric to describe its presence at Manta, Ecuador when it at first
minimized the facility as simply a “dirt strip,” only to
later acknowledge its development into a major facility. Alejandro
Valázquez, the agreeable “no problema” President
of the Paraguayan senate’s Foreign Relations Committee stated
in El Clarín on June 13 that “people fantasize
a lot” about
the possible negative effects of having the U.S. using the airport
base. He then proceeded with attempts to assuage fears of a permanent
U.S. military base by reminding the public that the U.S. and Paraguay
are allies that need to defend each other.
Representative William Cardozo, a Bolivian Social Democrat from the
Department of Tarija, urged Bolivia’s interim president Eduardo
Rodriguez to launch an investigation regarding the U.S. presence in
the region. Tarija, located
near the border with Paraguay, contains one of the two largest petroleum and
natural gas reserves in Bolivia. An even more critical stance comes from Luis
Chaquetilla, a member of the Unitaria Central Obrera Boliviana (COB), a powerful
labor group in Bolivia, who commented that Washington has launched a military
intervention through neighboring countries with the specific goal of controlling
the gas reserves.
Another Manta?
Over 80 million dollars has been invested in the base in Manta, Ecuador
which is now one of the best-equipped airports in Latin America.
Yet much controversy has arisen over the influence U.S. military
officials have in the region. At first, the Pentagon presented Manta
as a dusty, archaic facility which it would operate solely for anti-drug
and weather monitoring functions. Washington asserted that the base
would function only for daytime use and would not permanently house
U.S. personnel. Only a few days later the Pentagon clarified its
original statement and outlined its full mission for Manta, which
was to serve as a major U.S. military base tasked with a variety
of security-related missions.
Indigenous, religious and human rights groups protested the arrival
of U.S. personnel in 1999, alleging that the presence of the U.S. facility
would strongly infringe upon the autonomy of the Ecuadorian state.
These groups worry that the Paraguayan agreement is similar to the
one concerning Manta because of its focus on counter-narcotics surveillance.
Yet since the arrival of U.S. armed forces in Ecuador, human rights
workers have observed U.S. personnel engaged in anti-immigration efforts
and even played a liaison role in the 2002 coup against Venezuelan
President Hugo Chavez.
After September 11 the United States government put pressure on Ecuador
to allow expanded use of the Manta base to help fight the War on Terror,
but no official agreement has been reached. While a CSL has yet to
be established in Paraguay, the country will be more directly engaged
in the War on Terror because at least some training of Paraguayan soldiers
will be provided along with counter-terrorism tactics. Thus, while
the U.S. military may not be using the Paraguayan base for offensive
strategies, Asuncion’s forces are involved, assisted by those
from Washington. The community of Mariscal Estigarribia, like Manta’s
neighboring community Eloy Alfaro in Ecuador is a small and isolated
area. While it remains unknown whether or not the U.S. will eventually
turn the base into a CSL, it will no doubt become an important location
involving substantial transportation of personnel, weapons, and training
tools that will greatly affect the surrounding community.
The Transnational Institute, which has done considerable research on
the Manta CSL, acknowledges the validity of the longstanding rumors
concerning the possible establishment of another CSL in the Southern
Cone region. South America, and notably Bolivia, has become increasingly
critical of the U.S. role in economic development in the region. Evo
Morales, the Movement toward Socialism (MAS) party candidate
for the upcoming presidential elections, continues to gain popularity
amongst
the different indigenous groups and has aimed a strong anti-imperialist
message at the United States. Morales is one of the key leaders of
the Bolivian coco growers’ movement and has been episodically
critical of Washington’s militarizing anti-drug efforts in South
America. The U.S. troops training Paraguayans in anti-drug efforts
will only add fuel to Morales’ fire and that of like-minded Bolivian
critics of U.S. expansion activities in the area.
While it is clear that direct U.S. interests in the region subsided
after the Cold War, and even came to a staggering halt after September
11, the United States is once again at work trying to build a quasi-military
grid in Latin America. By entering into an agreement with Paraguayan
officials, the U.S. will be able to successfully keep an eye out for
the political unrest in Bolivia, maintain an influence in the highly
sensitive Triple Border region and monitor activities of the de-facto
left leaning alliance. Up to now Washington has expressed concern for
the leftist regimes in Brazil, Uruguay, Argentina and Venezuela, with
the likelihood that Bolivia, Ecuador and Mexico (if Lopez Obrador triumphs
in that country’s 2006 elections) might join. While Paraguay
alone exclusively has made an agreement that could very well infringe
on its judicial power and ultimate sovereignty, the entire South American
region could soon feel the after-effects of its domestic decision.
Argentina and Brazil have successfully held off the U.S. military forces
from gaining immunity in the area, but after several failed attempts
to acquire a South American base of power, the U.S. now has a road
paved for them by Paraguay’s 18-month agreement.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associates Mary Donohue and Melissa Nepomiachi.
July 20, 2005
For More Information:
“Base militar de EEUU en Paraguay despierta inquieta en Bolivia.” ABC Color (Asuncion). 6 July 2005. http://www.abc.com.py/seccion.php?sec=7&fec=2005-07-06.
“Bolivia Concerned about US
Base in Paraguay.” Prensa
Latina. 11 July 2005.
http://www.plenglish.com/article.asp?ID={AB7A170D-94F1-4CCA-BCEC-E76AE3B8E1AD}&language=EN
“Contingente Militar de EEUU Llega a Paraguay.” 2 July 2005. http://bolivia.indymedia.org/gn/2005/07/20520.shtml.
“Enrique Bolaños, Hugo Chavez : a tale of two Presidents.” ZNet Latin America. 4 July 2005. http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=20&ItemID=8222.
“EUA no Paraguai.” 4 July 2005. http://agenciacartamaior.uol.com.br/agencia.asp?coluna=boletim&id=1351.
Flynn, Michael “Ecuador: What's the deal at Manta?” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. January/February 2005.
“Paraguay concedió inmunidad
a las tropas de Estados Unidos.” El Clarín.
13 June 2005.
http://www.clarin.com/diario/2005/06/13/elmundo/i-02015.htm.
“Questionable Paraguay-US Military
Exercises Commence.” Prensa
Latina. 11 July
2005. http://www.plenglish.com/article.asp?ID={42AD11D9-A013-4A48-8E00-F0E9A55879AA}&language=EN
Rubens Barbosa and Jessica Stern. “Triborder Dispute.” Foreign Affairs. January/February 2004. http://dev.foreignaffairs.org/20040101faletter83165/rubens-barbosa-jessica-stern/triborder-dispute.html.
“U.S. Troops Set Up Shop.” Amerias.org.
3 June 2005.
http://americas.org/item_19757.
“Zero Hour in Bolivia: What to Watch for Today.” Narcosphere. 9 June 2005. http://narcosphere.narconews.com/story/2005/6/9/84257/46598.
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Memorandum
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