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U.S. Urged to Curb Militarization in Latin America[image:
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by Jim Lobe   Thursday, 19 September 2013 15:31

[image: A military checkpoint on Colombia's Atrato River. Credit: Jesús
Abad Colorado/IPS](IPS) - The United States needs to phase down its drug
war and tighten the reins on its cooperation with local militaries and
police in Latin America, according to a new report released here Wednesday
by three influential think tanks.

Of particular interest is the increase in training deployments to Latin
American and the Caribbean by the Special Operations Forces (SOF) – elite
units like the Army’s Green Berets and Navy SEALS – due in part to the U.S.
withdrawal from Iraq and drawdown from Afghanistan.

Over the past decade, SOF ranks have more than doubled to about 65,000, and
their commander, Adm. William McRaven, has been particularly aggressive in
seeking new missions for his troops in new theaters, including Latin
America and the Caribbean where they are training thousands of local
counterparts.

“You can train a lot of people for the cost of one helicopter,” Adam
Isacson, an analyst with the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA),
told IPS.

He noted that the increased investment in SOF was part of a much larger
Pentagon strategy of maintaining a “light (military) footprint” in
countries around the globe while bolstering its influence with local
military institutions.

The Pentagon, however, is much less transparent than the State Department,
and its programs are often not subject to the same human-rights conditions
and do not get the same degree of Congressional oversight.

Moreover, McRaven has sought the authority to deploy SOF teams to countries
without consulting either U.S. ambassadors there or even the U.S. Southern
Command (SOUTHCOM), making it even more difficult for civil society
activists to track what they’re doing and whether they’re working with
local units with poor human-rights records that would normally be denied
U.S. aid and training under the so-called Leahy Law.

Last summer, according to Isacson, McRaven’s command even tried to work out
an agreement with Colombia to set up a regional special operations
coordination center there without consulting SOUTHCOM or the embassy.

“What these developments mean is that the military role in foreign
policy-making is becoming ever greater, and military-to-military relations
come to matter more than diplomatic relations,” he said. “What does that
mean for civil-military relations not only in the region, but also here at
home?”

The 32-page 
report<http://www.wola.org/sites/default/files/downloadable/Regional%20Security/Time%20to%20Listen/Time%20to%20Listen.pdf>,
entitled “Time to Listen”, describes U.S. policy as “on auto-pilot”,
largely due to the powerful bureaucratic interests in the Pentagon and the
Drug Enforcement Administration and their regional counterparts that have
built up over decades.

“The counter-drug bureaucracies in the United States are remarkably
resistant to change, unwilling to rethink and reassess strategies and
goals,” said Lisa Haugaard, director of the Latin America Working Group
Education Fund (LAWGEF) which released the report along with WOLA and the
Centre for International Policy (CIP).

The report also noted that new security technologies, including drones,
whose use by the U.S. and other countries is growing quickly throughout the
region, and cyber-spying of the kind that prompted this week’s abrupt
cancellation by Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff of her state visit here
next month, pose major challenges to the security environment and civil
liberties in the region.

Total U.S. aid to Latin America hit its highest level in more than two
decades in 2010 – nearly 4.5 billion dollars – due to the costs of the
“Merida Initiative”, a multi-year program for fighting drug-trafficking in
Mexico and Central America, and a major inflow of assistance to help Haiti
recover from that year’s devastating earthquake.

But aid fell sharply in 2011 – to just 2.5 billion dollars – and is
expected to decline to just 2.2 billion dollars in fiscal 2014, which
begins Oct. 1.

Military and security assistance also reached its height in 2010, at 1.6
billion dollars, but has since declined to around 900 million dollars,
largely as a result of the phase-out of Plan Colombia and the Merida
Initiative. Central America is the only sub-region in which aid, including
non-security assistance, is increasing significantly.

But Isacson says dollar amounts can be deceptive, and while “big ticket”
aid packages are down, “other, less transparent forms of
military-to-military co-operation are on the rise,” in part due to the
migration of many programs’ management from the State Department, which has
more stringent reporting and human rights conditions, to the Pentagon.

A troubling trend, according to the report, is that some countries,
especially Colombia, have begun training military and police forces in
their neighbors, often with U.S. funding and encouragement.

In that respect, these third-country trainers act as private contractors
who are not subject to U.S. human-rights laws and whose cost is a fraction
of that of their U.S. counterparts.

Despite their security forces’ own highly controversial human rights
record, Colombian officers have been given major roles, for example, in
Washington’s Central America Regional Security Initiative (CARSI) and the
Merida Initiative, as well as in Honduras’ police reform, according to the
report.

“Bringing the military into the streets can result in grave human-rights
violations,” according to Haugaard who also noted U.S. involvement in
poorly designed and heavy-handed counter-drug operations, such as one in
Honduras last year in which four passengers in a river taxi were killed by
a joint Honduran-DEA operation.

Washington’s record has not been all bad, according to the report, which
praised the Obama administration’s insertion of human rights into its
high-level bilateral dialogues with Mexico, Colombia, and Honduras and its
emphasis on the importance of civilian trials for soldiers implicated in
serious rights abuses in Colombia and Mexico.

The administration has also taken some steps to strengthen enforcement of
the Leahy Law, which denies U.S. aid and training to foreign military units
that are credibly accused of serious rights abuses, according to the
report. It also praised Washington’s support for Colombia’s peace process
and its defense of the Inter-American human rights system against recent
attempts by Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia to weaken it.

Still, Washington’s own human rights record, including its failure to close
the Guantanamo detention facility, its newly revealed extensive
surveillance programs, and a drone policy that justifies extra-judicial
executions opens it to charges of double standard, the report noted.

*Jim Lobe’s blog on U.S. foreign policy can be read at
**Lobelog.com*<http://www.lobelog.com/>
*.*

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