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http://www.fpif.org/briefs/vol6/v6n21millat.html
Militarizing Latin America Policy
Volume 6, Number 21
May 2001
By Adam Isacson, Center for International Policy
Editors: Tom Barry (IRC) and Martha Honey (IPS)
Key Points:
The military is currently playing a major role in shaping U.S. policy
toward Latin America, rivaling the role of diplomacy and economic assistance.
The militarization of Washington's Latin America policy is being led
by the drug war, training programs, arms transfers, and a wide array
of "military-to-military contact" efforts.
The U.S. military regularly "engages" with the armed forces
of each country in the hemisphere except Cuba.
Deep within the Defense Department's civilian bureaucracy, the Clinton
administration made a quiet shift in 1999 that speaks volumes about
the current U.S. relationship with Latin America. The Pentagon's office
for Inter-American Affairs was transferred from the Bureau for International
Security Affairs-where it sat in the organizational chart alongside
similar offices for Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and Europe-into a
bureau with the alarming name of Special Operations and Low-Intensity
Conflict. Under the reorganization, Latin America is the only geographic
area assigned to an office that deals with issues like terrorism, drug
enforcement, and other activities of Special Forces (defined as military
units that specialize in "operations other than war").
The shift at the Pentagon is emblematic of the militarization of U.S.
policy toward Latin America since the early 1990s. Militarization is
not a new tendency, of course-the United States has treated Latin America's
many social problems as "special operations" (witness the
cold war emphasis on military aid instead of land reform or rural development).
But militarization is intensifying, led by new antidrug initiatives
and rapidly growing training and military engagement programs. Today,
military contacts and activities are playing such a central role in
bilateral relationships that they threaten to overshadow diplomatic
ties, economic cooperation, and democratic development.
The highest profile example is the drug war. In response to social problems-addiction
at home and desperately poor peasants in Colombia-the United States
is sending Colombia's armed forces aid valued at $1.5 million per day
during 2001. But antidrug operations are just the beginning.
The U.S. military presence in the region rivals-and perhaps surpasses-that
of civilian diplomats. The State Department has about 16,000 direct-hire
employees at posts throughout the world; Latin America accounts for
a modest fraction of that total (about 4,000). Meanwhile, the Southern
Command, the unit responsible for U.S. military activities in Latin
America and the Caribbean, has a staff of 800 military and 325 civilian
employees at its Miami headquarters, while two of its components-U.S.
Army South in Puerto Rico and Joint Task Force-Bravo in Honduras-combine
for an additional 570 military and 1,390 civilian staff. Another 107
officers work in Milgroups, managing security assistance programs at
U.S. embassies throughout the region, and still more are assigned to
Special Operations Command South in Puerto Rico and at "Forward
Operating Locations"-support bases for U.S. counterdrug aircraft-in
Ecuador, El Salvador, and the Netherlands Antilles. On temporary deployments,
more than 55,000 military personnel, including National Guard troops
and reservists, pass through Latin America in a typical year.
In contrast, economic assistance for the region has dropped sharply
in the early 1990s. In 2000-for the first time since before John F.
Kennedy's "Alliance for Progress" economic aid initiative-total
security assistance to Latin America actually exceeded total economic
assistance (roughly $900 million versus $800 million).
Beyond drugs, the main interest of U.S. military planners in the region
is "engagement"-maintaining frequent contact with military
counterparts everywhere in the hemisphere except Cuba. The main form
of engagement is training-courses in the U.S. and overseas as well as
dozens of yearly exercises and deployments-and such programs have expanded
greatly since the early 1990s.
The United States trained some 13,000 Latin American military and police
personnel in 1999, the last year for which data is available. At least
two-thirds of those trained are instructed in their own countries by
U.S. military Mobile Training Teams (MTTs) and during almost 200 yearly
visits by U.S. Special Forces teams on Counterdrug Training Support
(CDTS) and Joint Combined Exchange Training (JCET) deployments. In a
typical year, Latin American trainees also take courses at over 100
military institutions on U.S. soil. This includes the 650 students trained
in 1999 at the School of the Americas (recently renamed the Western
Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation) at Fort Benning, Georgia.
Training also takes place through a robust program of about a dozen
multilateral military exercises, regular exchanges, and courses offered
at a new Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies in Washington.
Military-to-military engagement goes beyond training, however. Southern
Command has increased its Humanitarian and Civic Assistance (HCA) program,
in which U.S. troops build infrastructure or provide medical assistance
(98 such projects took place in 19 Latin American countries in the region
in 2000). And arms transfers are expanding, led by helicopters for Colombia
and a likely $600 million sale of high-tech fighter aircraft to Chile.
The new Forward Operating Locations offer fresh opportunities for contact,
as does an expansion in Foreign Military Interaction seminars, conferences,
and other events, most of them financed through budgets at the discretion
of the general who heads the Southern Command.
Problems with Current U.S. Policy
Key Problems
The U.S. military's activities in Latin America at times outstrip official
policy, leading Washington to choose military solutions to the region's
largely social problems.
U.S. military engagement often seems to have little to do with official
goals in the region and encourages Latin American militaries to take
on roles that would be illegal in the United States.
Military engagement and training strengthen the region's militaries
at the expense of fragile civilian institutions, often with negative
human rights consequences.
The Pentagon's role in policy design is increasing. Military engagement
activities have been growing, while State Department and foreign aid
budgets have fallen or stagnated. Although civilian officials and Congress
still generally play the greater role in U.S. policymaking toward Latin
America, they clearly do not have the greater momentum. Well-funded,
frequent military engagement programs are outpacing or eclipsing U.S.
diplomatic engagement with some countries while eluding effective civilian
and congressional oversight. By forging relationships and incubating
policy initiatives, these military activities are leaving the nondefense
branches of government-including Congress-often struggling to keep up.
An important example is the three new counternarcotics battalions that
the United States is creating-at a cost of over a half billion dollars-within
the Colombian Army. The battalion idea first emerged publicly at a December
1998 meeting of the region's defense ministers, an engagement activity
sponsored by the U.S. Defense Department. Training of the first battalion
began in April 1999 using Pentagon counternarcotics funds, a budget
category for which Congress did not get detailed reports. The first
battalion got weapons and Huey helicopters through drawdowns and "no-cost
leases," mechanisms that do not require congressional approval.
It was not until the spring of 2000 that the Clinton administration's
$1.3 billion aid proposal for Colombia moved the now-active battalion
initiative beyond the Pentagon's discretionary funds and into State
Department-managed aid programs.
Similar examples of Pentagon initiative abound. Today, the military
component of U.S. aid to Colombia in 2000 and 2001-80% of the total-is
in an advanced state of implementation, while the economic and social
component is barely underway. Most members of Congress would be surprised
to know that the Defense Department budget is helping to build barracks
in Bolivia and the Navy-Police Riverine Training Center in Peru. In
the wake of Hurricane Mitch, the U.S. military took the initiative to
establish relations with Nicaragua's erstwhile Sandinista Army, with
little public notice or debate. The Defense Department negotiated Forward
Operating Location agreements to use airbase facilities in Ecuador,
El Salvador, and the Netherlands Antilles, only checking in with Congress
afterward to seek construction funds for the sites.
Often military activities pull official policies along in their wake,
but in some cases it is simply hard to figure out how they relate to
U.S. foreign policy goals at all. A quick look at activities in 1999
offers many examples. Why, for instance, did U.S. Special Forces need
to train with Argentine commandos in mountain warfare techniques? Why
did they train with 310 Belizean soldiers in small unit tactics, with
93 Dominican soldiers in riot control, or with 432 Bolivians and Uruguayans
in air infiltration training? Why did the School of the Americas continue
to offer a commando course in which students are "subjected to
stressful conditions simulating combat"? Why did Southern Command
offer Bolivia $569,490 in infrastructure-building, medical, dental,
and veterinary services, when civilian U.S. agencies were perfectly
capable of doing the same thing?
The stated purpose of the U.S. military's engagement activities is to
promote democracy and respect for human rights, to modernize and professionalize
security forces, and to strengthen regional security cooperation, often
by developing relationships with key officers overseas. These are all
understandable goals, but it is not clear how combat and technical training
helps Latin America attain them.
The rise of military engagement may in fact be undermining these goals,
since U.S. military initiatives frequently encourage Latin American
personnel to take on roles that would be illegal in the United States.
For instance, U.S. units cannot conduct domestically the types of counterdrug
operations for which they train their regional counterparts. Barring
extreme circumstances, the U.S. military does not keep public order,
though Special Forces frequently teach "Foreign Internal Defense"
and similar domestic-control skills overseas. Moreover, U.S. military
personnel cannot build roads, bridges, schools, and wells at home, but
they do so in Latin America, setting a risky precedent for militaries
in fledgling democracies.
The Pentagon's enthusiasm for working with every military in the region
often drowns out the warnings of human rights activists. Despite human
rights protections in U.S. military aid law, the Pentagon's diverse
military activities in Latin America can end up transferring weapons,
skills, and abilities that might later be misused by abusive officials
or units. Given the minimal tracking of trainees' careers and the feeble
end-use monitoring of arms transfers, it is unclear exactly what military
assistance is leaving behind. Meanwhile, military-to-military contact
programs can have unintended political consequences. Visits, conferences,
exchanges, and other activities that the U.S. Southern Command initiates
can offer an inadvertent U.S. seal of approval to abusive military bodies,
units, or individuals who are invited to participate.
The spread of freewheeling, unsupervised military programs-amid a decline
in diplomatic contacts and economic aid-inclines Washington to choose
military solutions to problems in Latin America. If a solid foundation
for militaristic policy choices already exists, it can eclipse political
approaches, such as peace processes or social assistance programs, which
would have to begin from scratch with less-familiar civilian leaders.
Latin American military leaders' analyses and recommendations often
carry disproportionate weight, because of their superior access to U.S.
policymakers. The resulting imbalance can lead Washington to neglect
many civilian institutions that badly need strengthening in fragile
Latin American democracies.
Toward a New Foreign Policy
Key Recommendations
Increase transparency of military engagement programs by improving congressional
oversight, post-training tracking of military personnel, and end-use
monitoring of arms transfers.
Beef up human rights conditions on military programs in the region,
increase the budget and power of the State Department, and shift the
Pentagon out of counterdrug aid and development projects.
Reforms must take place in the context of a fundamental rethinking of
the Pentagon's relationship with Latin America.
The militarization of U.S. policy toward Latin America is not the result
of some sinister hidden strategy. More than anything else, it is a symptom
of Washington's tendency to turn to the Pentagon because the money is
there. Increases in defense spending are simply easier to attain than
increases for almost any other priority. As a result, nondefense activities-such
as diplomacy and drug policy in Latin America-get funded through the
defense budget and managed by defense officials. Challenging this tendency
should be at the core of any long-term progressive political agenda.
Meanwhile, the more specific task of demilitarizing Washington's Latin
America policy can begin now.
The first step, and perhaps the easiest, is increasing transparency
and educating the public. Military activities and influence in Latin
America have flourished, because nobody has been watching closely. Only
effective oversight will make an informed debate possible.
A report on all foreign military training activities, first required
by law in 1999, was a crucial improvement, revealing lists of courses
taught and numbers of students trained in each country. This report
must be strengthened by declassifying key information (e.g., students'
military units, U.S. trainers' units, locations of training) and by
requiring fuller descriptions of the courses offered and their relation
to U.S. interests. Other engagement activities, such as military exercises
and the panoply of Foreign Military Interaction events carried out with
the Southern Command's discretionary funds, should also be fully reported
to complete and clarify the often confusing picture of U.S.-Latin American
military relations.
Transparency requires scrutiny of everything that military engagements
leave behind. Until 2001, the Pentagon did not keep track of the future
career paths of its trainees, leaving no record of whether trainees
subsequently violated human rights or were transferred to units with
very different responsibilities (such as shifts of counternarcotics
trainees to counterinsurgency units). This year, Congress required the
Defense Department to keep a database with this information for trainees
funded by the International Military Education and Training (IMET) program.
But post-training tracking must go further; currently IMET monitors
only about 20% of former U.S. military trainees in Latin America. Ongoing
oversight must also include more rigorous end-use monitoring of weapons
given or sold to Latin America, including the small arms most often
used to violate human rights or transferred via black market channels
to conflict zones.
Beyond transparency, there is an urgent need for effective legal conditions.
The Leahy Law, which prohibits aid to military units that violate human
rights with impunity, must be clarified (by defining what a "unit"
is, and delineating what circumstances trigger application of the law)
and expanded to include military engagement activities and all weapons
sales. Conditioning of military programs should also eventually extend
beyond human rights performance. Conditions should apply to the types
of military roles and missions that U.S. aid encourages in fragile democracies
as well as the types of skills and weapons provided to countries with
chronic histories of conflict and human rights abuse.
At the same time, the budget and power of the State Department and the
U.S. Agency for International Development must increase relative to
the Defense Department. The Pentagon should no longer be able to offer
counternarcotics aid or carry out development programs on its own, with
its own funds. The Defense Department's authority to use its own money
to give counterdrug aid to foreign militaries-the section 1004 law,
which must be renewed every few years-should be allowed to expire, and
these programs should pass to the State Department, where they belong.
The State Department must go beyond merely "signing off" on
Special Forces deployments and military-to-military engagement activities
in the region. Diplomats must begin actively questioning the Pentagon's
choices of trainees, topics, and missions.
Several of these recommendations will be difficult to attain in the
current political context. Bringing them within the realm of possibility
will require a fundamental rethinking of the U.S. military relationship
with Latin America. Some mechanism-perhaps a formal government commission,
a series of congressional hearings, or a nongovernmental education campaign-must
question the purpose of the current expansion of U.S. military programs
in the hemisphere for this rethinking to occur.
Military engagement for its own sake is no longer acceptable, and Latin
America is not a "special operation." Serious thought is long
overdue about what U.S. goals should be in Latin America and what are
the best instruments, standards, and controls needed to achieve them.
Adam Isacson <isacson@ciponline.org> has directed the Center for
International Policy's Latin America Demilitarization Program since 1995.
The program seeks to limit U.S. military involvement in the hemisphere
and works with organizations in the region seeking to reduce military
sizes and roles.
Sources for More Information
Organizations
Arms Sales Monitoring Project
Federation of American Scientists
307 Massachusetts Ave. NE
Washington, DC 20002
Voice: (202) 675-1018
Fax: (202) 675-1010
Email: tamarg@fas.org
Website: http://fas.org/asmp/
Contact: Tamar Gabelnick, Director
Center for International Policy
1755 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Ste. 312
Washington, DC 20036
Voice: (202) 232-3317
Fax: (202) 232-3440
Email: isacson@ciponline.org
Website: http://www.ciponline.org/
Contact: Adam Isacson
Conventional Arms Transfers Project
Council for a Livable World Education Fund
110 Maryland Ave. NE, Rm. 201
Washington, DC 20002
Voice: (202) 546-0795
Fax: (202) 546-5142
Email: clw@clw.org
Website: http://www.clw.org/cat/
Contact: Erik Floden, Director
Latin America Working Group
110 Maryland Ave. NE, Box 15
Washington, DC 20002
Voice: (202) 546-7010
Fax: (202) 543-7647
Email: lawg@lawg.org
Website: http://www.lawg.org/
Contact: Joy Olson, Director
School of the Americas Watch
Box 4566
Washington, DC 20017
Voice: (202) 234-3440
Fax: (202) 636-4505
Email: info@soaw.org
Website: http://www.soaw.org/
Contact: Alison Snow, Legislative Director
Washington Office on Latin America
1630 Connecticut Ave. NW, Ste. 2
Washington, DC 20009
Voice: (202) 797-2171
Fax: (202) 797-2172
Email: wola@wola.org
Website: http://www.wola.org/
Contact: George Vickers, Director
Publications
Lora Lumpe and Jeff Donarski, The Arms Trade Revealed: A Guide for Investigators
and Activists (Washington: Federation of American Scientists, 1998). Also
available at http://www.fas.org/asmp/library/publications/revealed.htm.
Joy Olson and Adam Isacson, Just the Facts: A Citizen's Guide to U.S.
Defense and Security Assistance to Latin America and the Caribbean (Washington:
Latin America Working Group, 1998, 1999, 2001). Also available at http://www.ciponline.org/facts.
Gen. Peter Pace, Commander-in-Chief, United States Southern Command, "Posture
Statement of U.S. Southern Command," Statement before Senate Armed
Services Committee, March 27, 2001. Also available at http://www.ciponline.org/colombia/032701.htm.
Dana Priest, "A Four-Star Foreign Policy?" Washington Post,
September 28, 2000. Also available at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A31642-2000Sep27.html.
U.S. Department of Defense and U.S. Department of State, "Foreign
Military Training and DoD Engagement Activities of Interest in Fiscal
Years 1999 and 2000," Joint Report to Congress, March 1, 2000 (Washington:
March 2000). Also available at http://www.state.gov/www/global/arms/fmtrain/toc.html. |