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Today's Top News
US Military Looks to Colombia to Replace Base in Ecuador
An article by the Colombian weekly magazine Cambio suggests the U.S. military base in Manta, Ecuador, will be moved to a new location in Colombia after the U.S. military's contract with Ecuador expires in 2009. The likely new host for the U.S. base is Colombia's Palanquero air force base in Puerto Salgar, 120 miles north of Bogotá.
Cambio cites an April 22 meeting between U.S. Ambassador to Colombia William Brownfield and Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos in which the U.S. diplomat delivered some unexpected news. Brownfield told the minister the State Department had decided the Palanquero base was being "recertified." Cambio mentions "military and diplomatic circles" interpreted the decision as the first step toward establishing the new U.S. base in Palanquero.
The base had been "decertified"-barring it from receiving direct U.S. military assistance-since January 2003, when a Colombian court implicated planes from Palanquero in the 1998 bombing of a town in eastern Colombia in which 18 innocent civilians were killed. (That same year, Palanquero received $352,000 in unspecified U.S. military aid.) The Colombian military first blamed the deaths on a guerrilla car bomb, but subsequent investigations found a U.S.-made rocket-only used by the Air Force-caused the destruction.
U.S. troops at the Manta air base. (By Cambio Archives)Brownfield said the State Department's recent recertification was in response to supposed gains by the Colombian Armed Forces in respect for human rights and in the planning and execution of Air Force operations. Palanquero is equipped with advanced radar equipment installed by a U.S. team in the 1990s that played an instrumental role in the March bombing of a guerrilla camp in Ecuador that killed Raúl Reyes, a commander of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).
Latin American countries rallied around Ecuador and denounced the bombing and subsequent incursion by Colombian Special Forces. The United States was alone in lending its full support to the Colombian government's controversial decision. And now that the U.S. contract for the Manta base is set to expire, the U.S. military would naturally consider relocating the base on the soil of its most steadfast ally in the region: Colombia.
Sources from both the Colombian and U.S. governments refuse to publicly confirm or deny whether Palanquero will be the new site of the U.S. base-or even if the new base will in fact be in Colombia. "We have to look at criteria like geography, altitude, concentration of threat, etc." Brownfield said in an interview last month when asked about the base relocation. "Without a doubt, there are possibilities in Colombia. Our government could propose and the host would decide if this type of collaboration is permitted." Colombian President ÃÂlvaro Uribe similarly left the door open to the possibility: "We will continue to do everything possible to strengthen the help of the United States in the effort to defeat narcotrafficking. We have not talked about a military base, we've talked the way we always do . . . about ways to strengthen cooperation."
Manta: A South American Foothold
In U.S. military jargon, Manta is a "Forward Operating Location," later renamed a "Cooperative Security Location" (CSL) in a branding effort presumably aimed at sounding less invasive and permanent. Manta was first leased to the military by the administration of Ecuadoran President Jamal Mahuad in 1999. In 2001 alone, the U.S. military used $61.3 million from the multibillion-dollar military aid package known as Plan Colombia to revamp Manta, which remains the only full-blown U.S. CSL on the South American mainland.
Maps of Manta and Palanquero (El Tiempo)The improvements built by a local subsidiary of the ABB Susa corporation, a New Jersey military contractor, allowed the creation of a formidable war machine capable of handling some of the largest aircrafts in the U.S. arsenal. Manta currently counts on a rotating set of about 450 personnel, including agents from the military, Drug Enforcement Agency, Coast Guard and Customs Enforcement.
The 10-year agreements that regulate the lease of bases like Manta supposedly limit their use to counter-drug missions, but several press investigations and accusations by the Ecuadoran government show the base is also used for intelligence gathering and logistical support to aid the Colombian government's counter-insurgency against the FARC.
Manta has also been the subject of several scandals, including one in August 2005 when local press revealed a former U.S. operative from Manta was recruiting Ecuadoran and Colombian nationals to join mercenary operations in Iraq. The company leading the recruiting was EPI Security & Investigators, owned by Jeffrey Shippy, a former Manta employee of Dyncorp, the military contractor managing the spraying of coca fields in neighboring Colombia.
Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa has long warned he plans to not renew the lease on Manta. He famously declared he would allow the U.S. military to keep Manta under the "simple" condition that Ecuador be allowed to build a similar base in Miami. Correa's allies are even planning to write into the new Constitution a prohibition on foreign military bases. With the loss of Manta, the U.S. military not only loses a strategic piece of real estate, but also a necessary foothold for surveillance missions conducted by AWAC E3 and P-3 Orion spy aircraft.
Enter Stage Right: Palanquero
U.S. military spokespeople have also floated the idea of Peru as a potential home for the new base, which would join ranks with similar "Cooperative Security Locations" in El Salvador and in the Caribbean islands of Aruba and Curaçao-and another on Cuban soil if Guantánamo were included. A joint-report by a series of Latin America watchdog organizations based in Washington from 2007 explains: "The physical presence of U.S. military personnel throughout the hemisphere has changed substantially during the past ten years. Back in 1997, large military bases were the rule, most of them in the former Panama Canal Zone."
With the loss of these bases, including the Howard Air Force Base in Panama, the Pentagon came up with the idea of "Forward Operating Locations" or "Cooperative Security Locations" as a decentralized infrastructure that would help the military keep tabs on the region and replace the lost capacity for surveillance on drug trafficking, which had been deemed the latest "national security threat."'
U.S. Navy sailors in joint exercise with Peruvian Navy. (By US Navy)The loss of the Manta air base comes at a time when the Pentagon is beginning to reassert its military presence in Latin America and the Caribbean. The U.S. Navy, for instance, announced in April the re-establishment of its Fourth Fleet. The Fourth Fleet was created in 1943 during World War II, but was scrapped seven years later after the end of the war. Announcing its resurrection, the Navy vaguely stated the fleet was charged with conducting "varying missions including a range of contingency operations, counter narco-terrorism, and theater security cooperation activities."
The journalists at Cambio visited Palanquero and discovered that, in the eyes of U.S. military planners, it is ideally equipped like no other installation in Latin America. A much larger facility than Manta, Palanquero has enough housing for more than 2,000 people in a huge complex that includes restaurants, a supermarket, a theater, a hospital, and even a casino. And its aviation capacities are state-of-the-art for the region: two huge hangars able to accommodate between 50 and 60 planes and a runway that is 600 meters longer than Manta's. "Up to three planes can take off at a time," a military officer proudly told reporters.
The potential U.S. base is strategically located in the center of the country. The Colombian Air Force's Israeli-made Kfir fighter jets can currently reach all of the country's borders in 10 minutes. And since Palanquero lies on the banks of the Magdalena River it is even capable of receiving amphibious aircraft, Cambio reports.
Former Colombian Defense Minister Rafael Pardo Rueda (1991-94) has already stated his opposition to the possibility of a new base. "A decision of this caliber would have serious repercussions for our foreign relations," said Pardo, Colombia's first civilian defense minister. "The possible base would reinforce the opinion that the decisions of Colombia are subordinated to the North. . . . Cooperation is better under sovereign conditions, rather than having a base acting with autonomy within our borders."
If the U.S. military is indeed planning on moving into Palanquero, Colombian law would require approval of the Senate, which is currently dominated by Uribe's allies. Nonetheless, Cambio established that current security cooperation agreements between the United States and Colombia already contain the sufficient loopholes to make the move legally painless
© 2008 Venezuelanalysis.com
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21 Comments so far
Show AllUribe and his co-traitors will sign a long term lease like the one that gave Guantanamo, Cuba to the US. So, even though the people of Colombia don't want one of the empire's bases in the center of their country, there will be nothing they can do about it legally.
THE GREAT WAR FOR CIVILIZATION
The Conquest of the Andes
Colombia makes a great checkpoint between Middle and South America - divide and plunder. Colombia borders Venezuela's oil fields.
Must keep a good relationship with the premier supplier of cocaine to the US and the rest of the world. Keep that money laundered for Wall Street!
There can be no coincidence here with plans to reinstate the US military base in Columbia with the "heroic rescue of hostages" there recently. All the lavish praise from the US pentagon for the Uribe government's ability to pull off the rescue without a shot makes sense in light of the need of the Pentagon to strengthen ties with Uribe and assist in his re-election effort that has been charged with vote tampering.
Last thing the US military would want is to have is a new regime to deal with at this time when they want to have the base put back into full use. This "rescue mission" was well timed in every way politically - with John McCain conveniently visiting Columbia at the time. It's really been played up in the news here in the US. Swiss news has already revealed the plan was organized by the US who paid a $20 million ransom for the hostages.
I find this troubling that our government is continuing to meddle in Central and South America. NAFTA, corporate interests and our own government's payoffs smell of continued bad news for these countries. Here I was hoping we were going to be able to close down the School of the Americas one day soon! Doesn't look like it now! The greed for Venezuela's oil fieids nearby certainly has to have something to do with all this. Another Iraq in the next decade to come?
BTW, didn't George Bush buy some huge amount of land, around 160,000 acres, when he was on his last South American tour recently? Does anyone remember where was that purchase? Columbia?
This just in. Poland REJECTS US missle defense offer. The US remains confused and clueless as usual. Link and enjoy, it's independence day in Poland. http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080704/wl_nm/shield_poland_usa_dc
Good news sung425!
Wish more countries would assert themselves against the US imperialistic moves - like Iraq and Columbia! It might even inspire more of the US citizens to wake up before it is too late!
Suter July 4th, 2008 5:18 pm ....Paraguay........
Thanks, Willybill...
Just to allow the US military to be closer to the drugs just like Afghanistan.
Wake the hell up americano
I have always been grateful for the Philippines closing the US bases, it was a fine gift. I hope Ecuador and every other country does the same. It would be just like Christmas if our military had to stay home.
We might find we don't have to outspend the rest of the world on military toys if we stopped occupying and infiltrating every outpost and outhouse we can reach in the universe.
Why in the hell do we have to have bases anywhere, let alone Latin America?! It is an affront to Latin American sovereignty, a drain on us taxpayers and our balance of payments, and thus further devalues the dolaar. A McCain presidency would only further these disastrous policy. A President Obama must face a strong peace and justice movement that demands the end of polices that sacrifices other nations and our own at the altar of Empire.
I think an Ecuadoran "Cooperative Security Location" near Miami is a great idea.
The millions of dollars spent on the base supplies helps the local economy, and the local prostitutes always profit from a military base with boys far from home. The U.S. rightly points out all the benefits of our military bases for the host country, and its about time the U.S. gets some of those benefits in return.
Imagine the boost to the sagging American economy if this idea takes off... 40,000 German soldiers going to DisneyWorld, 35,000 Japanese soldiers on leave to Las Vegas, 50,000 Russian soldiers in the Big Apple.
Extra security, *and* a boost to the economy. It's a win-win situation.
Paraguay. Wouldn't it be sad for Senor Bush, private citizen, if Fernando Lugo decides to sign extradition treaties with the rest of the world and even the US.
How come nobody has said a word about Venezuela?
Hugo Chavez has vowed to stop the relocation of the American base to Colombia, right on the Border of Venezuela (not "in the middle of the country" as the article states.)
John C - We are talking about Venezuela!
Overkill states in the July 4th post above, "Columbia borders Venezuela's oil fields" & this article is from Venezuelanalysis.com!
That's why it is important to see the recent staged hostage rescue in light of the our government's covert mission to reopen the base in Columbia. Thus this publicity is intended to create a picture in the eyes of the world for a friendly working relationship with Columbia and a lowkey reopened military base. Hah!
Bet the natives in Palanquero haven't forgotten the 18 innocent civilian deaths in 1998 when an American Air Force bomb was found to have caused the incident. What was the US Air Force doing then anyway?
The plan is being carried out overtly now. This fake publicity is just the beginning of a closer move to the Venzuelean oil fields next!
Is it just me, or does anyone else think the timing of the wall-to-wall Bettancourt coverage sort of smells? I mean, how many women do you know who would have something to wear to a reception with the prez of France two days after being freed from 6 years of captivity in the deep Amazon?
Could there be a PR angle here?
You know because Chavez was working to release the kidnapped prisoners and even called on the FARC to give up the war and get involved in the politics in columbia, I don't buy the story we have been given so far. These prisoners who were treated apparently much better then Bush treats his, we are supposed to believe that these FARC soldiers had no communication with anyone in their command and when they saw 2 big white helicopters with unarmed crew and cameramen filming and went along with this because they were tricked? Well I think that Fidel and Chevez who wanted the release are very quiet now and I see nothing in Grandma about this big news story…
Chevez does not want a war with the USA anymore than Cuba does.
So I decided to look at some articles that you won't get on Common Dreams for more background and I think there is more to the kidnap and release story than we are being fed and it is strange that Common Dreams does not have one on it yet.
On the CIA''s continued interference in Venezuela (ALL MY LINKS SO FAR HAVE BEEN CENSORED FOR THIS COMMENT)
go to Granma.cu OUR AMERICA and read
"• EVA GOLINGER
The CIA is more active than ever in Venezuela
May 15.08
HER name and her accent are from the movies. Her manner of an incorrigible young girl, her humorous regard and ironic smile touch everyone. The daughter of a U.S. father and Venezuelan mother, Eva Golinger is a most unusual woman."
Jim
Here is the link to Eva if it gets through this time
http://www.granma.cu/INGLES/2008/mayo/juev15/19eva-i.html
Saludos desde Puerto Rico,
So glad we ran the US Navy out of Vieques, Culebra and Roosevelt Roads.
no matter how you shuffle the money, US taxpayers foot the bill. It's just about demanding a show of subservience.