|
campaigns
news
Feb 10, 2010US Missile Interceptors Planned for Romania by 2015
Feb 05, 2010Romania accepts US 'invitation' to host anti-missile shield
Feb 02, 201050 activists enter "Dal Molin" base and chain them selves to the cranes
Feb 02, 2010Blenheim Sun reports on "courageous" protests at Waihopai spy base
Jan 07, 2010Yemen to let US setup air base on its soil
Jan 07, 2010The question no US official dare ask
Jan 06, 2010 Waihopai Spybase Protest, January 22-24
Jan 06, 2010An alliance larger than one issue
Jan 05, 2010U.S. deploys fleet of interceptor missile ships to Mediterranean
Dec 09, 2009Initiative Concerning Pelindaba Treaty for African Nuclear Weapons Free Zone
Nov 14, 2009US health agency to take 'fresh look' at Vieques
Nov 14, 2009Obama lays out America’s Asia-Pacific agenda
Nov 13, 2009Pentagon urged to keep Guam better informed on Marine transfer
Nov 07, 2009US 8th Army headquarters may stay in Korea
Nov 07, 2009 USA to launch ICBM Minutman III on Nov 18 from Vandenberg Air Force Base to the Marshall Islands
Nov 05, 2009US may locate NATO missile command in Czech Republic
Nov 05, 2009US granted access to ALL Colombian airports!!
Nov 03, 2009Vicenzan citizens do inspections of new US base (Dal Molin)
Oct 30, 2009Civilian massacre 'appropriate', says German NATO general
Oct 30, 2009US missile systems stand guard in Bahrain, United Arab Emirates
Jun 02, 2009New Military Base in Colombia Would Spread Pentagon Reach Throughout Latin America
The Pentagon budget submitted to Congress on May 7, 2009 includes $46 million for development of a new U.S. military base in Palanquero, Colombia. President Obama told hemispheric leaders last month that "if our only interaction with many of these countries is drug interdiction-if our only interaction is military-then we may not be developing the connections that can over time increase our influence and have a beneficial effect." [1] Written by John Lindsay-Poland, for School Of the Americas Watch In this Obama is on point. This base would feed a failed drug policy, support an abusive army, and reinforce a tragic history of U.S. military intervention in the region. It's wrong and wasteful, and Congress should scrap it. The new facility in Palanquero, Colombia would not be limited to counter-narcotics operations, nor even to operations in the Andean region, according to an Air Mobility Command (AMC) planning document. The U.S. Southern Command (SouthCom) aims to establish a base with "air mobility reach on the South American continent" in addition to a capacity for counter-narcotics operations, through the year 2025. [2] With help from the Transportation Command and AMC, the SouthCom noted that "nearly half of the continent can be covered by a C-17 without refueling" from Palanquero. If fuel is available at its destination, "a C-17 could cover the entire continent, with the exception of the Cape Horn region," the AMC planners wrote. [3] A U.S. Embassy spokesperson in Bogota said that negotiations are not yet concluded for the base. The lease for the U.S. "Forward Operating Location" in Manta, Ecuador expires in November 2009, and Ecuador notified Washington last year that it would not renew the lease. The facility in Manta was authorized to conduct only counter-drug operations. Yet, according to military spokesmen, drug traffic in the Pacific-where aircraft from Manta patrolled-has increased in recent years. [5] U.S. forces in Manta also carried out operations to arrest undocumented Ecuadorans on boats in Ecuadoran waters. But public documentation of U.S. operations conducted from Manta does not indicate use of C-17 cargo aircraft, so their use in Palanquero apparently would represent an expanded U.S. military capacity in the region. The "mission creep" in the proposal for continent-wide operations from Colombia is also evident in President Obama's foreign aid request for Colombia. While the budget request for $508 million tacitly recognizes the failure of Plan Colombia drug policy by cutting funds for fumigation of coca crops, the White House is asking for an increase in counterinsurgency equipment and training to the Colombian Army.[6] Colombian and U.S. human rights and political leaders have objected to continued funding of the Colombian army, [7] especially after revelations that the army reportedly murdered more than 1,000 civilians and alleged they were guerrillas killed in combat, in order to increase their body count. [8] The Palanquero base itself, which houses a Colombian Air Force unit, was banned from receiving U.S. aid for five years because of its role in a 1998 attack that killed 17 civilians, including six children, from the effects of U.S.-made cluster bombs. [9] The United States resumed aid to the unit last year. Colombian Defense Ministry sources said that Colombia was attempting to obtain increases in U.S. military aid as part of the base negotiations. [10] Palanquero offers the U.S. military a sophisticated infrastructure-a 10,000-foot runway, hangars that hold more than 100 aircraft, housing for more than 2,000 men, restaurants, casinos, supermarkets, and a radar system installed by the United States itself in the 1990s. [11] Colombian activists also point out that a new base at Palanquero would reinforce the existing U.S. military presence at other bases in Colombia, such as Tres Esquinas and Tolemaida. "The militarization of Palanquero is an obstacle to effective and visionary peace initiatives such as those promoted by communities throughout the country, as well as to the humanitarian exchanges developed by Colombians for Peace," says Danilo Rueda of the Intercongregational Commission for Justice and Peace. [12] "Colombian military bases where there are foreign-especially U.S.-soldiers, provide tangible evidence that in this country there is neither sovereignty, nor autonomy, nor independence," says the Medellín Youth Network. The Palanquero base, the Youth Network says, "is the political lobby, is the payment and the legal lie so that the armed conflict generated by social inequality may be turned over to others." [13] U.S. law caps the number of uniformed U.S. soldiers operating in Colombia at 800, and the number of contractors at 600. Until last year, a significant number of them were intelligence personnel assigned to the effort to rescue three U.S. military contractors kidnapped by the leftist FARC guerrillas. With the rescue last year of the three contractors, many U.S. intelligence staff left Colombia, leaving space for soldiers to run operations in the prospective new U.S. base or bases. Former defense minister and presidential candidate Rafael Pardo opposes the base. "That the Colombian government asks for a U.S. base now would be a serious error," he says. [14]
End Notes [1]CNN, "Obama: Summit of the Americas 'productive'," 19 April, 2009, at: http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/04/19/obama.latin.america/. [2]"White Paper, Air Mobility Command, Global En Route Strategy," p. 22, preparatory document for Air Force Symposium 2009-AFRICOM, at http://www.au.af.mil/awc/africom/documents/GlobalEnRouteStrategy.pdf. [3]Ibid. [4]"Global En Route Strategy," p. 22. [5]Chris Kraul, "Cocaine Culture Creeps into Ecuador," Los Angeles Times, October 5, 2007, http://articles.latimes.com/2007/oct/05/world/fg-ecuadrugs5. [6]Adam Isacson, "First Peek at the Obama Administration's 2010 Aid Request," 7 May 2009, http://www.cipcol.org/?p=848; see also: http://www.state.gov/f/releases/iab/fy2010/index.htm. [7]In February 46 national and regional U.S. organizations urged Obama to terminate military aid to Colombia, while a letter from more than a hundred Colombian leaders urged a reformulation of policy, putting promotion of a negotiated end to the armed conflict at its center. See http://www.forcolombia.org/monthlyupdate/march2009#president. [8]Nadja Drost, "In Colombia, Suspicious Deaths," Global Post, 11 May 2009, at: http://www.globalpost.com/print/1280781. See also "426 militares han sido detenidos por ejecuciones extrajudiciales," Semana, 11 May 2009, at: http://www.semana.com/noticias-justicia/426-militares-capturados-falsos-positivos/123701.aspx. [9]Congregación Intercongregacional de Justicia y Paz, "Masacre en Santo Domingo, 13 de diciembre de 1998," at: http://justiciaypazcolombia.com/Masacre-en-Santo-Domingo-Arauca. [10]"Con traslado de base de Manta," El Tiempo, 18 April 2009, at: http://www.eltiempo.com/colombia/justicia/con-traslado-de-base-de-manta-eu-tiene-en-la-mira-varias-pistas-del-suroccidente-del-pais_4877714-1. [11]"De Manta a Palanquero?" Cambio, 2 November 2008, at: http://www.cambio.com.co/portadacambio/779/4234729-pag-2_3.html. [12]Statement by Danilo Rueda, May 2009, at: http://www.forcolombia.org/rueda. [13]Statement by Medellín Youth Network, May 2009, at: http://www.forcolombia.org/PalanqueroRed. [14]"De Manta a Palanquero?"
John Lindsay-Poland co-directs the Fellowship of Reconciliation Task Force on Latin America and the Caribbean, in Oakland, California. He can be reached at johnlp(at)igc(dot)org
comments add comment
If you have an account please login before adding a comment. login
|
|
CopyRight© 2009 No Bases. This site is an initiative from No Bases and was developped by EasyMind.
|