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Catherina

(35,568 posts)
Sun May 12, 2013, 06:13 PM May 2013

Obama and the Militarization of the “Drug War” in Mexico and Central America

Obama and the Militarization of the “Drug War” in Mexico and Central America

Written by Alex Main
Tuesday, 07 May 2013 15:57


Honduran soldiers exercised at Forward Operating Base Mocoron, one of three military outposts the United States is building in Honduras to help take the fight in Central America’s vicious drug war into remote, ungoverned areas that have been safe havens for narcotics traffickers. (Photo: Tomas Munita for The New York Times)

During his trip last week to Mexico and Costa Rica, President Obama sought to down play the U.S.’s security agenda in the region, emphasizing trade relations, energy cooperation and other more benign themes. In a May 3rd joint press conference with his Costa Rican counterpart Laura Chinchilla, Obama stated that it was necessary “to recognize that problems like narco-trafficking arise in part when a country is vulnerable because of poverty, because of institutions that are not working for the people, because young people don't see a brighter future ahead.” Asked by a journalist about the potential use of U.S. warships to counter drug-trafficking, Obama said “I’m not interested in militarizing the struggle against drug trafficking.”

Human rights organizations from North America and Central America have a very different impression of the administration’s regional security policy. In a letter sent to Obama and the other region’s presidents on April 30th, over 145 civil society organizations [PDF] from the U.S., Mexico and the countries of Central America called out U.S. policies that “promote militarization to address organized crime.” These policies, the letter states, have only resulted in a “dramatic surge in violent crime, often reportedly perpetrated by security forces themselves.” The letter presents a scathing indictment of the U.S.-backed so-called “war on drugs” throughout the region:


Human rights abuses against our families and communities are, in many cases, directly attributable to failed and counterproductive security policies that have militarized our societies in the name of the “war on drugs.” The deployment of our countries’ armed forces to combat organized crime and drug-trafficking, and the increasing militarization of police units, endanger already weak civilian institutions and leads to increased human rights violations.

In Mexico, the letter says, “drug-related violence and the militarized response has killed an estimated 80,000 men, women, and children in the past six years. More than 26,000 have been disappeared, and countless numbers have been wounded and traumatized.” The letter also discusses the situation in Guatemala, where violence is “reaching levels only seen during the internal armed conflict” and “controversial ‘security’ policies have placed the military back onto the streets. And, in Honduras:

Since the coup d’état that forced the elected president into exile in 2009, the rule of law has disintegrated while violence and impunity have soared. We are witnessing a resurgence of death squad tactics with targeted killings of land rights advocates, journalists, LGBT activists, lawyers, women’s rights advocates, political activists and the Garifuna’s community. Both military and police are allegedly involved in abuses and killings but are almost never brought to justice.

Though Obama claims that he has sought to avoid “militarizing the struggle against drug trafficking”, the opposite trend has been observed throughout his administration. As the "Just the Facts" database of U.S. military spending in the Western Hemisphere shows, military assistance to Central American countries has significantly increased under Obama, from $51.8 million in 2009, to $76.5 million in 2013 and an anticipated $90 million in 2014.

The U.S. sale of arms and military equipment to the region has also soared. According to a recent Associated Press investigation by Martha Mendoza , “the U.S. authorized the sale of a record $2.8 billion worth of guns, satellites, radar equipment and tear gas to Western Hemisphere nations in 2011, four times the authorized sales 10 years ago, according to the latest State Department reports.”

The presence of the U.S military in the region, and the U.S. promotion of military tactics in law enforcement, has also increased under Obama. A New York Times investigative report from May 5, 2012 described how the U.S. military had recently established forward operating bases in the remote Moskitia region of Honduras and was providing support to drug interdiction efforts. A heavily armed DEA Foreign-deployed Advisory Support Team (FAST) previously deployed in Afghanistan was conducting operations with a U.S.-trained and vetted Honduran Tactical Response Team. Six days after the article was published, FAST and TRT killed four indigenous Miskitu villagers during an early morning operation. As we showed in a report published last month jointly with Rights Action, the victims’ families continue to wait for some form of justice and compensation for the killings.

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http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/the-americas-blog/obama-and-the-militarization-of-the-drug-war-in-mexico-and-central-america & http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/05/10
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Obama and the Militarization of the “Drug War” in Mexico and Central America (Original Post) Catherina May 2013 OP
and since we're on the subject Catherina May 2013 #1
Which country was he speaking of? Flatulo May 2013 #2

Catherina

(35,568 posts)
1. and since we're on the subject
Sun May 12, 2013, 06:25 PM
May 2013

of the 16 military bases in Guatemala, 5 were scheduled to receive 'aid'. (last update March 2012)

1. PopTun, Guatemala Site of the Guatemalan Special Forces "Kaibiles" training center. In August 2009, $1.15 million in contracts funded by SouthCom and by Special Operations Command South for "SOCSO Relocatables" and "Air Base Ops Center". Renovation of Kaibiles barracks, $75,000, contracted by the Army Corps of Engineers in 2010.

2. Tecun Uman, Guatemala City, Guatemala Counter Narco-Terrorism "Ops Center/Barracks, Mait. Fac., Judicial Off.", $1 million funded by SouthCom, scheduled for July-September 2011.

3. Champerico, Guatemala Counter Narco-Terrorism "Ops Center/Barracks" and Pier, $1.75 million funded by SouthCom, scheduled for July-September 2011.

4. San Jose, Escuintla "CNT (Counter Narco-Terrorism) Maintenance Facility", unknown amount, funded by SouthCom, scheduled for October-December 2010; and "200 Meter Range", $250,000 funded by Special Operations Command South, scheduled for July-September 2011.

5. Coban, Alta Verapaz, Guatemala Site of Guatemalan army base and U.S. military-funded design and construction of "training and force protection facilities" in 2012.


Interactive map at following link with "information related to the military bases, development projects and attacks on human rights defenders." There map is a bit behind but one gets the idea.

GHRC tracks Guatemala’s increasing militarization, the continuing development of mega-proyectos around the country and the attacks on human rights defenders in the past couple of years. More precisely, GHRC has been tracking links between licenses for development projects, the establishment or support of military bases in the area, and the complaints from human rights defenders regarding mistreatment and attacks on activists and indigenous communities in the area.

http://www.ghrc-usa.org/resources/tracking-human-rights/
 

Flatulo

(5,005 posts)
2. Which country was he speaking of?
Sun May 12, 2013, 08:17 PM
May 2013
Obama stated that it was necessary “to recognize that problems like narco-trafficking arise in part when a country is vulnerable because of poverty, because of institutions that are not working for the people, because young people don't see a brighter future ahead."


Only half kidding...
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