Latin America
Related: About this forumThe U.S. Re-militarization of Central America and Mexico
The U.S. Re-militarization of Central America and Mexico
Jul 3 2014
Alexander Main
During his brief visit to Costa Rica in May 2013, President Obama appeared eager to downplay the U.S. regional security agenda, emphasizing instead trade relations, energy cooperation, and youth programs. So much of the focus ends up being on security, he complained during a joint press conference with his Costa Rican counterpart Laura Chinchilla. But we also have 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 dont see a brighter future ahead. Asked by a journalist about the potential use of U.S. warships to counter drug-trafficking, Obama was adamant: Im not interested in militarizing the struggle against drug trafficking.
Human rights organizations from Central America, Mexico, and the United States see the administrations regional security policy very differently. In a letter sent to Obama and the regions other presidents last year, over 145 civil society organizations 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. 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 latest round in the ramping up of U.S. security assistance to Mexico and Central America began during President George W. Bushs second term in office. Funding allocated to the regions police and military forces climbed steadily upward to levels unseen since the U.S.-backed dirty wars of the 1980s. As narco-trafficking operations shifted increasingly from the Caribbean to the Central American corridor, the United States worked with regional governments to stage a heavily militarized war on drugs in an area that had yet to fully recover from nearly two decades of war.
In 2008 the Bush Administration launched the Mérida Initiative, a cooperation agreement that provides training, equipment, and intelligence to Mexican and Central American security forces. A key model for these agreements is Plan Colombia, an $8 billion program launched in 1999 that saw the mass deployment of military troops and militarized police forces to both interdict illegal drugs and counter left-wing guerrilla groups. Plan Colombia is frequently touted as a glowing success by U.S. officials who point to statistics indicating that drug production and violence has dropped while rebel groups size and territorial reach have significantly receded. Human rights groups, however, have documented the programs widespread collateral damage, which includes the forced displacement of an estimated 5.7 million Colombians, thousands of extrajudicial killings, and continued attacks and killings targeting community activists, labor leaders, and journalists.
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http://nacla.org/news/2014/7/3/us-re-militarization-central-america-and-mexico-0