Diciembre de 2005
Por Adam Saytanides, In These Times
Rumours of an American base raise fears that the United States is there to stay
In June Paraguay's legislature gave the green light to the U.S. military for a
series of 13 joint exercises to run through December 2006.
Then the rumors began appearing in the Latin American press: The United States
was moving to establish a military base at Mariscal Estigarribia, a town in
Paraguay just 124 miles from Bolivia's southeast frontier and within easy
striking distance of Bolivian natural gas reserves, the largest in the Americas.
Anywhere from 400 to 500 U.S. troops were said to be arriving.
In late July, Brazil reportedly launched military maneuvers along the Paraguayan
border, a move seen as an __expression of Brazilian discontent with Paraguay.
More vocally, Brazil's foreign minister Celso Amorin drew a line in the sand:
"Paraguay must understand that the choice is between Mercosur and other possible
partners."
Brazil and Argentina lord over Paraguay in the Mercosur trading bloc with a
dominant import-export relationship. They don't want to see their leverage
compromised if Paraguay gains preferred access to the U.S. market for its
textiles (hinted at recently) and drops out of the Mercosur trade partnership.
But Bolivia has the most to fear from a U.S. military base in Paraguay. With
national elections slated for December 5, the Andean nation is expected to
become the next Latin American flashpoint. Since October 2003, widespread
indigenous peasant uprisings have ousted two presidents. Quechua and Aymara
Indians make up the majority of the Bolivian populace, and they're pressuring
the central government to halt the forced eradication of coca cultivation and to
nationalize the country's natural gas reserves. Evo Morales, presidential
candidate for the Movement Towards Socialism, or MAS party, made a meteoric rise
onto the international political stage by supporting these goals, in open
defiance of Washington. Considered by many analysts to be the frontrunner,
Morales' main competition is former president Jorge Quiroga Ramírez, the
preferred candidate of the United States.
Both the U.S. Embassy and Paraguayan President Nicanor Duarte Frutos
emphatically deny plans for a U.S. base.
"There have been these joint exercises since 1943," Bruce Kleiner, U.S. press
attaché in Asuncion, told In These Times. "The only difference is this time they
authorized 13 at one time, for expediency."
Kleiner says U.S. military personnel have been given no special treatment, and
no blanket immunity. The joint training exercises generally involve less than 50
personnel, and last for two weeks at a time. And he adds, "There are no U.S.
military personnel at Estigarribia, and no exercises planned there."
The hand-wringing grew more intense in August, when Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld arrived in Asuncion and met with Duarte Frutos, partly to discuss Cuba
and Venezuela's "unhelpful" and growing influence in Bolivia. As a senior
defense department official told reporters, "The challenge ... is to help the
Bolivians steer this situation to a democratic outcome."
Rumsfeld's comments fueled suspicions that the United States was making a move
to block Morales' rise to power, or at least stifle any move he might make to
nationalize gas reserves at the expense of U.S. corporations. U.S. officials
have also said that the three-borders region, where Paraguay, Brazil and
Argentina meet, is home to financiers of Islamic terrorist groups, but presented
no strong evidence to back this.
Jorge Ramon de la Quintana is a former Bolivian military officer who spent three
years in the Defense Ministry conducting political analyses of national defense
strategies. He says the confluence of all of these factors is ominous.
"I don't believe in the arguments being put forth by the Secretary of Defense or
the Embassy in Asuncion," Quintana told In These Times. "The military presence
in Paraguay reflects a series of perceived threats by U.S. Southern Command."
Quintana says the main motivation to invade Bolivia would be to stop the spread
of socialism. With Hugo Chávez enjoying broad support internationally, and
left-leaning presidents at the helm in Brazil (Lula da Silva) and Argentina
(Néstor Kirchner), Washington is finding its backyard increasingly insubordinate
and difficult to control. The last thing the State Department wants to see is
Morales, a good friend of Chávez, taking over. Strong socialist movements might
develop next in increasingly unstable Peru and Ecuador. "This is the return of
the Domino Theory," says Quintana.
But Paul Sondrol, an academic expert on Latin America at the University of
Colorado at Colorado Springs, says all this talk of impending intervention is
rubbish. "There are no designs on Bolivia's natural gas: it's an urban legend,"
he says. However, Paraguay does have a legitimate problem with outlaws in the
tri-border area. According to Sondrol, Paraguayan military officers sell
everything from weapons systems to hot Mercedes sedans on the black market here.
"Paraguay's democracy isn't stable, and it's probably getting worse," Sondrol
said. "I'd guess Paraguay is asking the U.S. to come in as much as the U.S. is
asking 'Can we send some troops down there?' "
Council on Hemisipheric Affairs Director Larry Birns, a personal acquaintance of
President Duarte, has backed off initial reports of the presence of 500 U.S.
troops. He told In These Times there are no plans at this moment to build a big
U.S. base in Paraguay, but he worried that the denials being issued sound
identical to the ones that predicated an escalation of U.S. military activity at
the airbase in Manta, Ecuador.
"Paraguay is interesting for what it could become," says Birns.
Bolivia's MAS party has been careful not to add to the chorus of shrill
protestations. "Though I have heard many things, it's important to look at this
with a cool head," says Álvaro García, Evo Morales' vice-presidential running
mate. "I've seen no evidence to suggest they have an intention of setting up a
base in Paraguay."
García says the information he's seen indicates that the airstrip at
Estigarribia lacks the support infrastructure needed to become a full-blown
military base, such as taxiways, hangars and barracks. However, he admits that
the airfield's proximity to Bolivia's natural gas reserves is "worrying."
"But what gives us greater worry is, we don't know if this is merely joint
exercises, or the beginning of establishing a greater presence or base," Garcia
said. He echoed, perhaps unwittingly, the sentiments of Argentine Nobel laureate
Adolfo Pérez Esquibel, who remarked: "Once the United States arrives, it takes a
long time to leave ...."
