The US Military Descends on Paraguay
by BENJAMIN DANGL
07/14/06 "The Nation" -- -- While hitchhiking across
Paraguay a few years ago, I met welcoming farmers who let me
camp in their backyards. I eventually arrived in Ciudad del
Este, known for its black markets and loose borders. Now the
city and farmers I met are caught in the crossfire of the US
military's "war on terror."
On May 26, 2005, the Paraguayan Senate
allowed US troops to train their Paraguayan counterparts
until December 2006, when the Paraguayan Senate can vote to
extend the troops' stay. The United States had threatened to cut
off millions in aid to the country if Paraguay did not grant the
troops entry. In July 2005 hundreds of US soldiers arrived with
planes, weapons and ammunition. Washington's funding for
counterterrorism efforts in Paraguay soon doubled, and protests
against the military presence hit the streets.
Some activists, military analysts and politicians in the
region believe the operations could be part of a plan to
overthrow the left-leaning government of Evo Morales in
neighboring Bolivia and take control of the area's vast gas and
water reserves. Human rights reports from Paraguay suggest the
US military presence is, at the very least, heightening tensions
in the country.
Soy and Landless
Farmers
Paraguay is the fourth-largest producer of
soy in the world. As this
industry has expanded, an estimated 90,000 poor families have
been forced off their land. Campesinos have organized protests,
road blockades and land occupations against displacement and
have faced subsequent repression from military and paramilitary
forces. According to Grupo de
Reflexion Rural (GRR), an Argentina-based organization that
documents violence against farmers, on June 24, 2005, in
Tekojoja, Paraguay, hired policemen and soy producers kicked 270
people off their land, burned down fifty-four homes, arrested
130 people and killed two.
The most recent case of this violence is the
death of Serapio Villasboa Cabrera, a member of the
Paraguayan Campesino Movement, whose body was found full of
knife wounds May 8. Cabrera was the brother of Petrona
Villasboa, who was spearheading an investigation into the death
of her son, who died from exposure to toxic chemicals used by
transgenic soy producers. According to
Servicio, Paz y Justicia
(Serpaj), an international human rights group that has a chapter
in Paraguay, one method used to force farmers off their land is
to spray toxic pesticides around communities until sickness
forces residents to leave.
GRR said Cabrera was killed by paramilitaries connected to
large landowners and soy producers, who are expanding their
holdings. The paramilitaries pursue farm leaders who are
organizing against the occupation of their land. Investigations
by Serpaj demonstrate that the worst cases of repression against
farmers have taken place in areas with the highest concentration
of US troops. Serpaj reported that in the department of San
Pedro, where five US military exercises took place, there have
been eighteen farmer deaths from repression, in an area with
many farmer organizations. In the department of Concepción there
have been eleven deaths and three US military exercises. Near
the Triple Border, where Paraguay, Brazil and Argentina meet,
there were twelve deaths and three exercises.
"The US military is advising the Paraguayan police and
military about how to deal with these farmer groups.... They are
teaching theory as well as technical skills to Paraguayan police
and military. These new forms of combat have been used
internally," Orlando Castillo of Serpaj told me over the phone.
"The US troops talk with the farmers and get to know their
leaders and which groups, organizations, are working there, then
establish the plans and actions to control the farmer movement
and advise the Paraguayan military and police on how to
proceed.... The numbers from our study show what this US
presence is doing. US troops form part of a security plan to
repress the social movement in Paraguay. A lot of repression has
happened in the name of security and against 'terrorism.' "
Tomas Palau, a Paraguayan sociologist at
BASE-IS, a Paraguayan
social research institute, and the editor of a recent book on
the militarization of Latin America, said, "The US conducts
training and classes for the Paraguayan troops. These classes
are led by North Americans, who answer to Southern Command, the
branch of the US military for South America."
Like Castillo, Palau said there is an association between the
US military presence and the increased violence against
campesinos. "They are teaching counterinsurgency classes,
preparing the Paraguayan troops to fight internal enemies," he
told me. He said it's common knowledge that the US troops and
the Paraguayan troops are conducting operations together. "All
the Paraguayan press is talking about this."
The US Embassy in Asunción rejects all claims that the US
military is linked to the increased repression against campesino
and protest groups, either through exercises or instruction. In
an e-mail response to the charges, Bruce Kleiner of the
Embassy's Office of Public Affairs writes that "the U.S.
military is not monitoring protest groups in Paraguay" and that
"the U.S. military personnel and Paraguayan armed forces have
trained together during medical readiness training exercises
(MEDRETEs) to provide humanitarian service to some of Paraguay's
most disadvantaged citizens." However, the deputy speaker of the
Paraguayan parliament, Alejandro Velazquez Ugarte, said that of
the thirteen exercises going on in the country, only two are of
a civilian nature.
According to BASE-IS, Paraguayan officials have recently used
the threat of terrorism to justify their aggression against
campesino leaders. One group, the Campesino Organization of the
North, has been accused of receiving instructions from the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), that country's
largest leftist guerrilla movement. The FARC has also been
accused of colluding in the kidnapping and murder of the
daughter of former Paraguayan President Raúl Cubas Grau last
year. A June 23 report from the Chinese news service Xinhua said
that Colombia's defense minister, Camilo Ospina, spoke with
Paraguay's attorney general, Ruben Candia, about the presence of
the FARC in Paraguay. Ospina said the FARC was consulting
organized crime groups and "giving criminals advice on
explosives" in Paraguay.
Regarding the FARC connection in Paraguay,
Paul Wolf, an international attorney in Washington who has
studied the group closely and written about it, said, "Since the
Colombian government hasn't shown any evidence or given any
names, this can't be considered as anything but war propaganda."
Linking Paraguayan campesino groups to the FARC is nothing new,
particularly since the death of Cubas's daughter. However, in an
interview with the Paraguayan newspaper La Nación, the
bishop of Concepción, Zacarias Ortiz Rolon, said, "As far as the
official interest in making believe that there is a guerrilla
group and that it is fed by the Colombian FARC, that seems a bit
suspicious to me."
The Association of Farmers of Alto Paraná (ASAGRAPA), a
campesino group near the Triple Border, reported that a local
politician offered one of the organization's leaders a sum of
money equivalent to a monthly salary, in return for which the
ASAGRAPA member was told to announce that other leaders in the
organization were building a terrorist group and receiving
training from the FARC. BASE-IS reports suggest that this type
of bribery and disinformation is part of an effort to guarantee
the "national security of the US" and "justify, continue and
expand the North American military presence."
"All of these activities coincide with the presence of the US
troops," Palau explained about the violence against farmers.
"The CIA and FBI are also working here. It's likely they are
generating these plans for fabricating lies about guerrilla and
terrorist activities. They need to find terrorists to use as an
excuse for militarization." Last October the Cuban media outlet
Prensa Latina reported that FBI director Robert Mueller arrived
in Paraguay to "check on preparations for the installation of a
permanent FBI office in Asunción...to cooperate with security
organizations to fight international crime, drug traffic and
kidnapping."
Journalist Hugo Olázar of the Argentine paper Clarín
reported last September that US troops were operating from an
air base in Mariscal Estigarribia, Paraguay. He visited the base
last year and said it had an air-traffic control tower, a
military encampment and was capable of handling large aircraft.
Though the United States denies it is operating at the base, it
used the same rhetoric when first discussing its actions in
Manta, Ecuador, which is currently home to an $80 million US
military base. The base there was first described in 1999 as an
archaic "dirt strip" used only for weather monitoring. Days
later, the Pentagon said it would be utilized for
security-related missions.
Other indications that the US military might be settling into
Paraguay come from the right-wing Paraguayan government. Current
President Nicanor Duarte Frutos is a member of the Colorado
party, which has ruled the country for more than fifty years. It
was this party that established the thirty-five-year
dictatorship of Alfredo Stroessner. Soon after his election in
2003, Duarte became the first Paraguayan president to be
received at the White House. Last August Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld flew to Paraguay. Shortly afterward, Dick Cheney
met with Paraguay's vice president.
Last year, Argentine Nobel Peace Prize laureate Adolfo Perez
Esquivel commented on the situation in Paraguay, "Once the
United States arrives, it takes it a long time to leave. And
that really frightens me."
Counterfeit Rolling Papers and Viagra
Washington has justified its military presence in Paraguay by
stating that the Triple Border area at Ciudad del Este is a base
for Islamist terrorist funding. In a June 3, 2006, Associated
Press report, Western intelligence officials, speaking
anonymously, claimed that if Iran is cornered by the United
States, it could direct the international network of the
Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah to assist in terrorist attacks.
The Justice Department has indicted nineteen people this year
for sending the profits from the sale of counterfeit rolling
papers and Viagra to Hezbollah. "Extensive operations have been
uncovered in South America," the AP article states, "where
Hezbollah is well connected to the drug trade, particularly in
the region where Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay meet."
Other claims about terrorist networks said to be operating in
the Triple Border region include a poster of
Iguaçu Falls,
a tourist destination near Ciudad del Este, discovered by US
troops on the wall of an Al Qaeda operative's home in Kabul,
Afghanistan, shortly after 9/11. Aside from this, however, the
US Southern Command and the State Department report that no
"credible information" exists confirming that "Islamic terrorist
cells are planning attacks in Latin America."
Luiz Moniz Bandeira, who holds a chair in history at the
University of Brasília and writes about US-Brazilian relations,
was quoted in the Washington Times as saying, "I wouldn't
dismiss the hypothesis that US agents plant stories in the media
about Arab terrorists in the Triple Frontier to provoke
terrorism and justify their military presence."
Throughout the cold war, the US government used the threat of
communism as an excuse for its military adventures in Latin
America. Now, as leaders such as Bolivia's Evo Morales and
Venezuela's Hugo Chávez move further outside the sphere of
Washington's interests, the United States is using another "ism"
as an alibi for its military presence. As Greg Grandin pointed
out in his article "The
Wide War," first posted on TomDispatch.com, the Pentagon now
has more resources and money directed to Latin America than the
Departments of State, Agriculture, Commerce and Treasury
combined. Before 9/11 the annual US military aid to the region
was around $400 million. It's now nearly $1 billion. Much of
this goes to training troops.
Making wild allegations about Paraguayan farmers being
terrorists is one way to justify the increased spending and
military presence in the region. "The US government is lying
about the terrorist funding in the Triple Border, just like they
did about the weapons of mass destruction in Iraq," said an
exasperated Castillo of Serpaj. Indeed, the street markets I
walked through in Ciudad del Este, and the farmers I met along
the way, seemed to pose as much of a threat to US security as a
pirated Tom Petty CD or a bottle of counterfeit whiskey.
Click on "comments" below to read or post comments -
Click Here For Comment Policy
Are Comments Offensive? Unsuitable? Email us