Fourth Fleet
Steams South
Return of
the Gunboat
By John Ross
31/07/08
"Counterpunch"
-- -- Mexico
City. -- The
resurrection
and imminent
dispatch of
the United
States
Fourth Fleet
to patrol
the coasts
of Latin
America
invokes the
bad old days
of Monroe
Doctrine
impositions
and gunboat
diplomacy
for many
citizens of
those
southern
latitudes.
This April,
the U.S.
Navy
announced
the
reactivation
of the fleet
that
historically
operated in
the south
Atlantic
during World
War II,
dueling with
Nazi
U-boats.
Activating
the Fourth
Fleet
"demonstrates
U.S.
commitment
to our
global
partners,"
Admiral Gary
Roughead
explained,
adding a
threatening
fillip: "The
Fourth Fleet
will send a
strong
signal to
all Navies
operating in
the region."
Roughead
maintains
that the
fleet's
focus will
be on drug
interdiction
and
"conducting
training
exercises"
and its
activation
is
"non-hostile."
Frank Mora,
a professor
at the U.S.
War College
in
Leavenworth
Kansas told
the Miami
Herald, he
thought the
Fleet could
be used in
"environmental
emergencies"
and to
control
"youth
gangs."
The
reactivated
flotilla
will sail in
the
strategic
area
overseen by
the U.S.
Southern
Command or
SOUTHCOM
based in
Quarry
Heights,
Panama and
is to be
homeported
at Mayport
in
Jacksonville
Florida. The
fleet is
expected to
group
together 11
war ships
homeported
at Mayport,
including an
aircraft
carrier
(reportedly
the
soon-to-be
commissioned
"U.S.S.
George H.W.
Bush") and a
nuclear
submarine.
To allay
Latin
leaders'
fears,
Undersecretary
of State for
Hemispheric
Affairs Tom
Shannon was
deployed to
South
America
during July.
The
Undersecretary's
visit to
Brazil
proved
abrasive. He
was met by
raucous
demonstrators
in Brazilia
and closely
questioned
on the floor
of the
Brazilian
Senate about
the Fourth
Fleet's
revival -
one lawmaker
recalled how
in 1964,
U.S.
ambassador
Lincoln
Gordon had
threatened
to land
marines
stationed
right off
the
Brazilian
coast if
leftist
president
Joao Goulart
did not
resign.
Ex-Brazilian
president
Jose Sarnay
warned of
U.S. Fourth
Fleet
designs on
the enormous
Tupi
deep-water
oil field
that may
hold as many
as five to
eight
billion
barrels and
could turn
Brazil into
one of the
top five
petroleum
producers on
the planet.
The U.S.
Navy
currently
operates out
of six Latin
bases -
Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba;
Quarry
Heights,
Panama;
Aruba,
Curacao;
Comalapa, El
Salvador;
Comayuga,
Honduras;
and Manta,
Ecuador -
the
last-named
about to be
shut down by
Ecuador.
Incensed by
Washington's
participation
in the March
1st bombing
of a FARC
guerrilla
camp in the
Ecuadoran
jungle -
Manta is
believed to
have
provided
logistical
support for
Colombian
helicopters
- President
Raphael
Correa has
resolved not
to renew the
U.S. lease
on that
facility
when it
expires in
2009. An
educated
guess has
the base
being
relocated to
La Guajira,
Colombia
close to the
Venezuelan
border which
will not
make Hugo
Chavez
happy.
Those
attentive to
Latin
American
history do
not view the
U.S. Fourth
Fleet's
intentions
as
"non-hostile."
U.S. Naval
blockades of
Cuba in 1963
during the
Soviet-American
missile
crisis and
of
revolutionary
Mexico in
1914, stir
bitter
memories.
The U.S.
Navy turned
the
Caribbean
into an
"American
lake" from
1914 through
the late
1920s,
parking its
fleet in
Santo
Domingo and
repeatedly
invading
Nicaragua.
U.S. Navy
flotillas
land troops
on sovereign
soil, their
long guns
take out
distant
targets, and
bombing
raids and
reconnaissance
flights are
launched
from
aircraft
carriers.
Just the
presence of
the Fourth
Fleet in
Latin
American
waters
smacks of
strategic
intimidation.
From
Brazilia,
Undersecretary
Shannon flew
south to
Buenos Aires
to deliver
the good
news that
the Fourth
Fleet would
not enter
Argentina's
territorial
waters or
inland
rivers
"without
being
invited."
Shannon's
timing was
impeccable.
President
Cristina
Fernandez de
Kirchner's
six
month-old
regime,
which has
been roiled
by months of
mobilizations
led by big
soybean
farmers, was
on maximum
alert - the
"soyeros"
have blocked
the nation's
highways
since last
January
after
Fernandez
tacked a 15
per cent tax
on exports
in order to
finance
programs for
the poor.
Bi-lateral
relations
between
Washington
and Buenos
Aires have
been in the
tank since
the U.S.
charged
supposed
bagmen for
Venezuelan
president
Hugo Chavez
with
financing
Fernandez's
campaign.
The
so-called
scandal of
the "Maletas"
($800,000
USD was
alleged to
have been
smuggled
into
Argentina in
a suitcase
or "maleta")
is a
scenario
that Queen
Cristina (as
she is
taunted by
political
opponents)
labels
"garbage."
Writing in
the Mexican
daily La
Jornada,
left Latin
American
analyst Raul
Zebichi
concludes
that
Shannon's
voyage to
Buenos Aires
to sell the
Fourth Fleet
to Fernandez
during the
soyero
crisis
amounted to
"deliberate
destabilization."
The sailing
of the
Fourth Fleet
is "naked
aggression
by
Washington
to regain
its
hegemony" on
a continent
where U.S.
influence
has been
impressively
diminished
by the
serial
victories of
the Latin
American
electoral
left.
Undersecretary
Shannon then
moved on to
Bolivia
where that
majority
indigenous
Andean
nation's
president
Evo Morales
is viewed by
Washington
as one of
the
ringleaders
of the
anti-American
wave
sweeping the
southern
continent.
Bolivia is
not a target
for the U.S.
Fourth
Fleet,
having lost
its access
to the ocean
in the Guano
War of the
late 19th
century.
Nonetheless,
Morales
denounced
U.S.
ambassador
Phillip
Goldberg's
support of
the
right-wing
"autonomy"
movement
that is
promoting
the
secession of
five
Bolivian
provinces,
reading
Shannon
e-mails sent
by U.S. AID
officials to
Bolivian
citizens
threatening
aid cut-offs
if they
continued to
support his
government.
Only in
Colombia,
the first
stop of
Shannon's
checkered
journey, did
he find some
satisfaction.
Touching
down soon
after the
immaculately
scripted
"rescue" of
Ingrid
Betancourt
and 14
hostages
held by the
weakened
FARC
guerrilla
army, Tom
Shannon laid
on the
blarney. The
Fourth
Fleet's
intentions
were
honorable
and
"non-hostile."
The war
ships will
safeguard
commercial
shipping
lanes and
provide
additional
drug
interdiction.
It didn't
take much
effort to
sell
President
Alvaro Uribe,
George
Bush's top
flunky in
Latin
America, on
the idea.
Uribe even
offered
Barranquilla
as a
homeport
away from
home for
U.S. war
ships.
Fourth Fleet
deployment
to Colombia
will provide
much needed
backup for
Washington's
anti-drug,
War on
Terror Plan
Colombia, a
$6,000,000,000
boondoggle
that has
succeeded in
expanding
the nation's
cocaine
acreage by
27 per cent
in 2007.
If Uribe was
supportive
of the
Fourth
Fleet's
reactivation,
Venezuela's
Hugo Chavez
was
decidedly
not,
declaring
the move to
be "an act
of war" and
fretting
about Yanqui
sabotage of
offshore
oilfields.
In the
Caribbean,
Fidel
Castro, an
82 year-old
columnist
for a Cuban
communist
youth paper,
sneered that
the Fourth
Fleet is
"the
flotilla of
intervention".
Castro has
had first
hand
experience
with U.S.
Naval
blockades.
One
immediate
response of
Latin
America's
leftist
leaders to
Washington's
unilateral
revival of
the fleet
has been the
formation of
UNASUR, a
12-nation
mutual
security
pact that
pointedly
excludes the
U.S.
Spearheaded
by Brazil,
the
continent's
economic
powerhouse,
UNASUR seems
designed to
boost
Brazilian
armament
industry
sales as
much as to
stave off
U.S. stabs
to
reestablish
its hegemony
over Latin
America.
Mexico,
which is
banking on
deep-water
oilfields in
the Gulf (an
area under
Fourth Fleet
purview) to
revive its
sinking
reserves,
does not
seem alarmed
about the
war ships on
the eastern
horizon -
despite the
rather
touchy
dispute over
whether
Mexico or
the U.S. has
title to
those
deep-water
tracts. The
U.S. Navy
trains
Mexico's
Navy and
supplies it
with
state-of-the-art
weaponry.
Under the
Merida
Initiative,
sometimes
tagged Plan
Mexico, the
Mexican Navy
is slated to
receive
Orion
tracking
planes and
souped-up
interdiction
craft, part
of the
$1,400.000,000
USD war
chest to
rearm
Mexico's
security
apparatus -
despite its
reputation
as one of
the worst
human rights
abusers in
the
Americas.
Equipment
received via
the Merida
Initiative,
actually a
hefty
subsidy to
U.S. defense
contractors,
will forge
what
Uruguayan
political
writer
Carlos Fazio
dubs "the
third link"
by which the
Mexican
security
apparatus is
annexed to
Washington.
Indeed, just
the need for
spare parts
will tie the
Mexican
military to
the Pentagon
for the life
of the
planes,
helicopters,
swift boats,
and
transport
carriers
Plan Mexico
will buy.
Actually,
the Merida
Initiative,
born in the
Yucatan city
of that name
in a surge
of
enthusiasm
during
Bush's first
encounter
with
Mexico's
Felipe
Calderon in
2007, almost
didn't make
it to the
wire. When
the U.S.
Senate,
urged on by
Vermont's
Patrick
Leahy, voted
to impose
human rights
oversight on
the package,
Mexico
almost
backed out,
accusing
Washington
of
interfering
in its
domestic
affairs.
The Senate
bill would
have
mandated
civilian
trials for
Mexican
military
personnel
accused of
human rights
violation
and would
have
strengthened
the hand of
non-government
human rights
organizations
to watchdog
how Merida
Initiative
equipment
was used.
The measure
would also
have pressed
for an
investigation
into the
2006 murder
of
independent
U.S.
journalist
Brad Will by
Oaxaca
security
forces -
indeed, the
human rights
components
of Plan
Mexico were
largely due
to the
persistence
of Brad's
friends who
were
sometimes
escorted
from
congressional
hearings for
vehemently
pushing
their case.
The bill's
human rights
provisions
were
rejected by
all three
sides of
Mexico's
political
spectrum.
Legislators
compared the
call for
compliance
with the
odious
"certification"
process by
which the
U.S.
Congress
"certified"
Mexico's
cooperation
in
Washington's
Drug War
each year
through the
mid-1990s, a
source of
much
distrust.
But Mexican
politicos
were not
alone in
their
contempt for
the new Plan
Mexico -
Bush White
House drug
czar John
Waters
accused
Leahy and
his
Democratic
cohorts of
"sabotaging"
the
agreement,
and Homeland
Security
chieftain
Michael
Chertoff
warned that
the human
rights
provisions
were
"unacceptable."
The Senate
bill was
sent back to
Congress for
rectification
but
reemerged
with an
almost
identical
text - even
the call for
resolving
Brad's
murder was
left intact.
Yet in the
magic
realist
mindset that
passes for
politics
here,
President
Calderon,
his Interior
Secretary
Juan Camilo
Mourino, and
Foreign
Minister
Patricia
Espinosa
chose not to
acknowledge
the
unreconstructed
language and
signed off
on the
grant.
Espinosa
made much of
the
affirmation
that no U.S.
soldier will
set foot on
Mexican soil
as the
result of
the Merida
Initiative -
a phenomenon
never
contemplated
by the
agreement in
the first
place.
George Bush
signed the
Merida
Initiative
into law
June 30 and
in mid-July
Chertoff
flew into
Mexico City
for
discussions
on
implementation
and to
"evaluate
eventual
risks to
mutual
security."
Oddly, the
day the
Homeland
Security
boss went
home, the
U.S. Drug
Enforcement
Administration
leaked an
intriguing
story to the
daily El
Universal:
Mexican drug
war troops
had
discovered a
car bomb
factory in
Culiacan,
Sinaloa,
where a
bloody
battle
between
cartels has
taken over
500 lives
since the
first of the
year. The
DEA
suspected
that the
Sinaloa
cartels' hit
men were
being sent
through
Chavez's
Venezuela
(where
else?) to
Iran (where
else?) for
advanced
terrorist
training.
Preposterous?
Under
current
security
arrangements,
the Iran
gambit could
become a
pretext for
the U.S.
military
occupation
of Mexico,
which on the
face of it
is of course
highly
unlikely.
But Plan
Mexico folds
into the
ASPAN - the
North
American
Agreement on
Security and
Prosperity,
a sort of
security and
energy
NAFTA. Much
as NAFTA was
aimed at
integrating
the
economies of
its three
member
nations,
ASPAN
proposes to
integrate
security and
energy
structures -
a goal
greatly
advanced by
Plan Mexico.
In addition
to ASPAN,
Mexico has
been
designated
the U.S.'s
southern
security
perimeter by
NORCOM, the
United
States
Northern
Command,
which is
responsible
for keeping
terrorists
out of North
America. The
suggestion
that
Iran-trained
terrorists
are
car-bombing
a few
hundred
miles south
of the
border could
have the
stealth
bombers on
the runways
at NORCOM
headquarters
in a
hollowed-out
mountain in
Colorado in
a jiffy.
Foreign
minister
Espinosa's
affirmation
that Plan
Mexico will
not land
U.S. troops
on Mexican
shores flies
in the face
of the
facts. Since
2006, the
Yanks have
offered at
least 60
training
courses to
Mexican army
and navy
troops
inside
Mexico - 700
Mexicans are
trained in
the United
States at
the Center
for
Strategic
Forces in
Fort Bragg
North
Carolina
under the
provisions
of the IMET
program.
U.S. Naval
trainers
offer
courses at
Veracruz on
the Gulf
Coast and
Manzanillo
on the
Pacific.
But the
physical
presence of
U.S.
military
personnel on
the ground
here is
mooted by
the
Pentagon's
reliance on
civilian
mercenaries.
SY Coleman,
which
advertises
itself as "a
warrior in
the global
war on
terror" on
its web
page, has
been
recruiting
pilots "with
experience
in
international
military
conflicts"
to fly
reconnaissance
over
Mexico's
Caribbean
off-shore
platforms,
an inviting
terrorist
target.
Blackwater
WorldWide
just opened
its western
training
facilities
in a huge
warehouse
several
hundred
yards from
the U.S. -
Mexican
border on
the Otay
Mesa in San
Diego, and
in July
provided
security for
John McCain
on a Mexico
City
campaign
stopover
according to
knowledgeable
sources,
that
notorious
mercenary
army's first
known
sighting
inside
Mexico.
Blackwater
has recently
been awarded
big boodle
Department
of Defense
drug war
contracts
and appears
to be
bulking up
to challenge
DynCorps
which holds
the
franchise on
privatizing
Washington's
War on Drugs
in Latin
America.
With the
Yanquis'
Fourth Fleet
working
Latin
America's
Atlantic
coast, the
United
States Coast
Guard
patrols its
Pacific
flank.
During the
last week in
July, the
Coast Guard
and the
Mexican Navy
found
themselves
under
submarine
attack - a
36-foot
submergible
with five
tons of
Colombian
cocaine
aboard was
spotted by
the
Americanos'
radar 100
miles off
Oaxaca and
towed to
port where
the crew was
jailed.
In addition
to cocaine,
Pacific
shipping
lanes are
also
important to
liquid
natural gas
tankers,
another
inviting
terrorist
target,
operating
under
contracts
with Spanish
energy titan
REPSOL
between Peru
and LNG
terminals in
Manzanillo
in southern
Mexico and
the Sempra
Corporation's
Ensenada
facility
hard by the
U.S. border.
In fact, the
Ensenada
terminal,
which
provides San
Diego with
energy, was
to have been
located in
that U.S.
port city
but fears
the plant
could be
taken out by
terrorists
moved it to
Mexico.
Deploying
the U.S.
Pacific
Fleet, which
is
homeported
in San
Diego, to
Latin
America's
west coast,
is surely
being
weighed by
Navy brass.
What does
presumptive
President
Barack Obama
think about
all this
updated
gunboat
diplomacy?
The only
clue voters
have as to
Obama's
Latin
policies was
a speech he
delivered
months ago
to win the
hearts and
minds of the
gusano-laced
Cuban
American
National
Foundation
in Miami in
which
platitudes
were a dime
a dozen - no
end to the
Cuban
embargo,
Hugo Chavez
was
"dangerous",
Colombia's
Uribe a
"democratic
hero." Given
this
repertoire
it doesn't
sound like
much is
going to
change when
Obama takes
the helm of
state. All
the pieces
are in place
- Plan
Mexico, Plan
Colombia,
ASPAN,
SOUTHCOM,
NORCOM, and
NAFTA - to
keep the
Consensus of
Washington
thriving
during an
Obama
presidency.
"What's good
for Latin
America is
good for the
United
States of
America" the
presumptive
president
told the
gusanos in
Miami,
failing to
annunciate
the other
half of the
equation:
what's good
for the
United
States is
usually very
bad for
Latin
America.
John Ross is
in the heat
of the first
draft of "El
Monstruo -
Tales of
Dread &
Redemption
In The Most
Monstrous
Megalopolis
On Planet
Earth".
Write
johnross@igc.org
