Saturday, August 15, 2009
U.S. to use Colombia Military Bases...
Colombia and U.S. finalize drug interdiction deal allowing U.S. use of Colombian military bases.
The deal, worth over $40 million for Bogotá, would permit the US military to operate surveillance aircraft from seven bases to track drug-running boats in the Pacific Ocean, a US defense official said on Thursday.
"This agreement reaffirms the commitment of both parties in the fight against drug trafficking and terrorism," Colombia's foreign ministry said in a statement.
Colombia announced on July 15 that it was negotiating the deal.
Officials said the two countries agreed on the text of an agreement, which now has to be reviewed by government agencies in Bogota and Washington before getting a final signature.
But the move, coming after Ecuador refused to renew an agreement allowing the US military to fly out of Manta for the past 10 years, has drawn angry reaction from governments across Latin America.
Chavez-led attacks
Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan president, led the attack along with Rafael Correa, his Ecuadorian counterpart and ally.
Speaking in Quito, the Ecuador capital, at a recent regional summit, Chavez said he was fulfilling his "moral duty" by telling fellow leaders that the "winds of war were beginning to blow".
"This could generate a war in South America," he said.
However, Frank Mora, a U.S. defense department official for Latin America, dismissed the controversy as a tempest in a teapot.
"This agreement simply formalizes what already almost exists right now," he told the AFP news agency.
Reassurance needed
A senior US military officer said on Thursday that the US needed to reassure regional powers about the deal.
"I think we need to do a better job of explaining to them what we're doing and making it as transparent as possible, because anybody's concerns are valid," General James Cartwright, vice-chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff, said.
Cartwright and Robert Gates, the US defence secretary, also said the deal was not a unilateral move but the product of a partnership with Colombia designed to target drug cartels.
"The strategic intent is, in fact, to be able to provide to the Colombians what they need in order to continue to prosecute their efforts against the internal threats that they have," Cartwright said.
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