El Salvador Ratchets Up its U.S. Ties
Too Close for Comfort: El Salvador Ratchets Up its U.S.
Ties
• With all of the hullabaloo focused on CAFTA, Washington is moving ahead with a new police training facility in a troubled Central American country.
• As U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice astonishes the world by repeatedly describing El Salvador as a “democracy,” she announced at this year’s Organization of American States (OAS) General Assembly in Ft. Lauderdale (June 5–7) that plans are underway to develop an International Law Enforcement Academy (ILEA) in El Salvador. The school would yearly enroll as many as 1,500 students from various hemispheric countries.
• Negotiations for the ILEA come during a period when cooperation among Central American nations on matters of national and international security is already at an all time high.
• The Salvadoran Ombudsperson for Human Rights, Dr. Beatrice de Carrillo, and the Popular Social Block (BPS), a group led by a Lutheran pastor in El Salvador, are at the head of protests against the launching of the controversial U.S. facility as well as the overall expansion of U.S. influence in the country.
• Today, El Salvador is the consummate Central American Banana Republic.
With full support coming from President Antonio
Saca’s rightist Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) -led
government, Washington is ambitiously planning for an
expanded presence in El Salvador. The State Department’s
Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement
Affairs (INL) is currently in the initial stages of
negotiating plans with Salvadoran officials to establish an
International Law Enforcement Academy (ILEA) at La Comalapa,
with the potential for additional use of an existing
Salvadoran police training headquarters in Santa Tecla. A
counterpart facility in Peru is under consideration, though
no concrete steps have yet been taken in that direction.
Establishing the ILEA in Latin America has been a crucial, longstanding State Department strategy for consolidating Washington’s influence in the western hemisphere. The ILEA in El Salvador would realize a strategy whereby the U.S. would have a variety of training instructors in Latin America, additionally featuring the Pentagon’s Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation (WHINSEC). The facility shed its former title of School of the Americas (SOA) in 2001, in a cosmetic public relations tactic aimed at separating it from an unsavory past. Unlikely enough, unless the progressive notion gains ascendancy in the current negotiations for the ILEA Latin America and guarantees the inclusion of a specific clause banning the involvement of military personnel, ARENA’s compromising agreement to host the civilian police training school in El Salvador could ultimately lead to a broadening of the school’s already 360 degree scope and have it become a new U.S. military influenced outlet. This grave possibility will become increasingly urgent as the freshly baptized military training school WHINSEC continues to decline in influence.
The ILEA Mission
ILEAs – there
are four others worldwide – have been established, usually
without great controversy, in regions where the history of
U.S. intervention has been marked by a much lower profile.
The overarching goal of the INL in establishing these police
training schools at its best is to improve transnational
cooperation on security matters, democratic rule and lawful
proceedures in any given strategic region. The State
Department’s statement of purpose proclaims that through the
ILEAs, it is seeking to “buttress democratic governance
through the rule of law; enhance the functioning of free
markets through improved legislation and law enforcement;
and increase social, political, and economic stability by
combating narcotics trafficking and crime.”
Generally, the ILEA instructors are largely part of an international task force, the curriculum is primarily developed by the U.S. and costs are shared bilaterally between the U.S. and the host nation. ILEAs use a variety of courses to train police leadership with the expectation that they will in turn go on to professionalize their forces. The first ILEA was set up in Budapest by the State Department in 1995 under President Bill Clinton, in response to a shifting geopolitical scene that saw many countries emerge from Eastern Block communism without wholly qualified security forces. The ILEA Budapest has caused few problems since its founding. In Latin America, however, the State Department’s attempt to secure a site for the ILEA has been a mounting struggle, on a hill of its own making. El Salvador’s problematic newfound openness to the institution is indicative of ARENA steering the country into increasing dependency on the U.S.
The Breadth
of Salvadoran Compliance
El Salvador showed its capacity
for harmonizing to U.S. policy goals long before entering
negotiations for the ILEA Latin America. ARENA has been
institutionalizing its compliance with Washington’s policy
initiatives in the country regardless of any resulting harm
to Salvadoran national interests or the genuine
developmental needs of its society. Dollarized since 2001,
El Salvador was the first country in Central America to
ratify the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) and
is the only Latin American nation still maintaining troops
in Iraq. Additionally, it already plays host to a U.S.
military base at La Comalapa as well as an FBI installation,
which both operate with the stated purpose of dealing with
Salvadoran youth gangs’ links to drug trafficking in the
U.S. The ILEA’s goals overlap with those of the institutions
it already has ensconced in El Salvador.
Whatever Happened
to the ILEA South?
The U.S. has had to search gingerly
to come upon a western hemisphere country that would agree
to its terms for an ILEA to be based there; strategic
considerations were largely made to defer to finding a
nation with the political will to host the institution.
After Panama rejected the project, negotiations with Costa
Rica almost came to fruition in 2002 but ultimately
foundered in what could become an extremely useful case
study for El Salvador’s critics of the ILEA. Tom Browne, an
INL official, emphasized to COHA that one reason for the
initiative’s failure was that Costa Rica “wanted a different
type [of a] curriculum, [at that time they desired] more of
a theoretical type of training than a hands on type of
training.” However, in 2002, the greatest source of discord
was the important fact that the U.S. obstinately refused to
sign a clause barring military instructors or armed forces
personnel from the program. Moreover, the U.S. was in the
process of withdrawing from the jurisdiction of the
International Criminal Court at the time and was demanding
diplomatic immunity from prosecution for the academy’s U.S.
personnel. The distribution of the ILEA’s costs was also
perceived by many Costa Ricans as being grossly unfair.
According to a June 18, 2002 U.S. State Department press release, John Danilovich, then U.S. ambassador to Costa Rica, suggested at an initial signing ceremony that the U.S. choice of Costa Rica as a host country recognized “the country’s record as a stable democracy, promoter of the rule of law, and regional model in education.” His statement reflected an awareness of the prerequisite for a U.S. police training facility abroad, which had been spelled out by the Reagan administration in a Congressional amendment to the Foreign Assistance Act (FAA). In 1974, Congress had acted favorably on provision 660 of the FAA to ban U.S. training of foreign police forces, after a controversial link between U.S. police training and human rights abuses and torture had become evident in several Latin American programs, especially in Uruguay. Even though exemptions to the ban were already being made on a case by case basis, the Reagan administration amendment lifted the ban to allow for training in any bona fide democratic country without glaring human rights violations.
In El Salvador, ARENA Glances at
the Mirror and Thinks it Sees a Shiny Costa Rica
Though
El Salvador, with its ghastly modern history and endemic
human rights violations dating back to the matanza of 1932,
hardly meets the criteria of the Reagan administration’s
amendment, it is now making boasts that it is a regional
examplar of good governance and sound policing. Its claims
are strikingly similar to those put forth in 2002 by
advocates of the ILEA in Costa Rica, as once again ARENA is
deftly using El Salvador’s alliance with Washington to
safeguard its immediate political objectives. On June 10,
the National Center for U.S. - El Salvador Sister Cities
reported Saca’s remarks that “all Salvadorans should feel
proud that the United States has chosen us” to host the
ILEA. The Center also reprinted a statement by Jaime
Francisco Vigil, Director of the Salvadoran National Public
Security Academy (ANSP), in which he suggested that the
choice of El Salvador was made, in part, because its police
force is the “most honest, nearest to the people, and is not
corrupt like in other parts of the world.” To the contrary,
during the height of the Salvadoran civil conflict, tens of
millions of dollars were passed under the table to senior
officials of the Salvadoran security forces by U.S. embassy
officials. The Salvadoran Ombudsperson for Human Rights, Dr.
Beatrice de Carrillo, serves at the head of on office which
was institutionalized at the end of the Salvadoran civil war
to monitor human rights abuses; she has written a long
report on the corruption and the poor human rights record of
the Salvadoran police force, and energetically opposes her
government’s plans for the ILEA. She thereby joins with the
denouncement of the Farabundo Martí National Liberation
Front (FMLN) as well as of the multi-organizational
Salvadoran Popular Social Block (BPS), in opposing the
ILEA.
Military Silhouettes on the Police Academy’s Horizon
In reports and off-the-record conversations, State
Department officials hem and haw as to why exacly El
Salvador was chosen for hosting the ILEA, as it is obviously
not a thriving democracy despite President Bush’s repeated
praise to the contrary. As of yet, there have not even been
token assurances, similar to the ones Danilovich ultimately
made in reference to the proposed Costa Rican academy, that
this ILEA would be “strictly civilian,” which is a promise
that should be writ in stone before Salvadoran authorities
allow the school to become concrete. While the INL likes to
involve Department of Defense (DOD) personnel in their
training activities because of their topical expertise,
there are substantive reasons to warrant safeguards against
U.S. military instruction in a civilian police training
facility. If the U.S. human rights record in police training
is poor, its military record is even worse. The detention
centers of Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib are only painfully
relevant, high profile contemporary examples of the kind of
moral quagmires that were routinely seen in El Salvador in
the 1980s, when the U.S military unremittingly complied in
boldly scrawling history with the blood of El Salvador’s
civilians. Andres Conteris, president of Non-Violence
International and long time ILEA monitor, could have been
justified in using strong language when he accused the U.S.,
in a COHA interview, of being “a known trainer in torture
technologies.”
The Civil War’s Dismal Surfacings
During
the Salvadoran civil war of 1980 – 1992, Washington backed
the government party with training and more than $6 billion
in military and economic aid in order to contain the power
and influence of the increasingly formidable Marxist FMLN. A
1993 UN Truth Commission later determined that 90 percent of
the violence that was committed during the Salvadoran war
was not by the much maligned leftist rebels, but rather by
El Salvador’s Christian Democratic government (later to be
replaced by ARENA) and associated death squads.
Additionally, the war’s most dramatic killings and incidents
of torture could all be linked to Salvadoran military
personnel trained at the paradigm of U.S. hemispheric
military training, the SOA. Two of the three implicated in
the 1980 murder of Archbishop Romero, 19 out of 27 cited by
the UN Truth Commission for complicity in the 1981 massacre
at El Mozote, and ten of the twelve responsible for the 1989
murder of six Salvadoran Jesuit priests, their housekeeper
and her teenage daughter, were trained at the SOA.
Washington initially denied that the mass executions at El
Mozote and in surrounding villages had ever taken place;
however, 500 dead bodies of civilians were ultimately
identified along with the unknown remains of hundreds more.
Truncated exhumation efforts in the main village were
sufficient to unearth the remains of at least 143 bodies and
revealed that 131 had belonged to children under the age of
12, with it being estimated that six years was the
children’s average age.
The Bedrock Argument for U.S.
Hemispheric Policy: Blanket Trust
U.S. intervention in
the Salvadoran civil war supported the Salvadoran
government’s strategy of targeting villages thought to
harbor leftist sympathizers. This in turn led to massive
displacements which eventually ignited the gang problems
which are the very dragon that the U.S. is trying to slay
today with its expanded presence in El Salvador.
Nevertheless, proponents of stepped-up military or civilian
hemispheric training efforts carry a confidence in U.S.
paternalism that is tantamount to blind conviction. In an
example that does not bode well for El Salvador, David
Kirsch reported in a 1990 Covert Action Quarterly article
the response of Elliott Abrams, then Assistant Secretary of
State for Latin American Affairs, to a question posed at a
Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing: Would cattle
prods be included in U.S. overseas police assistance to
Costa Rica? “I think that [the Costa Rican] government has
earned enough trust, as I think we have earned enough trust,
not to be questioned, frankly, about exporting torture
equipment,” he said. “But I would certainly be in favor of
giving it to them if they want it.”
A Call for
Constraints
In securing its country’s approval for the
ILEA, ARENA will likely play on national fears that any
frustrating of Washington’s demands could trigger widespread
deportations of Salvadorans living in the U.S. and result in
a ban on their vital remittances now being sent back home.
This strategy has served ARENA well in justifying CAFTA, and
it has helped ensure the necessary political support to keep
Salvadoran troops in Iraq and maintain the party’s hold on
the presidency. Partisan Washington diplomats, too, have a
history of calculatedly exacerbating Salvadoran fears with
intimidating remarks. According to a 2004 PBS report, Roger
Noriega, the Assistant Secretary of the State Department’s
Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, warned the Salvadoran
electorate that "we know the history of [the opposition
party, the FMLN], and for this reason, it is fair that the
Salvadoran people consider what type of relations a new
government could have with us" if they voted for the FMLN
during the upcoming election. In drumming up support for the
ILEA in El Salvador, Washington might well revisit this
time-tested strategy.
The State Department’s Herculean push for the Salvadoran ILEA is also particularly inappropriate as it undermines current area efforts in favor of regional autonomy. The Central American countries are showing a record level of cooperation in their own initiatives to strengthen the rule of law as well as cooperate among themselves on a range of other activities. On June 30, regional leaders met in Honduras to solidify plans for pursuing a transnational security force, create a Central American passport and establish common visa requirements. Calls for a U.S. role did not focus on increased intervention from Washington, but rather reminded the U.S. of its major role as a drug importer and consumer, and consequent responsibility to cooperate in solving the area’s narcotics problems. When COHA focused on this recent acceleration in Central America’s own security initiatives in its talk with Browne, he responded by observing that the ILEA Latin America would be useful because the curriculum being developed “covers all sorts of crime” and is a “very broad based curriculum,” and “maybe has some synergies with the other issues but it covers everything under the sun.”
The INL’s Strategy by Numbers: the “Multiplier
Effect”
With its vast curriculum and 1,500 students a
year, the ILEA Latin America will not be merely another SOA;
it will have a good deal of clout on its own. It could dwarf
WHINSEC in terms of numbers reached. WHINSEC trains only 700
to 1,000 students a year, and numerous Latin American
countries have recently stopped sending students altogether.
The State Department’s INL already has a respectable reach. For example, as Jonathan Farrar testified on May 25, 2005 before the House International Relations Committee, the INL maintains a Guatemalan Regional Anti-Narcotics Training Center that provides room for students from 12 other hemispheric countries, “organized or financed over 120 training courses” for more than 6000 Mexican law enforcement personnel in 2004 alone. The INL also prioritizes police training, with the most questionable success, in such unhinged and intractable locations as Haiti and Colombia.
However, with few constraints and with its massive impact, the ILEA would be a unique and formidable consolidation of power that would institutionalize what is now a roving lack of direction. Given the additional appearance that systematically gauging the effects of the school is of no great concern to the State Department – they are content with predicting, in Farrar’s words, that the institution will be a “way to achieve a multiplier effect for [their] investment” – it is imperative that greater oversight infiltrate the negotiation process for the ILEA Latin America.
A Proposed Rebuttal to the Planned
Academy
Given State Department officials’ insistence that
negotiations are still preliminary and that curricular
development is still underway, Vigil’s comment that the
first course will begin this July 25 appears to have been
somewhat premature. Those opposed to the ILEA have
substantial momentum and conceivably enough time in which to
influence the negotiation process in a progressive
direction. With the ILEA Latin America, Washington will
almost certainly maintain the inflexible attitude it takes
when it comes to negotiating its proposals. As Conteris put
it in describing the unraveling of the ILEA South,
Washington decided to “pick up the marbles [in Costa Rica]
and go home” rather than offer concessions to transparency
and anti-military safeguards. For the antagonists of the
ILEA Latin America, this provides some room for hope.
Opposition efforts in El Salvador to the hemispheric ILEA just might repeat previous successes in deterring the facility’s ability to strike roots in Panama, Costa Rica and El Salvador’s steamy political habitats, given the Bush Administration’s seeming inability to compromise when it comes to Latin America both on small as well as large issues. What the Salvadoran opposition must do now to succeed is press hard in its own right and at the same time capitalize on U.S. recalcitrance.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Kathryn Tarker.