Pubdate: Fri, 15 Dec 2000 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2000 The Dallas Morning News Contact: P.O. Box 655237, Dallas, Texas 75265 Fax: (972) 263-0456 Feedback: http://dmnweb.dallasnews.com/letters/ Website: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Forum: http://forums.dallasnews.com/cgi-bin/wwwthreads.pl Author: Tod Robberson, The Dallas Morning News Bookmark: MAP'S link to Latin America items is: http://www.mapinc.org/latin.htm S. AMERICAN INSTABILITY IS TROUBLING TO ANALYSTS Political Volatility May Challenge U.S. Outreach BOGOTA, Colombia - As the United States launches a $1.3 billion program to bring Colombia's drug and insurgency problems under control, dangerous social and political trends are developing in nearby countries that threaten to turn the entire region into a tinderbox, senior U.S. officials say. These officials and some of their Latin American counterparts warn that the next U.S. administration will confront a number of serious challenges concentrated in the Andean region of South America. Most of the problems, they say, are independent of the mess that already awaits the next administration in war-racked Colombia. The military unrest and political upheaval that led to last month's ouster of President Alberto Fujimori in Peru offer only a glimpse of the problems on the horizon, U.S. and Latin American officials say. There remains a high potential for coups, armed rebellions, refugee crises and social unrest extending from Bolivia all the way to the Panama Canal. "All of these issues highlight the fact that the roots of democracy maybe aren't running as deeply as everyone thought," said a senior Pentagon official in Washington. Signs Of Discontent In the last year alone, the region has witnessed an army-backed coup and indigenous uprising in Ecuador, a military split in Peru and armed confrontation between peasant farmers and troops in Bolivia. There are increasing signs of military disgruntlement with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. There also are growing border tensions between the government of Venezuela and some of its neighbors. In Panama, business and political leaders have openly discussed the possibility of forcefully ousting President Mireya Moscoso, whose government is mired in economic problems and the growing presence of Colombian insurgents in southern Darien province. "Some of the political unrest ... is a slightly delayed reaction to all the economic difficulties in the last few years they've had down there," the Pentagon official added. "Every one of those economies is in the tank. "If you have a very strong political foundation and strong commitment to democracy, you can handle an economy that's in the tank. If you don't, then ... all bets are off." In the middle of all this, senior U.S. officials say, are signs of increasing adventurism by Cuba's Communist government and a close alliance developing between Cuban leader Fidel Castro and Mr. Chavez of Venezuela. The two governments are sharing intelligence and cooperating on security matters and have even begun offering those services to other governments interested in distancing themselves from the United States. "I think it's fair to say that we are increasingly concerned with Venezuela's behavior," said the senior Pentagon official. "My concern, and I think other folks' concern, is that Chavez is your basic 1960s-style demagogue, and Fidel Castro is his role model. Chavez is the only person in the world currently alive who is using Fidel Castro as a role model, but nevertheless, he seems to be doing that." Mr. Chavez, a former army colonel who was jailed after a failed military coup in 1992, has engineered a wholesale replacement of his country's constitution, along with the legislature, judiciary, executive branch and labor-union leadership. He has used bellicose language regarding a border dispute with neighboring Guyana, extended the declared limits of Venezuelan territorial waters beyond those recognized by other nations, and offered quasi-diplomatic status in Caracas to leaders of Colombia's biggest guerrilla group. Defending Venezuela Mr. Chavez held a news conference last week to deny accusations that Venezuela had encouraged rebellions in Ecuador and Bolivia this year. At the same time, Mr. Chavez criticized Colombian President Andres Pastrana's treatment of the guerrillas and the $7.5 billion program, Plan Colombia, aimed at dislodging the drug-trafficking network that helps fund the nation's main insurgent groups. "Does anyone think that negotiations for peace will be strengthened with more weapons, armed men and munitions?" Mr. Chavez commented last week in a public critique of Plan Colombia. He also lashed out at the Clinton administration and said he hopes the next administration "doesn't have agitators, professional liars ... as high officials." Despite repeated demands by Mr. Pastrana's government that Venezuela stop meddling in Colombia's internal affairs, Mr. Chavez has persisted. Colombia finally withdrew its ambassador to Caracas in protest last month. "Overheated rhetoric, time and time again ... is not helpful," the Pentagon official said. "Even if their actions are OK, there has been an excess in rhetoric coming out of the Venezuelan government, anti-U.S. if you will. Of course, we also watch their actual behavior ... and we are clearly concerned about their intervention or what they are up to regarding some of their neighbors, in particular Colombia." Emboldened by Venezuela's leadership role in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, and with the economy experiencing a boost from high oil prices, Mr. Chavez has assumed a more forceful position in regional affairs, even to the point of urging other nations to reject U.S. advice and military assistance. "Undoubtedly, he has created a sense of independence and independent action in Latin America that is very well-liked" by other nations in the region, a senior Andean region official said. By offering security assistance and low-priced oil sales to friendly nations, Mr. Chavez is gaining popularity at a time when the United States is trying unsuccessfully to rally support behind Plan Colombia. "So the influence of Venezuela is likely to increase as the other relationships are fostered," the official said. But the public sparring is making other nations in the region nervous, said Deputy Foreign Minister Luis Gallegos of Ecuador, who warned that the destabilizing effects of Colombia's drug and insurgency problems already are testing the nerves, if not the resources, of Colombia's neighbors. "Aside from this security issue, we have a very complex regional situation, which is not only a Colombian or Ecuadoran affair, or just an Andean affair, it is a hemispheric, regional affair," he said. The solution will not come from bellicose pronouncements, either by the United States or Venezuela, but through dialogue and cooperation, he said. Independent political analysts say that the region's turmoil and the rise of leaders such as Mr. Chavez are not entirely coincidental events. "If you look at the Andean region in particular, it's really hard to single out why so many countries are in such deep crisis all at once," said Coletta Youngers, a human rights activist and specialist in Andean political affairs. "But what you can say is that ... the heyday of the democratization and economic growth of the late '80s and early '90s is over throughout the region. "Throughout Latin America you see growing discontent with increasing economic disparities and the growing number of people living in poverty, the lack of trickle-down that would allow people to climb out of poverty," she explained. "That has led to an increasing willingness to support what I call authoritarian, populist leaders who appeal to people's frustration." Long-Term Drawbacks The promise of Mr. Chavez and Mr. Fujimori to restore order, oust corrupt officials and help the poor, Ms. Youngers said, was "very attractive in the short term, but in the long term creates very serious problems in terms of democratic consolidation. So I think the trend of the future is increasingly toward political unrest and instability and increasing threats to what had been a trend of deepening democracy." Adding to the tensions are the potential "spillover" effects that Colombia's neighbors are expecting once the U.S.-backed Colombian military unleashes two of its newly trained counternarcotics battalions next month in areas where drug-crop cultivation and guerrilla activity are prevalent. Ecuador expects thousands of refugees to cross its borders from Colombia, putting additional strains on an already cash-strapped government, Mr. Gallegos said. With U.S. assistance, the government has launched a $400 million plan to develop Ecuador's northern border region with Colombia into a manufacturing and commercial belt capable of employing Colombian refugees as well as Ecuador's jobless. "We recognize that this is more a social issue than merely one of arms," Mr. Gallegos said. Ecuador also is allowing the United States to base counternarcotics operations from a military base in the northern town of Manta. Panama, however, has consistently rejected U.S. overtures to provide military hardware, training and security assistance under Plan Colombia. Both governments say there is lingering animosity and distrust related to the decades of U.S. military presence of Panama before last year's handover of the Panama Canal. Heightened Divisions But the divisions became most apparent last month when Panama hosted a hemispheric summit, and Ms. Moscoso's government pointedly accepted security assistance from Cuba while the United States stayed away. She accepted Cuban advice to shut down traffic in various parts of Panama City, close schools and even allow Cuban agents to conduct security sweeps through apartment buildings in a five-block radius from where the summit was held, according to a source involved in planning the summit. "I always tell the Panamanians, if and when you're ready, give me a call," the senior U.S. official said. "But in the interim period, you've picked the Venezuelans and the Cubans to be your pals. I question your judgment of friends, but there you are. I don't see anything else we can do about it." Other U.S. officials say they are exasperated, especially considering that Panama has no military force and that its national police force is overwhelmed by a larger and more heavily armed force of Colombian guerrillas and paramilitary fighters based in the Darien jungle. Illegal arms bound for Colombia are flooding into the country, One U.S. official in the region warned that Panama's citizens ultimately could suffer the consequences of Ms. Moscoso's decisions to reject U.S help. "Our arrangements with Colombia do not require Panama to become involved. But Panama has to be concerned with its own security and with potential spillover, whether it's on the security side or the drug-trafficking side," the official said. "If Plan Colombia succeeds - that is, if the Colombian government succeeds in getting a handle on the problems there - there will be impact on the neighboring countries," the official said. "If Plan Colombia fails to get a handle on that problem, there will be an impact on the neighboring countries. In either case, and if Panama does not have a better fix on what its responses will be, it will go badly for Panama." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake