Pubdate: Thu, 13 Apr 2000 Source: Inside the Pentagon (US) Copyright: 2000 Inside the Pentagon Contact: 1225 Jefferson Davis Hwy #1400, Arlington, VA. Website: http://insidedefense.com/ Author: Elaine M. Grossman Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n352/a08.htm http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n173/a01.htm http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n379/a05.htm U.S. TO ESTABLISH COUNTERDRUG FORWARD OPERATING BASE IN EL SALVADOR The United States quietly signed an agreement with El Salvador last month to open a forward operating location at the international airport in the capital city of San Salvador, U.S. officials tell Inside the Pentagon. The site is to play host to U.S. military forces as they conduct counternarcotics surveillance and reconnaissance missions in the region. With the surprising new pact, El Salvador joins Ecuador and the Netherlands as host nations for U.S. forward operating locations, or FOLs, which are designed to replace the permanent basing facilities the United States maintained in Panama until last year. Under the 1978 Panama Canal Treaties, the United States pulled its last forces from Howard AFB and other facilities in Panama in December. FOLs have been set up in two Dutch Caribbean islands -- Curacao and Aruba -- and in the coastal town of Manta in Ecuador. U.S. military forces based in the United States and elsewhere rotate in and out of the FOLs as they patrol the narcotics source zone in South America, where drugs are grown and processed, and the transit zone in the Caribbean, Central America and Mexico, through which drugs are shipped to the United States. The new agreement, signed March 31, will allow the United States to use the new FOL in San Salvador for a 10-year period, a State Department official said this week. The pact is renewable for periods of five years thereafter, if desired by the two nations. That such an agreement was even under negotiation between the United States and El Salvador came as a surprise to many officials in Washington involved in or tracking the U.S. military's counternarcotics mission. The pact was reached after just two months of low-profile talks between the Salvadoran government and the U.S. State Department, supported by the U.S. Southern Command, sources said. The State Department official said the U.S. government has not formally announced the new pact, but officials there will answer reporters' questions as they arise. With the new agreement, El Salvador will become the home of SOUTHCOM's Central American FOL. Previously, SOUTHCOM Commander Gen. Charles Wilhelm had said Costa Rica may offer airfield facilities at Liberia for a Central American FOL, to be run by the U.S. Navy. But speaking "on background," U.S. defense officials consistently told ITP that Costa Rica, which disbanded its Army in 1948, had little serious interest in hosting U.S. forces, even on an expeditionary basis as the FOLs entail. Essentially, sources said, Costa Rica served as a place-holder until U.S. forces could either return to Panama under a new agreement or find another site in the region for a new FOL. Navy officials, having long ago laid out their requirements for a Central American FOL, were not heavily involved in the negotiations with El Salvador. In fact, Pentagon officials said El Salvador readily agreed to virtually every U.S. demand, such that there were few or no areas of disagreement in the talks. "We told them what we wanted and they said yes," according to one Pentagon official. The FOL will be set up at Comalapa International Airport in San Salvador, according to other Pentagon officials. The Navy will likely utilize existing facilities on the restricted military side of the airport, although it remained unclear this week whether additional U.S. military construction will be required. Officials said it also remains uncertain when Navy personnel -- just eight to 12 are likely -- will arrive in El Salvador to prepare for initial FOL operations there. First, the executive agreement must be approved by the Salvadoran legislature; U.S. officials were reluctant to estimate how long that might take. The Clinton administration will also notify the U.S. Congress about the pact, but the agreement does not require Senate ratification. Using the new FOL will not increase the number of operating hours for Navy aircraft in the region, according to one Pentagon official. However, it will enhance the service's ability to perform its mission by affording operators more valuable "on-station" time because time now spent in transit from bases in the Caribbean and South America will be eliminated. The airfield will host Navy P-3 maritime patrol aircraft, Air Force E-3 Airborne Warning and Surveillance planes, Army Airborne Reconnaissance Low aircraft and Customs Service Citation planes, according to the State Department official. - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto