Pubdate: Sun, 09 Jul 2000 Source: Minneapolis Star-Tribune (MN) Copyright: 2000 Star Tribune Contact: 425 Portland Ave., Minneapolis MN 55488 Fax: 612-673-4359 Feedback: http://www.startribune.com/stonline/html/userguide/letform.html Website: http://www.startribune.com/ Forum: http://talk.startribune.com/cgi-bin/WebX.cgi Author: David Gonzalez, New York Times SALVADORANS BALK AT U.S. PLAN TO USE AIRPORT SAN SALVADOR, EL SALVADOR -- The United States has touched a nerve in El Salvador by seeking to set up a military logistics point for its war on drugs in a country where U.S. advisers, intelligence and money not long ago helped fuel a civil war. The Salvadoran government agreed in March to allow U.S. reconnaissance planes to use a military portion of the nation's international airport at Comalapa for refueling and maintenance as part of a regional network to monitor the routes used to smuggle drugs from South America to the United States. But the agreement has become caught up in a larger debate over the role of the military there -- both El Salvador's own and that of the United States - -- in fighting organized crime and drug trafficking in a country where murder, kidnapping and drug-related crime have become hallmarks of life since the peace accords ended the civil war eight years ago. The crime wave has increased pressures for the Salvadoran military, which for years before and during the civil war was used as a political repression force, to play a role in shoring up domestic security, something the country's new constitution forbids. At the same time, the encroaching role of the United States is seen by some as infringing on national sovereignty. Approval of the accord has been held up in the National Assembly by members of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, or FMLN, the political party of the former guerrillas who were sworn enemies of many U.S. policymakers during the 1980s, when El Salvador's civil war became part of the larger hostilities of the Cold War. Supporters of the accord say the U.S. presence now would help deter the drug trade that has increasingly relied on routes along El Salvador's Pacific coast and helped fuel an explosion in crack cocaine use and related crime. Legislators from the FMLN, who form the largest single bloc in the Assembly, say the accord turns over to the United States monitoring and enforcement tasks that rightly belong to El Salvador's own police and military. In addition, the 10-year renewable agreement, they say, is too broad and does not guarantee that the U.S. role will not grow. "To have a United States base here would be a provocation because our democracy is not yet mature," said Blanca Flor Bonilla, an FMLN legislator and member of the Foreign Affairs Committee. "The democracy we started with the peace accords is weak. There are fears in military terms." A Linchpin U.S. officials say they do not consider the facility a base, since it would not have barracks, commissaries or other features of a permanent military installation. But they acknowledge that it would be a linchpin of the U.S. government's anti-narcotics strategy after the closing last year of Howard Air Force Base in Panama, which handled in its day some 2,000 counternarcotics flights per year. Existing facilities in Ecuador, Aruba and Curacao have been used to fill the gap left by Howard's closing and have about 15 ground support personnel stationed at each, with crews and aircraft rotating through in short-term stays. U.S. officials have favored the facilities because they cost less to operate than a full base: about $18 million a year versus $75.8 million a year at Howard. And spreading the facilities over the Caribbean and Central and South America, they say, has allowed for greater coverage than when the planes flew from the single base in Panama. The new facilities, which in military parlance are known as forward operating locations, or FOLs, reflect a deeper change in U.S. relations with countries in the region. "When we had Panama, it was a crutch for us," said an administration official. "We could do whatever we wanted and not worry about working with other countries. This FOL prepares us for the reality in the region that there are problems we can no longer handle by ourselves." But seeking that aid has proved tricky in Central America, where the United States was deeply involved in trying to turn back leftist insurgencies in El Salvador, Nicaragua and Guatemala through the 1980s. Discussions with the Costa Rican government over locating a facility there failed earlier this year. Salvadoran officials offered to place a facility there, saying they wanted to contribute to regional security. But they also believed that it would help them combat their own problems of drug abuse and crime. El Salvador has seen an explosion in crack consumption over the last 15 years as traffickers started paying their Salvadoran accomplices in cocaine, rather than cash. Salvadoran authorities say seizures of cocaine have increased, including the discovery of nearly 800 pounds aboard a private plane in June. Opponents of the accord worry that it fails to specify the number of U.S. troops allowed. They also bristle at general references that allow U.S. personnel access to any government institutions needed to carry out their mission. Rodrigo Avila, the nation's former chief of police who is now a legislator, countered that the accord presented no such threat. "This is a support operation and not about war or anybody coming here with tanks," said Avila, a member of the Nationalist Republican Alliance party, or Arena. "I am not in agreement that U.S. troops should come in here and do what they want, but that is not in the spirit of the accord." U.S. officials acknowledge that the agreement is broad, but they say that it needs to be flexible in case troops have to move elsewhere quickly or need equipment or supplies not readily available there. The FMLN has indicated that it may support the agreement if changes are made and, if not, insists that it can block it. But even that is uncertain since legislators have yet to determine if the accord is a routine matter that requires a simple majority to pass or a treaty, which would need a three-quarters majority of the Congress. The FMLN has enough votes to deny a three-quarters vote, but it could not stop a simple majority. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk