Pubdate: Thu, 22 Apr 1999 Source: Inside the Pentagon Page: 1 - Front Page Address: 1225 Jefferson Davis Hwy #1400, Arlington, VA. Author: Elaine M. Grossman COHEN APPROVES SOUTHCOM PLAN TO OPEN FACILITIES IN CARIBBEAN, ECUADOR Defense Secretary William Cohen on April 16 approved a plan drafted by the U.S. Southern Command to open new military operating facilities on two Caribbean islands and in Ecuador. Cohen's blessing comes as a significant setback for Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Michael Ryan, who had argued that the plan's designation of his service as "executive agent" for all three initial "forward operating locations" was unnecessary because the Air Force can accomplish its counternarcotics mission from a single site at the Dutch island of Curacao (Inside the Pentagon, April 15, p1). "The Department of Defense is fully committed to ensuring that necessary steps are taken to bring the FOLs to full operational status," Cohen wrote in last week's memo. Among the features of the plan, Cohen said, is that "the Air Force is designated 'executive agent' for the FOLs at Curacao/Aruba, and Manta, Ecuador. As such, the Air Force will develop, establish and maintain the operation of these facilities." In the end, it appeared the dye was cast for SOUTHCOM's full plan for three initial FOLs when Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Henry Shelton rejected a formal protest lodged by Ryan on April 6. The Air Force chief had told Shelton that while the JCS had discussed SOUTHCOM's plan to open the new FOLs in an April 1 meeting, the chiefs had stopped short of approving it. In Ryan's view, his service could meet all of SOUTHCOM's operational requirements for conducting the counterdrug mission -- which mainly consists of airborne reconnaissance patrols over South and Central America and the Caribbean -- using a single site at Curacao. Ryan reportedly did not object to SOUTHCOM opening other FOLs for the other services or the Customs Service to use, but he did not want to see the Air Force stuck with the whole bill. The service designated as executive agent for a particular FOL would be responsible for funding it, and the concern is great among all the services that the monies currently identified for the counterdrug mission will not cover the cost to open multiple operating sites on the Dutch islands of Curacao and Aruba, at Manta on Ecuador's Pacific coast, and possibly at Liberia, Costa Rica. In an April 16 response to Ryan, Shelton wrote that SOUTHCOM's plan for multiple FOLs is "valid considering geographic limitations, the total number of DOD and interagency aircraft incorporated into the CD [counterdrug] mission, and the footprint restrictions at each of the site options." Shelton did not address why Navy, Air Force and Customs aircraft are mixed at each location under the SOUTHCOM plan, which Ryan views as unnecessarily costly considering the savings that could be achieved by consolidating each service's infrastructure in each location. Cohen's memo says SOUTHCOM will "review and refine" the new FOL plan after the first several months of operation "to ensure an optimum combination of effectiveness and efficiency for DOD and interagency air operations," although it remains unclear how much voice the services will be accorded in this assessment. Further complicating the matter is SOUTHCOM's insistence -- adopted this week by Cohen in his own memo -- on counting Curacao and Aruba as a single FOL. The two islands are about 30 miles apart and, from the standpoint of the military operators, would reportedly require duplicate facilities. By SOUTHCOM's account, the Air Force is responsible for executive agency at only two new FOLs: Curacao/Aruba as one, and Manta as another. The Navy would be responsible for executive agency at a "third" site if an FOL is negotiated for Liberia, Costa Rica, under this framework. "The governments of the Netherlands, Ecuador, and Costa Rica will not permit positioning all CD surveillance assets in any single location," Shelton wrote to Ryan, although it did not appear Ryan had sought anything beyond consolidating Air Force assets at a single location. "Please be assured," he continued, "that regardless of the number of FOLs assigned to the services, it is my intent to maintain above-the-line funding for each site and to avoid the type of 'mission creep' that would eventually erode readiness." A SOUTHCOM advance team was to be dispatched as early as this week to one or more of the FOLs to begin preparing the sites to accept assets on an expeditionary basis from Howard Air Force Base, Panama, according to defense officials. Air operations at the Central American base will end May 1 in accordance with the 1978 Panama Canal Treaty, which demands that all U.S. forces be pulled out by the end of this year. Some details of SOUTHCOM's operational concept for the anticipated FOLs were still in limbo even as of this week, sources said, making it difficult to ascertain exactly how the transition of operations from Howard will unfold. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake