Pubdate: Sat, 31 July 1999 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: Guardian Media Group 1999 Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/ Author: Julian Borger in Washington PANAMA PULLOUT PROMPTS DRUG FEARS As US forces closed the latest of a network of bases in Panama yesterday, concerns were raised in congress that the accelerating withdrawal from the central American outpost would leave dangerous holes in America's defence against drug-smuggling. The shutdown of the Fort Clayton army base marked the last main phase of troop withdrawals, and represented the latest step in the implementation of a 1977 treaty by which the US will relinquish its hold on the Panama canal by the end of this year. A US honour guard at the base wore period uniforms from 1903, when Theodore Roosevelt sent a warship to support Panama's bid for independence from Colombia in what turned out to be the start of a 96-year military presence. With US troops now leaving at the rate of more than 600 a month, a former US general and Republican congressmen called for the renegotiation of the agreement to allow some forces to remain behind to intercept traffickers crossing Panamanian airspace on their way from South American drug cartels to the US market. Gen George Joulwan, a former Nato commander who once led all US military operations in Latin America, told a congressional committee: "Panama is critical to counter-drug efforts." Critics of the withdrawal focused on the departure on May 1 from Howard air force base, from where 15,000 flights took off each year, many of them to track traffickers' planes carrying cocaine and heroin. US law forbids the military from carrying out police operations, but agencies such as the Drug Enforcement Administration rely on the army and air force for satellite pictures, radar surveillance and transport. Out of this year's military budget, $982m (pounds 615m) is set aside for anti-drug operations. The US troop presence in Panama has been scaled down from 10,200 a few years ago to about 1,000. The army's jungle warfare training centre at Fort Sherman, an electronic eavesdropping station at Galeta island, and Rodman naval station were closed in April. In November, the Stars and Stripes will be lowered for the last time over the army's Fort Kobbe, East and West Corozal bases. Democrats said the relocation of military anti-drug operations to Miami would more than compensate for the loss of the Panama bases. But a congressional report argues that the new deployment "will not replicate the mission capacity in Panama". The problems have been deepened by Venezuela's refusal to allow US surveillance planes to use its airspace. General Barry McCaffrey, the US drug tsar, said this week that smugglers were "flying over Venezuela in moonless nights at 10,000ft without changing course. They think they're safe". It is estimated that the US can now only monitor 15% of the drug-running corridor from Latin America, compared with 50% before the Panama withdrawal began. - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto