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The U.S. Descends on Paraguay

By Benjamin Dangl, The Nation. Posted July 20, 2006.


How a city in a small South American country became one of the centers for U.S. military and anti-terrorism funding.

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While hitchhiking across Paraguay a few years ago, I met welcoming farmers who let me camp in their backyards. I eventually arrived in Ciudad del Este, known for its black markets and loose borders. Now the city and farmers I met are caught in the crossfire of the US military's "war on terror."

On May 26, 2005, the Paraguayan Senate allowed /www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9541.htm"> US troops to train their Paraguayan counterparts until December 2006, when the Paraguayan Senate can vote to extend the troops' stay. The United States had threatened to cut off millions in aid to the country if Paraguay did not grant the troops entry. In July 2005 hundreds of US soldiers arrived with planes, weapons and ammunition. Washington's funding for counterterrorism efforts in Paraguay soon doubled, and protests against the military presence hit the streets.

Some activists, military analysts and politicians in the region believe the operations could be part of a plan to overthrow the left-leaning government of Evo Morales in neighboring Bolivia and take control of the area's vast gas and water reserves. Human rights reports from Paraguay suggest the US military presence is, at the very least, heightening tensions in the country.

Paraguay is the fourth-largest producer of soy in the world. As this industry has expanded, an estimated 90,000 poor families have been forced off their land. Campesinos have organized protests, road blockades and land occupations against displacement and have faced subsequent repression from military and paramilitary forces. According to /panna.org/resources/documents/paraguaySoyExpansion.dv.html"> the death of Serapio Villasboa Cabrera, a member of the Paraguayan Campesino Movement, whose body was found full of knife wounds May 8. Cabrera was the brother of Petrona Villasboa, who was spearheading an investigation into the death of her son, who died from exposure to toxic chemicals used by transgenic soy producers. According to Servicio, Paz y Justicia (Serpaj), an international human rights group that has a chapter in Paraguay, one method used to force farmers off their land is to spray toxic pesticides around communities until sickness forces residents to leave.

GRR said Cabrera was killed by paramilitaries connected to large landowners and soy producers, who are expanding their holdings. The paramilitaries pursue farm leaders who are organizing against the occupation of their land. Investigations by Serpaj demonstrate that the worst cases of repression against farmers have taken place in areas with the highest concentration of US troops. Serpaj reported that in the department of San Pedro, where five US military exercises took place, there have been eighteen farmer deaths from repression, in an area with many farmer organizations. In the department of Concepcion there have been eleven deaths and three US military exercises. Near the Triple Border, where Paraguay, Brazil and Argentina meet, there were twelve deaths and three exercises.

"The US military is advising the Paraguayan police and military about how to deal with these farmer groups.... They are teaching theory as well as technical skills to Paraguayan police and military. These new forms of combat have been used internally," Orlando Castillo of Serpaj told me over the phone. "The US troops talk with the farmers and get to know their leaders and which groups, organizations, are working there, then establish the plans and actions to control the farmer movement and advise the Paraguayan military and police on how to proceed.... The numbers from our study show what this US presence is doing. US troops form part of a security plan to repress the social movement in Paraguay. A lot of repression has happened in the name of security and against 'terrorism.' "


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Benjamin Dangl is the editor of Upside Down World, an online magazine uncovering activism and politics in Latin America. Email ben(at)upsidedownworld.org

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great job!
Posted by: browngoddess on Jul 20, 2006 4:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
excellent article and very disturbing too. all one has to do is look at the history of what u.s. funding to latin america has gone toward to know that "counterterrorism" funding will be no different.

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Counterfeit rolling papers are a dead give away!
Posted by: Bic Pentameter on Jul 26, 2006 7:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But we'll find other irrefutable evidence to go wherever we want.

I think we spotted somebody with a peace sign or marijuana leaf on a bumper sticker in your neighborhood just last week! Rest easy, though, we'll monitor your phone converstaions and keep you safe. It's for your protection against al-Aqsa. They could be peeking through your curtains, you know.

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selling your soul
Posted by: Dboy on Jul 26, 2006 3:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When you agree to let the US military on your soil in exchange for a small paycheck, bad things happen. Hopefully one day this planet will figure that out. US "friendship" does not come cheap. US money IS NOT WORTH IT, if it means selling out your country, culture, and independence to the fascist US.

Dboy

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Has South America shaken loose of American control? Isn't that like losing China to Mao?
Posted by: Sojourner on Jul 26, 2006 6:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Or like losing the international automobile business to Japan?

Maybe with global warming, we'll be able to grow our own bananas without needing to exploit the rest of the New World.

I believe there will be hell to pay for making the US the enemy of people all over the world. If we cannot saddle them with generals who are our puppets, there will be hell to pay in all of our markets.

We can suck on our nuclear weapons and our super carrier Ronald Reagans and continue to rear our children to join our foreign legions to go off and die in some foreign land--just as we have done for the past 100 years--but it has stopped working to our advantage.

Only by willing to die, ourselves, can we squeeze the blood from others. It is not necessary, and it was never intended to be that way. Controllers of others are crazy.

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It is all about the oil
Posted by: jackass on Jul 31, 2006 3:43 AM   
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The US oil driven war mongering is taking advantage of a small poor country centrally located to the future latin american union. The US is scared that the future of S.A. excludes them from profiting off the mass natural resources and growing technical aptitude developing there. They are scared because the majority of S.A's citizens are of a faith that believes in Jesus making it difficult to lable them as terrorists to someday justify plundering their land. Paraguay is the only country down there that is sorry enough to allow this to happen.

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