U.S.-Panama Policy:
Canal, Bases, and Dollars
Volume 1, Number 14
November 1996
Written by John Lindsay-Poland, Fellowship of Reconciliation.
Editors: Tom Barry (IRC) and Martha
Honey (IPS)
Key Problems
- The U.S. and Panama have convergent interests in safe and efficient
interoceanic commerce.
- Though the Panama Canal Treaties clearly specify the removal of all
U.S. troops and bases by the turn of the century, the retention of some
U.S. military presence in the canal area is under discussion.
- Although the canal is not owned or operated by the U.S. military,
the Pentagon has always had a role in canal policy.
A history of mutual dependence underlies U.S.-Panama foreign policy and
accounts for the patterns of dominance and dependence in bilateral relations.
The two nations have convergent interests in safe, efficient commerce
across the isthmus. For the U.S., this results from its status as the
main user of the Panama Canal; for Panama, it is because half its population
lives on the canals banks, and the canal generates economic benefits.
The U.S. has also depended on Panama as a base for hemispheric military
operations. Although the canal was the initial reason for the special
U.S. attention to Panama, the selection in 1941 of the canal zone as headquarters
for the U.S. Southern Command (SouthCom, previously the Caribbean Command)
sharpened U.S. interest in Panamanian affairs.
Due to the power differential between the U.S. military and economic
empire and the small nation of Panama, colonialist attitudes have often
characterized policy discussions and obstructed rational decisionmaking.
The enduring impact of the 1989 U.S. invasion of Panama should not be
underestimated in considering future U.S.-Panama policy. The invasion
was the twentieth U.S. military intervention in this nation of 2.5 million
people and easily the most violent event in Panamas history.
Despite the increasing importance of air transport and the rise of other
major trading nations, the U.S. remains the canals primary user.
One-eighth of all U.S. seaborne traffic passes through the locks. Its
economic utility for the U.S. is in making interoceanic trade cheaper
for U.S. shippers and tradersin effect subsidizing the U.S. shipping
industry and its exports.
The Panama Canal Treaties of 1977 specified that the U.S. transfer canal
operations to Panama and terminate its military presence by December 31,
1999. Moreover, the Canal Treaties require that the locks be turned over
to Panamanian authorities free of all debts and encumbrances. A recent
audit of the Panama Canal Commission found that the commission had deferred
$890 million worth of maintenancework needed to ensure the seaways
safety and efficient operation.
Although the canal is not owned or operated by the U.S. military, the
Pentagon has always had a role in canal policy. The U.S. army supervised
the construction of the seaway from 1904 to 1914, and the Panama Canal
Commissions Board of Directors is, by law, chaired by the Assistant
Secretary of the U.S. Army, who retains the right to dictate the votes
of the boards U.S. majority. Except for an interlude during the
Carter administration, when the White House and the State Department assumed
a more prominent role, the Pentagon has been the main powerbroker in U.S.-Panama
policy.
SouthCom, one of the Pentagons regional commands, has used its
16 military bases in Panama to coordinate all U.S. military relations
with the countries of the Caribbean Basin and South America. The Pentagon
has begun to scale down its presence, and it plans to transfer SouthCom
headquarters to Miami in 1997. Although on a much reduced scale, U.S.
military units based in Panama still provide some training for Latin American
and Caribbean armed forces. About 6,500 U.S. troops remain in Panama,
monitoring Latin American airspace for unauthorized planes and training
troops in jungle combat.
Despite the treaties that clearly specify the removal of all U.S. troops
and bases, the retention of some U.S. military presence in the canal area
is being discussed by both U.S. and Panamanian policymakers. In the U.S.
Senate, a resolution sponsored by conservative Jesse Helms has called
for a new agreement that would permit the U.S. to retain its military
presence in Panama. The Pentagon, however, acknowledges that the bases
are not essential to either U.S. military or narcotics control strategy.
The militarys willingness to close the Panamanian bases has been
reinforced by the closure of military bases at home, increasing the reluctance
of the Pentagon to pay for a post-1999 military presence in Panamaat
an estimated cost of $200 million a year.
Problems with Current U.S. Policy
Key Problems
- Military bases in Panama serve as a platform for intervention.
- U.S. policy goals face a contradiction between the desire to promote
a high volume of unimpeded commerce and the mechanisms needed to reduce
the profitable drug trade.
- U.S. policy has failed to address clean-up of toxic and dangerous
substances left by decades of military activity.
In March 1995 the DOD identified three post-1999 activities for U.S.
bases in Panama: counterdrug operations, jungle combat training, and civic
action programs such as road building and short-term medical missions.
In October 1996 SouthCom gave its blessing to a Panamanian proposal to
establish a multinational counternarcotics center at Howard Air Base using
the same surveillance equipment now owned and operated by U.S. agents
and troops. This proposal, however, has garnered only lukewarm support
from other nations in the region, who are concerned that such a multilateral
operation would be a mere fig leaf shrouding continued U.S. control of
counterdrug policy and operations in the hemisphere.
SouthComs military bases in Panama have long served as a platform
for intervention in the internal affairs of Latin American nations. In
1989 SouthCom coordinated the U.S. military invasion and occupation of
Panama, resulting in the deaths of hundreds of Panamanian civilians. It
would be unimaginative for the U.S. to stake its future relations with
Panama on military bases, thereby leaving the lead role to the Defense
Department.
Furthermore, the missions suggested for the remaining U.S. military presence
in Panama, namely the war on drugs and jungle combat training, reflect
more profound policy problems. The Defense Department has spent billions
of dollars to interdict drug shipments in Latin America, yet the
street price and availability of cocaine in the United States have not
been demonstrably affected, as former SouthCom chief Barry McCaffreynow
U.S. drug czarhas testified. Reneging on the Canal Treaties
provision for withdrawal in order to continue jungle combat training would
continue the U.S. militarys inclination toward overseas intervention.
Compounding these problems, the reasons many Panamanians are interested
in keeping some U.S. bases have nothing to do with U.S. defense of democracy
or the fight against drugtrafficking, but rather with a perceived dependence
on military dollars and with concern for the countrys persistently
high unemployment. Increasingly, Panamanians view the bases as potential
sites for civilian development.
As a corollary to the arrogance apparent in U.S. policy regarding canal
protection and domestic security in Panama, the U.S. has historically
distrusted Panamas ability to police itself. The Defense Department
acknowledges that the canal is indefensible against sabotage, whether
or not U.S. bases remain in Panama. Washington, however, still groomed
the Panamanian Defense Forces (PDF) as the leading protagonists in the
projected transition of the canal area, and the U.S. used the PDF as an
ally in the regional wars of the 1980s. After the invasion in 1989 (which
dismantled the PDF), the fledgling Panamanian government constitutionally
abolished the army and created a new National Police.
Unfortunately, the U.S. has helped militarize the new National Air Service
by supplying it with helicopters and other military equipment, nominally
to fight the drug war. Although the U.S. embassy in Panama recently declared
that coca leaf production in Panamas Darién jungle region
has been eradicated, the helicopter gifts overshadow the meager $250,000
U.S. program to aid Panama in drug education and prevention.
U.S. drug policy in Panama faces a fundamental contradiction between
promoting a high volume of unimpeded commercewhich the U.S. and
Panama embraceand introducing mechanisms needed to reduce the profitable
drug trade. As long as the underlying incentives for the narcotics industry
are in place, Panamaa crossroads for trade of all kindswill
continue to be a transit zone for such contraband.
Panama has a high incidence of domestic cocaine use, and the economic
and social policies promoted by the U.S. through multilateral lenders
only compound the causes of drug abuse and trafficking, both of which
are linked to public health problems and economic inequities. Health issues
and unemployment, in turn, are exacerbated by privatization and other
economic adjustment measures that have eroded Panamas socioeconomic
standards.
U.S. economic aid programs in Panama, reduced drastically from their
post-invasion peak in 1991, are focused on protecting the canal watershed
in order to prevent deforestation from silting the canal and making it
less efficient. U.S. concern about protecting the canal watershed is laudable,
but by leaving decision-making to SouthComs discretion, Washington
has essentially ignored the problem of toxic and dangerous substances
left by decades of military activity in Panama. For example, unexploded
ordnance left on firing ranges has exploded, injuring and even killing
Panamanian children and farmers. The Canal Treaties require the U.S. to
make an effort to remove hazards to human health and safety from its military
sites. Relations between the two countries will be recklessly undermined
if future generations of Panamanians find their health and safety compromised
by the dangerous materials that the U.S. military left behind.
Toward a New Foreign Policy
Key Recomendations
- Assist Panama in effecting the transition of former military areas
to civilian control.
- Publicly renounce any new military base agreement with Panama.
- Commit to full maintenance of the canal through 1999, when it transfers
to Panamanian control.
- Commit to the polluter pays principle on firing ranges and other
U.S. military bases with hazards in Panama.
U.S. respect for and implementation of the spirit and letter of the Panama
Canal Treaties represent a chance to establish a new pattern of U.S.-Panama
relations. The principles of mutual respect and fair exchange should shape
this new era of bilateral relations.
A strong first step would be for the State Department and the Defense
Department to publicly refuse to enter into a new military base agreement
with Panama. Any agreement that would maintain U.S. military bases in
Panama is inappropriate both to the post-cold war world and to U.S. priorities
in an era of increased fiscal constraints. The U.S. government should
reject previous attitudes that regarded Panama as a launching pad. Instead,
Panama should be regarded as a sovereign nation with its own interests,
which Panamanians themselves must develop and protect.
Rather than continuing the patterns of past policies, the U.S. should
assist Panama in making the transition to civilian control and development
of former military zones. The land occupied by the bases is in the heart
of Panama's economic and population centers and could be put to more productive
use. For a fraction of what it costs to maintain these bases, the U.S.
could help Panama create sustainable, community-led development. Panama's
Regional Interoceanic Authority estimates that civilian economic activities
on the converted bases could spawn as many as 100,000 jobs--more than
6 times the direct and indirect employment currently generated by the
bases.
U.S. interest in stemming the contraband drug economy and drug abuse
would be best served by promoting equitable economic development in Panama.
Such a focus would include incentives for the creation of skilled jobs
for Panama's educated labor force, as well as resources to enable Panama's
burdened public health system to deal with issues that the private health
sector is ill-equipped to address.
Specifically, we recommend:
- The U.S. must fully implement the Canal Treaties. To honor these
agreements and to ensure that the canal remains an efficient channel
for interoceanic transport, the U.S. must increase its commitment to
maintenance. Solutions to the problem of the ongoing maintenance may
be found through such bilateral forums as the Joint Committee overseeing
the transition and through such multilateral forums as the Inter-American
Development Bank and the 1997 Canal Congress.
- The U.S., through the Agency for International Development (AID)
or the Pentagon's Office of Economic Adjustment, should provide support
to community-based enterprises that are planning the development of
transferred military areas.
- The U.S. must refrain from selling military equipment to Panama,
out of respect for Panama's wishes to abolish its armed services.
- The U.S. should commit itself to the polluter pays principle in Panama.
Where hazards to human health and safety are found, the U.S. should
remove the dangerous substances in close consultation with affected
local communities and agencies. In addition, the U.S. should commit
to sharing the cost of clean-up technology for use after the transfer
of its bases to Panama, especially for unexploded munitions on U.S.
firing ranges. An explicit agreement to make future cleanup technology
available to Panama--even after military bases are closed--is needed.
- The U.S. should release to Panama all information pertaining to the
presence of hazardous substances or relating to U.S. military activities
that have affected the canal zone's environment. Without such information,
Panama cannot successfully plan for future development of the zone.
- Washington should acknowledge past violations of human rights and
international law in Panama, and make a new commitment to human rights
and justice, particularly with respect to the victims of the 1989 military
invasion. The principles of international law require indemnification
for the suffering and devastation resulting from Washington's extraterritorial
aggression. At the very least, the U.S. should agree to abide by the
verdict of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, which is now considering
claims by civilian victims of the U.S. military invasion.
Sources for more information
World Wide Web
Fellowship of Reconciliation (Panamá Update and other FOR
reports on Panama)
http://www.nonviolence.org/~nvweb/for/panama/
La Prensa de Panamá (Daily news from Panama)
http://www.gbm.net/prensa/
Panama Canal Commission
http://www.pananet.com/pancanal/
U.S. State Department (Country Reports on Human Rights Practices)
http://dosfan.lib.uic.edu/dosfan/
Organizations
Fellowship of Reconciliation
995 Market Street, #801
San Francisco, CA 94103
Voice: (415) 495-6334
Fax: (415) 495-5628
Email: forlatam@igc.org
Center for Constitutional Rights
(represents victims of U.S. invasion before Inter-American Court of Human
Rights)
666 Broadway, 7th Floor
New York City, NY 10012
Voice: (212) 614-6464
Fax: (212) 614-6499
Panama Canal Commission
International Square
1825 I Street NW, #1050
Washington, DC 20006-5402
Voice: (202) 634-6441
EPICA
Wilson Center
1470 Irving Street NW
Washington, DC 20010
Voice: (202) 332-0292
Fax: (202) 332-1184
Email: epica@igc.org
U.S. Department of State, Panama Desk
2201 C Street NW
Washington, DC 20520
Voice: (202) 647-4986
Fax: (202) 647-2597
Atlantic Council of the United States
910 17th Street NW, 10th Floor
Washington, DC 20006
Voice: (202) 463-7226
Fax: (202) 463-7241
Publications
Fellowship of Reconciliation, Panamá Update (quarterly
newsletter on Panamanian affairs and U.S.-Panama relations)
John Lindsay-Poland and Tom Barry, Inside Panama: The Essential Guide
to its Politics, Economy, Society and Environment (Albuquerque, NM:
Interhemispheric Resource Center Press, 1995).
The Atlantic Council of the United States, "Defining a New Relationship:
The Issue of U.S. Access to Facilities in Panama," (July 1996).
Walter LaFeber, The Panama Canal: The Crisis in Historical Perspective
(London: Oxford University Press, 1978).
John Dinges, Our Man in Panama (New York City, NY: Random House,
1990).
Presencia Panameña (monthly newspaper oriented to Panamanians
in the United States)
P.O. Box 73-0757
Corona, NY 11373-9998
Voice/Fax: (718) 592-3002
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