Adamant: Hardest metal

From the Washington file: Southern Command Chief Warns of Narco-terrorist Threat in Latin America

usinfo.state.gov 12 March 2003

(James Hill says narco-terrorism fuels radical Islamic groups in region) (2040)

Narco-terrorism is a "pervasive force of destruction" that is affecting every country in the Americas, says James Hill, commander of the U.S. Southern Command (Southcom).

In a recent speech in Miami, Hill said that narco-terrorism -- that is, terrorist activity funded by the illicit drug trade and other organized crime -- is fueling radical Islamic groups associated with Hamas, Hizballah, and Al Gamatt that are operating in such places as the tri-border area of Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay, and on Venezuela's Margarita Island. Such groups, he said, generate hundreds of millions of dollars through drug and arms trafficking to finance terrorist groups around the world.

"Simply put, direct drug sales and money laundering fund worldwide terrorist operations," Hill said. "That is fact, not speculation."

The Southcom commander said the threat to countries in the region does not come from the military force of an adjacent neighbor or from a foreign invading power. Rather, "today's foe is the terrorist, the narco-trafficker, the arms trafficker, the document forger, the international crime boss, and the money launderer," Hill said. The new threat, he added, "respects neither geographical nor moral boundaries."

The hemispheric community must act in concert to prevent the "continuing and increasingly corrosive spread of narco-terrorism and its connections to international and transnational terrorists, arms, drugs, and other insidious threats" throughout the region, Hill said March 3 at the North-South Center.

The goal for regional leaders, he said, is a hemisphere where children do not have to live in fear of being orphaned by terrorists, kidnapped, or pressed into service by gangs, drug traffickers and narco-terrorists.

"Our children deserve to be safe -- and if we act together, we can give them safety and security," said Hill.

Following is the text of Hill's prepared remarks:

(begin text)

Remarks by James Hill, Commander of the U.S. Southern Command North-South Center March 3, 2003

"Building Regional Security Cooperation in the Western Hemisphere"

Today's Western Hemisphere strategic environment is unique. In stark contrast to many other parts of the world, countries in the Western Hemisphere are not threatened militarily by their neighbors. Twenty-five years ago, the vast majority of the governments in Latin America and the Caribbean were under either communist or autocratic rule. Today, every country in the hemisphere except one is a democracy.

Democracy is the goal and the accepted model for government in the Western Hemisphere. This is significant because democracies tend to look out for the welfare of their people, seek positive relations with their neighbors, and most importantly, don't make war against each other.

When flare-ups have occurred in the Americas in the past decade, they've been resolved by diplomacy and regional cooperation, rather than by force of arms. Contrary to popular myth, Latin America is the least militarized region of the world, accounting for only 4 percent of the world's defense spending.

The peace between our nations should have translated into greater prosperity and more security for the people of the Americas, but for some it has not. We know that our hemisphere, like the entire world, has become a more volatile and unpredictable place, and we've got a long way to go to make it safe.

Today, the threat to the countries of the region is not the military force of the adjacent neighbor or some invading foreign power. Today's foe is the terrorist, the narco-trafficker, the arms trafficker, the document forger, the international crime boss, and the money launderer.

This threat is a weed that is planted, grown and nurtured in the fertile ground of ungoverned spaces such as coastlines, rivers and unpopulated border areas. This threat is watered and fertilized with money from drugs, illegal arms sales, and human trafficking. This threat respects neither geographical nor moral boundaries.

Nowhere is the threat more graphically and brutally active than Colombia. Last month in Bogotá, a 200-kilogram car bomb planted by the FARC exploded in a parking garage under the 11-story El Nogal social club, killing 35 people, including six children at a piñata party, and injuring 173 more. I never refer to these terrorists as guerillas, insurgents, or rebels. Neither does the secretary of state - because, in his words, those labels romanticize them. There is nothing romantic about these narco-terrorists who wreak havoc on Colombia and its people.

These are the same narco-terrorists who employ home-made propane tank mortars -- with a range of 400 yards and notorious inaccuracy. They do what they are meant to do -- kill indiscriminately. These narco-terrorists conduct violent, incessant attacks to undermine the security and stability of Colombia. They are incredibly well-financed by their involvement in every aspect of drug cultivation and production, kidnapping and extortion. They have long since lost any ideological motivation they once may have had. Today, they are motivated by money and power, protecting and sustaining themselves through drug trafficking and terror. They offer nothing of value to the state or people, no better form of government, no liberation from an oppressive dictatorship. They offer death and lawlessness.

Last year, over 28,000 Colombians were murdered -- 13 times the rate of the U.S. More than 2,900 were kidnapped -- including many children. More than 450 Colombians lost their lives last year to landmines -- the very vast majority due to the narco-terrorists, not the military. One and a half million Colombians have been driven from their homes, displaced by the war. There were more terrorist attacks in Colombia alone last year than in all other nations of the world combined.

Colombia's narco-terrorists supply almost all of the cocaine and heroin consumed in the United States. Drugs killed more than 19,000 Americans in 2001 and were indirectly responsible for another 55,000 deaths, according to the Office of National Drug Control Policy. By statistical definition, this makes these drugs weapons of mass destruction.

The facts: narco-terrorists and other armed illicit groups operate in and out of southern Panama, northern Ecuador, northern Peru, Bolivia, portions of Venezuela and the tri-border area; they are involved in kidnappings in Venezuela, Ecuador, and Paraguay; they smuggle weapons and drugs in Brazil, Suriname, Guyana, Mexico, and Peru. They use the same routes and infrastructure for drugs, arms, illegal aliens, and other illicit activities. There is a huge and growing market for forged and illegal immigration documents; narco-terrorists and radical Islamic groups are feeding this market.

As traffickers exchange drugs for arms and services in the transit countries, transit nations become drug consumers as well. Narco-terrorism fuels radical Islamic groups associated with Hamas, Hizballah, al Gamaat, and others. These groups, operating out of the tri-border area, and other locales, like Margarita Island off Venezuela, generate hundreds of millions of dollars through drug and arms trafficking with narco-terrorists. Simply put, direct drug sales and money laundering fund worldwide terrorist operations. That is fact, not speculation.

I say this not to point fingers at any one country; I don't have enough fingers. The reality is that narco-terrorism is a pervasive force of destruction that not only affects our region, but each and every one of our countries -- big and small, rich or poor, weak or powerful. This is a battle that must be fought together. If we don't, I fear we risk winning the battle in Colombia, but losing the war in the rest of the region.

Narco-terrorists and drug trafficking organizations have shown considerable flexibility in adjusting their operations, tactics, and locations in reaction to our combined efforts.

If we are not as flexible, if we are not as agile, or as quick to anticipate and counter these adjustments, we'll find ourselves always one step behind, with old or inaccurate intelligence, lunging at shadows, and we'll come away with incomplete results. That's why I believe we need to re-evaluate our armed forces and security forces and collective agreements in order to bring about increased coordination and cooperation.

I would never say that the day of traditional military capability has passed, but it surely must evolve to remain relevant and defeat the threats of the 21st century. We must have the courage and confidence to honestly evaluate how our armed forces are configured, trained, and equipped, and more importantly, how well they communicate with and mutually support their sister services, other security forces, and neighboring countries.

Working together in multilateral exercises and forming trust through transparency are just some of the confidence- and security-building measures that have formed a structure for multilateral security cooperation in the Americas. We must continue to build upon this edifice with even more synchronization of effort.

The U.S. government and U.S. Southern Command are currently working on initiatives to do just that -- not only to exercise together, but also to operate together in order to shut down transnational threats.

The 5th Defense Ministerial Conference of the Americas held in Santiago in November emphasized the "desire to strengthen the inter-institutional and inter-governmental coordination ... which permits the ... preservation and stability of peace." Cooperation and coordination are much more complex than just communicating with each other. They must be built on a foundation of mutual respect and trust, and they must be mutually beneficial. Without these precepts, there is no cooperation. The most basic level of cooperation and coordination must be between the branches of the armed services themselves. This entails information-sharing, planning, and training. When we train, plan and operate together, we learn each other's terminology, doctrine, limitations and capabilities, and we forge a strong, seamless, combined arms force. I believe we're slowly getting better in this area.

The next level must be between the military and the other security forces such as the police and customs, and in this area we've got a long way to go.

Armed forces must -- operating within their constitutional and legal constraints -- support and cooperate with law enforcement agencies in combating drugs and other transnational threats. And where the legal boundaries don't make sense anymore given the current threat, they should engage in an honest dialogue with their democratically elected leaders to determine if laws and restrictions need revision. That is an essential discussion that takes place in a democracy, a proper role for a military in support of a democracy.

I routinely visit military and civilian leaders throughout Latin America and the Caribbean. I talk with them about re-addressing the roles and missions of their armed forces to ensure they focus on relevant 21st-century threats, not those of the past. Our ideas must look ahead in anticipation of what can be -- and [we must] transform ourselves to meet these new threats -- new ideas that will ensure multi-national cooperation and coordination to fight common enemies.

We must act together to prevent the continuing and increasingly corrosive spread of narco-terrorism and its connections to international and transnational terrorists, arms, drugs, and other insidious threats throughout the hemisphere. It is no mean or simple task.

But let me tell you what is at stake if we do not succeed -- our children and their children. Our goal needs to be an Americas where children do not have to live in fear of being orphaned by terrorists. Children should not live in fear of being kidnapped. Children should not live in fear of being pressed into service by gangs, drug traffickers and narco-terrorists, and they should not have their lives cut short being forced to work in a coca lab, breathing and ingesting poisons.

A child, whether he or she is growing up in Bogota, Rio, Pucallpa, Guatemala City, Port-au-Prince, Paramaraibo or New York, deserves to grow up, be loved, cared for, and have at least basic needs like nutrition, education and the one thing that many of today's children are missing -- the feeling that they are safe. Our children deserve to be safe. And if we act together, we can give them safety and security.

Thank you for the opportunity to be with you tonight, God bless you and God bless each of your countries.

(end text)

(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.Department of State. Web site: usinfo.state.gov)


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UK Ambassador offers British experience in anti-terrorist strategy

www.vheadline.com Posted: Monday, March 10, 2003 By: Patrick J. O'Donoghue

UK Ambassador to Venezuela John Hughes has thanked the Venezuelan government for its collaboration in the case of a Venezuelan citizen arrested in London on terrorist charges.

Speaking after meeting Executive Vice president Jose Vicente Rangel, Hughes says the British government has offered to share its experience in anti-terrorist policing with Venezuela. “It’s important for all governments in the world … we must all make war on the scourge.”

Ambassador Hughes and Rangel discussed the terrorist threat to international civil aviation. “I had the opportunity to hand the Vice President a joint letter on the matter from the British Foreign and Transport ministers.”

British Airways has resumed its flights from Caracas after its gaffe allowing a Venezuelan citizen fly all the way from Caracas from London carrying a grenade.

Radical Islamic Groups Getting Millions From Latin America - Much Of Money Comes From Drugs, Military Commander Says

www.nbc6.net POSTED: 3:48 p.m. EST March 9, 2003 UPDATED: 5:28 a.m. EST March 10, 2003

MIAMI -- Radical Islamic groups in the Middle East are getting between $300 million and $500 million a year from various criminal networks in Latin America, a top U.S. military commander said.

Gen. James T. Hill, commander of the U.S. Southern Command in Miami, said much of this money comes from drug trafficking, arms dealing and other illegal activities. Southern Command oversees U.S. military relations in Latin America.

Hill said the funds are sent abroad from several Latin American areas with large Middle Eastern populations, such as the "triple frontier" between Argentina, Paraguay and Brazil, and Margarita Island off the coast of Venezuela.

"The fastest-growing religion in Latin America today is Islam," Hill told The Miami Herald for a story published Sunday.

Hill said there was believed to be between three million and six million people of Middle Eastern descent in Latin America.

"There are radical Islamic groups associated with that population that are using it to create lots of money for their organizations," he said.

He said about $300 million to $500 million a year goes from Latin America to groups such as Hamas, Hezbollah and Al Gamaat.

Hill called for "increased coordination" among armed forces to fight narco-terrorism, conduct disaster relief operations and help stop the flow of money to international terrorist groups.

Emilio Viano, a terrorism expert at American University in Washington, said he was not surprised by Hill's assertions on funding for terrorist groups.

But he added that in some cases, increased international scrutiny after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks has made it harder for terrorist groups to launder money there.

Some experts, however, were skeptical about the new estimates of Islamic groups' fund-raising in Latin America.

Eduardo Gamarra, director of Florida International University's Latin American and Caribbean Center, called the estimates "absolutely ridiculous."

"A lot of figures have been bouncing around, but in the last year I've been looking at these particular issues, and most of what I found was speculation," he said.

President Hugo Chavez Frias condemns guerilla activities

www.vheadline.com Posted: Monday, March 10, 2003 By: Robert Rudnicki

President Hugo Chavez Frias has condemned Colombian guerilla activity and has called upon the neighboring country's several guerrilla organizations to respect Venezuelan sovereignty and the integrity of its terrain.

Speaking during his weekly "Alo Presidente" radio show, the Venezuelan leader recalled the massacre of Carabobo when Colombia's National Liberation Army (ELN) launched an attack on Venezuelan soil.

"We denounce the attacks made by the ELN, now and forever, because this is a Colombian problem and not a Venezuelan one."

Foreign (MRE) Minister Roy Chaderton Matos echoed the President's words, "Venezuela has no interest in playing a role in Colombia's war, and we don't want Colombia interfering in our domestic affairs either."

General: Radical Islamic groups get millions from Latin America- S America 'funding terrorists'

www.heraldtribune.com The Associated Press Radical Islamic groups in the Middle East are getting between $300 million and $500 million a year from various criminal networks in Latin America, a top U.S. military commander said. Gen. James T. Hill, commander of the U.S. Southern Command in Miami, said much of this money comes from drug trafficking, arms dealing and other illegal activities. Southern Command oversees U.S. military relations in Latin America. Hill said the funds are sent abroad from several Latin American areas with large Middle Eastern populations, such as the "triple frontier" between Argentina, Paraguay and Brazil, and Margarita island off the coast of Venezuela. "The fastest-growing religion in Latin America today is Islam," Hill told The Miami Herald for a story published Sunday. "We think that there are between 3 and 6 million people of Middle Eastern descent in Latin America. There are radical Islamic groups associated with that population that are using it to create lots of money for their organizations." He said about $300 million to $500 million a year goes from Latin America to groups such as Hamas, Hezbollah and Al Gamaat. Hill called for "increased coordination" among armed forces to fight narco-terrorism, conduct disaster relief operations and help stop the flow of money to international terrorist groups. Emilio Viano, a terrorism expert at American University in Washington, said he was not surprised by Hill's assertions on funding for terrorist groups. But he added that in some cases, increased international scrutiny after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks has made it harder for terrorist groups to launder money there. Some experts, however, were skeptical about the new estimates of Islamic groups' fund-raising in Latin America. Eduardo Gamarra, director of Florida International University's Latin American and Caribbean Center, called the estimates "absolutely ridiculous." "A lot of figures have been bouncing around, but in the last year I've been looking at these particular issues, and most of what I found was speculation," he said.

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