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Courting Ill WIll
Editorial
Los Angeles Times
November 26, 2005
Given the current political climate in
Washington, President Bush doesn't have much capital to spend on the two issues
perhaps most important to Latin America: agricultural subsidies and immigration.
But by restoring money to help Latin American nations fight drugs and
corruption, he can show allies at home and abroad that he remains committed to
good hemispheric relations.
For the last three years, the Bush administration has denied aid to countries
that have joined the International Criminal Court but refuse to sign a bilateral
agreement with the United States granting immunity to U.S. personnel. Several
nations in Latin America, including Argentina, Brazil, Costa Rica and Mexico,
have refused to sign the bilateral agreement.
Its necessity is dubious. The International Criminal Court, based in The Hague,
will not prosecute an individual where there is an able and willing national
justice system in place. Further, under the Status of Forces Agreement, which
the U.S. signs with any nation in which it has forces stationed, American troops
are immune from prosecution in foreign courts for any acts committed in the
course of their military duties.
In Latin America, moreover, the administration's insistence on the bilateral
agreement is especially counterproductive. U.S. military forces provide training
to help many Latin American nations combat drug traffickers and other criminals.
Many U.S. civic organizations, meanwhile, offer anti-corruption programs, AIDS
education and seminars on judicial reform.
Now those programs are in jeopardy. Ecuador, for example, which is host to one
of the largest American military bases on the continent, has lost $15 million in
the last two years, and it stands to lose an additional $7 million this year for
refusing the sign the agreement. Peru has lost about $4 million, part of which
was used to support its fight against drug dealers.
Bush can put an end to this policy, which is as harmful to U.S. interests as it
is humiliating to Latin nations, by simply waiving the requirement that these
nations sign the bilateral agreement as a condition of receiving their aid. The
cost in dollars would be small, but the payoff in political capital would be
immeasurable.
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