What the Heck Are US Marines Doing in Costa Rica? Obama's Tilt to the Right on Latin America
Friday 06 August 2010
by: Nikolas Kozloff, t r u t h o u t | News Analysis

(Photo: Candace Park / US Air Force)
The USS Makin Island, an amphibious assault aircraft carrier, is an intimidating ship. Built by Northrup Grumman, Makin Island is 45,000 tons of cold steel and has living quarters for almost 3,200 sailors and Marines. Weighing in at a whopping 42,800 tons, the ship is 844 feet long and 106 feet wide. The vessel's 70,000 horsepower hybrid propulsion system enables Makin Island to reach speeds in excess of 20 knots.
A multi-purpose ship, Makin Island is designed to transport and land Marines via helicopter, landing craft or amphibious assault vehicle. In an impressive show of force, the Navy recently deployed Makin Island to South American waters. There, the ship made visits to several ports of call including the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro, the Chilean town of Valparaiso and the Peruvian capitol of Lima. More significantly, perhaps, the aircraft carrier could soon be deployed to the Central American country of Costa Rica.
If you just did a double take, that is understandable. For years, this small nation has prided itself on its adherence to pacifistic principles. In a region plagued by violence, Costa Rica historically managed to stay above the fray and the nation has not had an Army since 1949. The country, with a small population of just four million, is seen as safer than its Central American neighbors and an attractive destination for tourists and US retirees.
Costa Rica's Controversial Drug War
So, why is the Costa Rican government now inviting the US Navy to patrol its local waters? Officially, the Americans will be deployed to help stem the flow or drugs northward. The ships would arrive for at least six months to assist counternarcotics operations by Costa Rican officials. The government argues that the help is well needed. For some time, smugglers have used Costa Rica as a transshipment point for drugs coming from Colombia and Panama. Without any armed forces and with long coastlines and poorly guarded borders, Costa Rica is vulnerable to the machinations of technologically advanced drug cartels.
Indeed, Costa Rican authorities report that powerful Mexican cartels are infiltrating their country. Recently, local police seized more than a ton of cocaine at a house outside the capital and detained two Mexicans with alleged ties to the Juarez cartel. Meanwhile, the Costa Rican prison system has been put under enormous strain as the inmate population has soared. With a spike in drug-related crime, the prisons have spilled over and become more violent.
Prison crowding has been increased as a result of newly-elected President Laura Chinchilla's crime crackdown. Under her initiative, the government is set to double the police force and build more prisons. Even so, the government may be woefully unprepared to deal with the drug war. Costa Rica already receives millions of dollars in anti-drug aid from the US under the so-called Mérida Initiative, though Chinchilla recently met with Secretary of State Clinton to ask for yet more financial resources.
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Moves to bring the US Navy to Costa Rica have sparked widespread suspicions that Washington is looking for a justification to remilitarize the Central American region. It's undeniable that a recent increase in violence has sparked panic. However, some have argued that the real issue has to do with the causes of violence. While the right argues that the spike has to do with drug cartels, the left believes that the violence has more to do with poverty and rising inequality. In Costa Rica, the gap between rich and poor has been widening dramatically in recent years. Consider that in the 1990s, the wealthiest 10 percent of Costa Rica's population made 15 times what the poorest tenth earned. However, in the 2000s, that figure was nearly 25 times.
Makin's Tour of Duty
Perhaps, Costa Rica's drug problem could be addressed through a combination of poverty alleviation and coastal interdiction. Indeed, for some time, Costa Rica has collaborated with the US Coast Guard. However, under the new arrangement, other branches of the American armed services are to be deployed. The US force which is called for is massive: a virtual flotilla of 46 warships accompanied by 7,000 Marines and five planes. Take a look at this footage of the USS Makin, and consider whether this huge aircraft carrier is best suited to combat drug trafficking or perhaps some other end.
According to the Navy's own web site, the fearsome vessel "will also have secondary missions of sea control and power projection by helicopter and fixed-wing vertical short take-off and landing aircraft." The euphemism "power projection" caught my attention in this instance. To be sure, the cartels are a menace, but there is also an increasingly inflammatory geopolitical context to consider. In light of military developments in Costa Rica, it's perfectly reasonable to wonder whether the US might have some kind of ulterior agenda.
Is it just a coincidence, for example, that Makin deployed to Brazil, a country which the US would surely like to employ as a counterweight to leftist Hugo Chávez in Venezuela? Consider also the vessel's port of call visits in Chile and Peru, two nations which have served as loyal US allies in a region which has recently undergone a leftward shift. For Venezuelans, it's an intimidating show of military force which, taken together with the deployment of the US Fourth Fleet in Caribbean waters, rattles the nerves.
Central America: Balance of Power
Recently, I came upon an interesting article written by Tom Hayden. In it, the veteran activist and journalist claims that Obama met secretly with Venezuelan President Chávez during an April 2009 Summit of the Americas held in Port of Spain, Trinidad. Hayden's source for the meeting is an unnamed Venezuelan official. Hayden also cites Oliver Stone, a filmmaker who, in his most recent movie "South of the Border," claims that Obama "assured Chávez that under his administration there would be no further destabilization attempts or any interference in the internal affairs of Venezuela."
I'm more inclined to trust Hayden than Stone, a man who has long held to conspiratorial beliefs. Whatever the truth, the reality on the ground casts doubt on the notion of a geopolitical cooling off within the wider region. In Trinidad, Obama spoke famously of resetting US relations with Latin America, but, in practice. the American president seems unable or unwilling to alter Washington's inherently militaristic bent.
While Obama's military escalation in South America is by now relatively well known, what is perhaps less publicized is the startling remilitarization occurring in Central America. There, South America's Pink Tide has swept through the region, bringing more progressive governments to power in Guatemala, El Salvador and Nicaragua. This has created a certain degree of friction as some countries, including Honduras up until last year's coup d'etat, have sought to ally to Venezuela in an area that the US sees as its historic "backyard."
In tandem with its South America strategy of divide and rule, the Obama White House is now engaging in a similar approach in Central America. With Honduras now back in the US orbit and Panama in the midst of Ricardo Martinelli's right-wing, anti-labor administration, Washington is looking for more allies to counterbalance Nicaragua and other reformist regimes. Costa Rica, a peaceful nation which has sought to remain on the sidelines of the region's tumultuous conflicts, now finds itself in something of a political quandary as the US navy deploys to its shores.
Debating Honduran "Rehabilitation"
At the center of the cross hairs is Chinchilla, Costa Rica's president, who only just assumed power in May. A protégé of Nobel Peace laureate and former President Óscar Arias, Chinchilla won the recent election in a landslide. She is Costa's Rica's first female presidenta in a long line of presidentes. A career politician, she served as justice minister and vice president in Arias' cabinet.
In the 1980s, Chinchilla earned a master's degree in public policy at Georgetown University in Washington, DC. At the time, she frequently wore indigenous fashions while criticizing the Reagan administration's policies in Central America. More recently, however, Chinchilla has moderated her politics and currently belongs to the National Liberation Party. Formally, Chinchilla's party is centrist and social democratic though, in practice, it has veered toward the center right.
In the arena of foreign policy, Chinchilla could follow in the vein of her predecessor. During his first presidency in the 1980s, Arias sent Reagan into a fit after the Costa Rican suggested that the Nicaraguan contras, who were trying to overthrow the leftist Sandinista government in Managua at the time, disband as part of an overall regional peace plan. On the other hand, however, Costa Rican political godfather Arias has been no great admirer of Fidel Castro or Chávez.
Indeed, when Honduran President and Chávez ally Manuel Zelaya was removed in a military coup d'etat and a new de facto regime installed, tensions ran high between Venezuela and Arias. When the Costa Rican leader attempted to mediate the Honduran imbroglio, Chávez charged that Arias was attempting to set a crafty trap. The de facto coup government in Tegucigalpa, Chávez declared, should never have been granted recognition or invited to the negotiation table in the first place.
In the event, Zelaya was never reinstated and in a subsequent November, 2009 election held under politically dubious circumstances, right-wing rancher Porfirio Lobo came to power. Since that time, Honduras has descended into a human rights nightmare and Zelaya supporters and journalists have been targeted, disappeared and killed. The mainstream media, meanwhile, has forgotten all about the story, yet, for Central Americans. Honduras still represents a crucial fault line.
There are real political stakes in this game. The US, which has historically backed retrograde military and economic forces in Honduras, wants the world to forget about last year's coup and to recognize Lobo's election. Chávez and Venezuelan ally Nicaragua, two countries which backed ousted President Zelaya, are opposed to any such notion. "Any government that comes out of that coup, that comes out of elections even, we will never recognize it as the government of Honduras," Chávez has explained.
Costa Rica's Chinchilla, who finds herself in the midst of this volatile regional milieu, appears to be siding with the US. Indeed, even as she invites the US Navy into Costa Rican waters, an unprecedented military buildup for her country, she has pressed for the reintegration of Honduras into the Central American fold. At issue is Honduras' membership in the Organization of American States and the System of Central American Integration or SICA, made up of Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama.
After last year's coup, Honduras was suspended from both organizations. However, Chinchilla has told Honduran leader Lobo that she supports his country's readmittance. "We will be advocating, as we have up to now, the full and total reincorporation of our beloved sister republic of Honduras in all of the region's bodies," she has said. Daniel Ortega, however, says that efforts to rehabilitate Honduras are "ridiculous." Indeed, the Nicaraguan leader recently skipped a SICA meeting entirely, claiming the confab was a sham and had been designed and promoted by the US.
Drug War: Crossing the US
As ousted Honduran leader Manuel Zelaya found out, challenging US economic and military power can have consequences. As I revealed at the time, Zelaya had been a staunch critic of the US militarized drug war prior to the 2009 coup. Indeed, Zelaya even went so far as to write personally to newly-elected President Obama, claiming the drug war was misplaced. In the event, his controversial outbursts on the drug war cast Zelaya afoul of Washington. But the Honduran leader didn't stop there, going so far as to suggest that Honduras should turn US military bases which were used for drug surveillance over to civilian control.
Now that the military and the Honduran elite have gotten rid of Zelaya, the Central American nation has returned to the US orbit. Like Chinchilla, Honduras' new President Lobo has gone out of his way to placate the Pentagon. In the department of Gracias a Dios, which lies on the Nicaraguan border, the US has financed the construction of a military base to the tune of $2 million. The installation is under control of the Honduran Navy, but military officials from the US Southern Command operate in an advising capacity. As if that were not enough, the US may also count on its old base at Palmerola, also known as Soto Cano.
Free-Trade Ideology
In other respects, Honduras has moved closer to the US since Zelaya's overthrow. The Honduran Congress, for example, withdrew the country's membership in Chávez's Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas or ALBA, a group of left-leaning countries intent on counteracting corporate-style US free trade. In his final days in office, Zelaya had vociferously campaigned for ALBA, a move which set him at odds with Honduras' business elite. Today, ALBA still has some teeth in Central America and counts Nicaragua as a member. On the other hand, politically left Nicaragua is also a member of the Central American Free Trade Agreement or CAFTA, which is sponsored by the US.
The political center of gravity would seem to be shifting away from Venezuela now as Costa Rica embraces US-style free trade. In 2007, former President Arias brought Costa Rica into CAFTA. The measure, however, was only narrowly approved by voters in a referendum. Under CAFTA, Costa Rica is obliged to open up its telecom sector. Privatization of the telecom industry, however, is a politically sensitive issue in Costa Rica as well as the wider Central American region (before he was removed from power in 2009, Zelaya opposed privatization of his country's telecommunications company Hondutel). Chinchilla has pledged to expand Costa Rica's network of free-trade agreements and has also supported liberalization of Costa Rica's state-controlled electricity and telecommunications sectors. Earnestly pro-business, the new president wants to accelerate exports like microchips.
Back to the Future
For a brief moment, it might have looked like South America's Pink Tide would sweep through Central America, propelling significant social and political change in the process. But with the South American left now facing its own significant challenges and internal problems, it's unclear whether Central America's social movements will get much of a long-term boost. Meanwhile, whatever Oliver Stone might claim about Obama's true intentions, the US continues to play its same age-old game in Central America.
Sensing weakness, the pro-business right wing has made significant electoral inroads in Panama, Honduras and, now, Costa Rica. Allied to the military old guard and the US, this resurgent right poses a thorny problem for the left. You don't need to tell that to Central American social movements, who recently met in the Nicaraguan capitol of Managua. There, activists denounced the "silent invasion" of US troops in Costa Rica, declared their opposition to worker repression in Panama and criticized the Lobo government in Honduras for its clampdown on the opposition.
Perhaps, the left got a bit complacent over the last few years. If anything, the lesson of Honduras, and, now, Costa Rica, suggest that it now has a more significant fight on its hands.

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Comments
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The USS Makin Island is,
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 17:49 — Irving 143 (not verified)The USS Makin Island is, specifically, a Landing Helicopter Dock ship, i.e. an amphibious assault ship with a well landing dock at the stern. It is the latest and last of the Wasp class of amphibious assault ship, the follow-on class to the rather disappointing Tarawa class LHA (Landing Helicopter Assault).
Both the Wasp and the Tarawa classes, like their predecessors the Iwo Jima class, resemble aircraft carriers, but they are not aircraft carriers by naval definition. They are only capable of handling aircraft that can take off and land vertically, as with assorted helicopters and the Sea Harrier fighter (and only the Wasps were designed from the outset to handle Harriers). All aircraft handling capability is in aid of the ships' primary function, which is to land and support Marine ground forces.
Their use in coastal drug interdiction is debatable at best, though there is no question that they present an impressive concentration of military force.
Guatemala, a central
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 21:02 — Peter Chase (not verified)Guatemala, a central strategic spot, is at an exact mid-point location for refueling small planes or making cargo transfers onto trucks between the Peten region and SW United States. As a land route across the isthmus "bridge" CR is a minor player.
Their sea routes are busy.
As a smuggling actor, Costa Rica roads are so bad that sea shipments go around it toward the north. It receives product indirectly, and has a traffiking connection with Italy. Are we sending this aircraft carrier to interdict with the Italian mob?
It is possible that the Mexican Cartel could want to stretch their influence into Costa Rica. That alone could be a justification for an experiment with foreign military practicing as an inter-agency helper with lots of new offensive technology. Does the US Navy have experience in inter-agency assistance? Not yet.
Gimme that oil, Arrrrh! We
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 21:25 — Rexozone (not verified)Gimme that oil, Arrrrh!
We be pirates for real but with a bit of torturin' and pillagin' and eco thievery among em. Somalian pirates are pussies compared with our war games and weapons.
We who make the most bullets gets the most forests. Just for the beef. And the oil? Just for the reef.
The war on drugs in South
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 23:58 — Anonymous (not verified)The war on drugs in South America is our own creation and has always been used as an excuse to rip off South American natural resources. I lived in the Amazon jungles in Peru and the place was crawling with US covert ops guys and DEA. Locally they are well known to be corrupt players in close relation to the region's traficantes (drug traffickers). Guns and drugs are their game and screwing young local girls.
I notice there is no mention of Columbia in the article, while the recent escalation and US military build-up there has created huge tensions with Venezuela. This is the same old story all over again. You are a skeptic of conspiratories, but the Iran-Contra conspiratory is well documented.
There will be blood. Lobo is a tin dictator and naturally we have aligned with him in Honduras. As a result of this and a renewed US military presence in Latin America, Obama has proven himself once again to be just another war monger in a long bloody line helping to ensure the entire world understands what our true motivations are. Our military has become a tool for private corporate interests and our foreign militarist policies only continue to make our nation less secure.
So much for American democracy. We look a lot more like a rogue state from outside our borders. Latin Americans should brace themselves for more slaughter and "co-lateral" damage. This latest deployment is a sure sign we are looking for trouble.
If we spent the money on
Sat, 08/07/2010 - 02:11 — Anonymous (not verified)If we spent the money on securing our borders and regulating drugs in the US instead of paying it to war contractors and builders, we'd not have this big of an international drug smuggling problem.
The meaning of power
Sat, 08/07/2010 - 09:12 — Anonymous (not verified)The meaning of power projection can be found here-
http //wcg-darktimediary.blogspot.com/2003/09/thug-politik-neo-con-agenda-for-new_11.html
IN 2007, a friend of mine
Sat, 08/07/2010 - 17:09 — Elaine Cimino (not verified)IN 2007, a friend of mine decided to settle in the Galapagos... at this point in time operations for right wing investors were sending US government and US contractor operatives to the region to confirm water resources. The news at the time was that there had been a surge of real estate investment that would be supported by cruise ship operations. This meant that an infrastructure for deep water ports of calls would be needed. I was told at that time Costa Rica was key to a US base in the region that included a base of operations in the Galapagos as well. in order to secure the shipping lanes and the "instability" in the region.
I had shared this news with colleagues here at home which has been confirmed.
The last bastion of the wild west .
South America is the only continent where there has not been nuclear weapons testing. The water and oil is part of the agenda.
These people planning is what must be stopped. Their practice of Preference Utilitarianism (PU) conflicts with human rights along with procedural and distributive justice. Preference utilitarianism, the philosophical underpinning of CBAs for many economists who often fails to measure things that make life worthwhile or sustainable unless they have substantial market force. These people are the drivers of policies, a consortium, that risks the Earth's balance. It is a global practice that is conspired, supported and financed by US private contractors, US ex officials, senators and military.
Which economic transaction is responsive to a recovering drug (oil) addict desires or to his "interests": with his therapist or his dealer?
The drive for profits and economic growth has kept the environmental problems coming at society.
Working only within the system as it is currently constituted will in the end not succeed what is needed is transformative change within.
For 49 years, tiny Costa
Sun, 08/08/2010 - 12:41 — Ray in Denver (not verified)For 49 years, tiny Costa Rica has been a shining light in this chaotic war-torn world. It had no army -- no equivalent of America's snarling Pentagon.
Now the USS Makin Island has brought more than 3,000 sailors and Marines to patrol Costa Rica's sea coast, and perhaps to eventually act ashore, supposedly to help curb the drug traffic. This traffic has been linked to Italy. Will America also send war vessels and troops to intimidate the Italian Mafia? The ego of those in our White House may permit that.
One day the rest of the world may stop lending money to a financially and morally bankrupt America, and only then will our global power quest end. Such empires do eventually collapse of their own weight, as did the might Roman Empire and others in history. It's tough to sit back and wait for this to happen of its own accord.
When Christopher Columbus arrived here, America was populated (and therefore "owned") by tribes of Native Americans. These tribes soon were persecuted, killed and plagued with disease brought here by the white crews of the invaders, who assumed that since they were more powerful than the Indians they could just take what they wished and do as they wished. Thus America was launched on a path that led eventually to a "democracy" of the people, by the people and for the people. In recent decades, there has been reason to wonder if this still holds true. The rich have been growing more powerful while the poor and middle class have lost their influence.
The ultimate end of these changes is unclear. Crossing one's fingers and wishing for a good outcome may seem silly, but it may be the only consistent action left to decent citizens. How sad.
Once again, the arrogant and
Mon, 08/09/2010 - 10:09 — Lawrence (not verified)Once again, the arrogant and over-funded Pentagon finds yet another reason to spend money that we don't have on missions that are rediculous and doomed to fail. Please, let's start by cutting the Pentagon budget in half, and start worrying about our own pRoblems here in the USA.
Looks like we are still
Mon, 08/09/2010 - 19:02 — Arminius Aurelius (not verified)Looks like we are still invoking the Monroe Doctrine [ Don't Tread on Me ] as far as Europeans and Asians are concerned . But on the other hand we have military bases in over 130 countries around the world surrounding Russia and China .We support thugs and brutal dictators around the world as long as they are compliant. They talk about stopping the drug trade in South America but our own borders are left WIDE OPEN . In Afghanistan when the Taliban ran the country , they outlawed growing Poppies [ Heroin ] but as soon as the U.S. overthrew the leadership , we allowed the farmers to grow this poisonous crop. This is more profitable than oil and I am sure that the C.I.A. big boys are getting their share of the profits besides the corrupt Afghan politicians . That is how we get their cooperation . I wonder how much I would have to donate to the Democratic or Republican party in order to be assigned as Ambassador to Afghanistan ? I would gladly contribute in the range of $ 500,000.00 to $ 700,000.00 in order to get that post . I am sure it would be a great " investment " in order to be able to dip my fingers into the pie . I would then be an honorary member of the Bush , Cheny , Rumsfeld , Clinton big boys club . What in Gods name ever happened to this country that we have become so pompous and arrogant hypocrites ? We have become BRUTAL THUGS under the guise of "Liberty and Justice for All " Mothers , just wait , in the not too distant future they will start up the draft once again and you will have the privilege of offering up your first born to fight and DIE for your country . Keep on knocking out kids , we will need them to bring " Democracy " to the world.
Dear Anonymous on 8/7 at
Fri, 08/13/2010 - 13:40 — Frances in California (not verified)Dear Anonymous on 8/7 at 7:11 - It's not about securing our borders to stem the drug trade; it's about making it less lucrative to the criminal oligarchy who has the entire Pentagon and all our "intelligence" agencies in thrall. As long as guys can get rich fomenting drug trade out of one side of their mouths while decrying the crime out the other as an excuse to "beef up security", nothing will get better.
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