Brazilian Defense minister Nelson Jobim said the government will increase the number of troops in the Amazon from 17,000 to 30,000 and build 28 new forts on Indian land and conservation areas of the world's largest rain forest.
According to the newspaper, the project is an initiative from President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, which besides increasing presence and patrolling it is geared to change the focus from "live frontiers" to "military vigilance cells," which means military staff will move into the area with their families.
There's no fixed timetable for the project, but defense sources said it's a nine year plan which will demand an investment in the range of half a billion US dollars. Existing barracks will also be improved and another US$ 60 million have been earmarked.
Brazil shares the huge Amazon basin, six million square kilometers, with eight other South American countries: Bolivia, Peru, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Surinam, Venezuela and French Overseas Territory Guyana.
Strategic Affairs Minister Roberto Mangabeira Unger said the Amazon protection project is part of a greater Brazilian effort to modernize and equip the armed forces, create a rapid deployment force and update its weapons industry.
"The plan includes the restructuring of Brazil's weapons industry to guarantee the supply of defense material without depending on foreign suppliers," Lula said at a recent ceremony to unveil the plan.
Mangabeira Unger said Brazil "will develop its capacity to design and manufacture conventional and nuclear submarines" to protect its coastline, as well as recently discovered offshore oil reserves that could hold up to 55 billion barrels of oil.
"We will not simply be buyers or clients, but partners," Mangabeira said earlier this year. "Any arrangement into which we will enter must, in principle, contemplate a significant element of research and development in Brazil
France has promised to provide Brazil with technology to build the Scorpène diesel attack submarine, which officials hope to use to develop into what would be Latin America's first nuclear-propelled sub.
Brazil's defense industry was the largest in the developing world in the mid-1980s, but it declined along with demand after the end of the Cold War.
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