US Military Base in Colombia? I Don’t Like It, Says Lula of Brazil

Brazilian president Lula
US plans to increase the number of troops in Colombia is drawing opposition, not just from left-wing populist leaders in the region but also from moderate governments like Brazil's Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva prompting Colombian President Alvaro Uribe to tour the region to try to ease concerns.

Colombia, Washington's main ally in the region, says the deal with Washington is aimed at strengthening anti-drug efforts.

The United States is in talks with Uribe's government about relocating US drug interdiction flight operations to Colombia after being kicked out of neighboring Ecuador. Colombia expects to sign a deal this month after a final round of talks in Washington.

The plan is expected to increase the number of US troops in Colombia above the current total of less than 300 but not above 800, the maximum permitted under an existing military pact, officials said.

Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez and allies from Ecuador, Bolivia and Nicaragua accuse the US of setting up a military platform in Colombia from which to "attack" its neighbors.

But other countries also expressed concern, mainly Brazil and Chile which are seen as serious referents from the region.

"I don't like the idea of a US base in the region," said Brazilian President Lula da Silva.

Uribe will meet with Lula, Chile's Michelle Bachelet and other South American leaders starting on Tuesday.

Bachelet called the Colombia-US talks "disquieting" and said the proposal should be discussed at the August 10 meeting of the South American Unasur group of nations.

The meeting will be held in Ecuador, which has broken off diplomatic relations with Colombia over a 2008 bombing raid targeting Colombian rebels who were camped out on Ecuador's side of the border.

"Where was the hysteria when these operations were being run out of Ecuador?" said a high-level official in Colombia's Defense ministry who asked that his name not be used.

"Mexico is having the worst security crisis in its history due to the drug trade and people are saying we should not help them by doing interdiction operations. It's ridiculous," the official said.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil and Ecuador Talk Business

Today President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva arrives in Ecuador for talks with president ...

Brazil and Egypt Talk Science and Education Projects

Brazil’s Minister of Science and Technology, Sérgio Rezende, has begun a five-day visit to ...

Thousands of Brazilian Farmers Might Be Expelled from Bolivia

"Illegal squatters, people living on land they do not have title deeds for, whether ...

Rio and Sí£o Paulo Police Use License to Kill Over 1000 Times a Year

Brazilian police officers in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, in the country's Southeast, ...

Kidnappers of Brazilian Reporter Condition Release to Airing of Tape

The men who kidnapped a reporter and a technical aide from leading Brazilian television ...

Brazil’s Lula Is Not Afraid to Attend the World Social Forum in Venezuela

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is expected to participate in the American ...

Brazilian Chief Says in Paris that He Fought the Hardest for South American Integration

At the opening of the colloquium “Brazil: Global Actor,” at the University of the ...

Pregnancy Train

Rio’s Health Secretary is worried that many girls are showing up pregnant in the ...

Uniting Brazilians and Arabs Through Film

The Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Relations wishes to organize a cinema exhibit in parallel ...

Brazil Pondering Extradition of Woman Wanted in Murder of Ex-Lebanese Premier

The São Paulo Federal Police (PF) executed the preventive arrest warrant issued by the ...