Brazil and Colombia in Joint Effort to Fight FARC and Drugs

Brazil-Bolivia border Brazil and Colombia will be signing this weekend a defense agreement by which the two South American countries will share military information, technology, training, intelligence, weapons procurement and joint exercises. The document should be signed when Brazilian President, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva arrives for two-day talks with his Colombian counterpart Alvaro Uribe.

The initiative among other things would facilitate air and land joint surveillance of the mostly lawless 1,000 miles shared Amazon border, a transit zone and haven for drug traffickers, guerrilla groups, smugglers, mining and other illegal activities.

The visit is also interpreted as a clear message of support for Colombian president Alvaro Uribe and the efforts of his elected government to end four decades of insurgency, which threatens the region.

Colombia's main rebel group, Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, FARC, is known to regularly cross into Brazil to smuggle cocaine for weapons and equipment for its ongoing fight with Colombian military.

Calls for regional security cooperation took on new urgency after Colombia last March first crossed into Ecuador in hot pursuit of a senior FARC commander which was killed together with several other members of the group. The attack delivered two laptops with valuable information on FARC and their network of contacts and financial support.

But Venezuela's president Hugo Chavez immediately reacted in support of Ecuador by ordering troops to the border. An emergency session of the Rio Group in Dominica Republic helped to defuse the situation and Brazil pushed forward the idea of a South American Defense Council. However President Uribe refused to join, saying Colombia couldn't trust all of its neighbors.

But Brazil insisted because Lula is interested in closer ties with Uribe to counter the regional influence president Chavez has gained with Venezuela's oil wealth. In this line of action Brazilian Defense Minister Nelson Jobim and the big promoter of the regional Defense Council warned on April that any FARC insurgents crossing into Brazil would be met with gunfire.

Lula this weekend will be next to Uribe during the commemoration of Colombia's July 20 Independence Day in Leticia, along the Amazon border. President Alan Garcia of Peru, Colombia's closest regional ally, and with budding insurgency problems of his own, will also be around for the event.

Brazil is also looking to boost arms sales and Colombia so far has proven an excellent client. Colombia in 2006 spent US$ 240 million in the purchase of 25 Super Tucano attack planes from Embraer SA, Brazil's main aircraft manufacturer. The low flying Super Tucano planes, ideal for jungle strafing, led the bombing campaign in Ecuador.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Gets Ready to Build Its Own Nuclear Submarine

Brazilian dreams of becoming the first Latin American country to operate a nuclear submarine ...

Brazil and Colombia Do Business in Bogota

Brazilian and Colombian companies will join in a business round in the Colombian capital, ...

Brazil Gives in Paris a Few Fashion Lessons

Printemps Haussman, the main store of Printemps, the famous French chain of department stores ...

Brazil: Spreading Small Business Incubators

After spreading across the main economic centers in Brazil, incubators will now start motivating ...

Foreign Tourists Have Already Brought US$ 2.1 Billion to Brazil This Year

The study Plano Cores do Brasil, meaning The Colors of Brazil Plan, ordered by ...

Brazil Has 8 Judges, But Only 2 Public Defenders per 100,000 People

Brazil’s National Justice Council (Conselho Nacional de Justiça), which is presided over by Supreme ...

Brazilian Program Helps Children Who Stop Working and Go to School

Brazilian children assisted by the Program for the Erradication of Child Labor (Peti) do ...

Clear Act of Dealing with the Unexpected

The more he thought the more the desire pierced him, the more his body ...

Arabs Love Brazil. They Are 7% of the Country.

They started arriving in Brazil in the nineteenth century. In their luggage was a ...

Brazilian Amazon on fire

Brazil May Become the Saudi Arabia of Ethanol. Or the Iraq

Not everything that pretends to be sustainable truly is. Environmental and social concerns ("the ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`