U.S. Policy and the Marxist Threat to Central America

Report Americas

U.S. Policy and the Marxist Threat to Central America

October 15, 1980 28 min read Download Report
Cleto Jr.
Visiting Fellow

(Archived document, may contain errors)

128 October 15, 1980 US PO LICY AND THE WMST THRE4T 'TO CENTRAL AMEHCA INTRODUCTION Although the Carter Administration was correct in believing that certain changes were necessary in Central America, a major mistake has been made in turning to the "passionate leftists1 as the U.S. a mbassador to El Salvador calls them) for solutions. By the time the Administration realized that these Ifpassionate leftists were armed Marxist revolutionaries interested only in exploiting these problems, a Marxist government had been installed in Nicara gua, potentially mortal wounds had been inflicted on El Salvador, an insurgency had gained momentum in Guatemala, and terrorism had started in Honduras.

In the near future, the U.S. must revert to a more traditional view of Central America if the spread of Marxism is to be contained.

The Carter Administration has projected an image of support to the left and hostility to the right, and this perception alone has generated many of this region's problems. One of the more potentially serious of these problems is that the Soviets may begin to believe that the U.S. would not react forcefully to their incursions in this area. The Soviets appear to have tested the water cautiously so far: thus, actions by the.U.S. in the next six months must be taken to project th e correct image to all parties in the conflict, including the Soviets, to preclude their attempting dangerous and perhaps irreversible maneuvers. The tempo of events now unfolding in Central America is so rapid that decisive policy alterations must be effe c ted immediately expected economic low points in El Salvador and Nicaragua, with profound internal and regional security implications, will occur at the end of the harvest season in the spring of 1981 The Fundamental differences exist in the people and pro b lems of these three countries. Communism is the common threat to all three, and as long as it exists in any great strength in any one 2 of them, the others will be in danger. Thus, although the Marxist government in Nicaragua might fall eventually of its o wn failures the security of El Salvador requires the acceleration of the removal of the government in Managua the communist guerrillas in El Salvador would add to the pressures now building up against the Nicaraguan government. The guerrillas in Guatemala receive material and moral support from the communists elsewhere in the region, and any setbacks experienced by the enemy in El Salvador and Nicaragua would not only weaken the insurgents in Guatemala, but might also convince Mexico to reassess its curren t complacency towards communist guerrilla use of its territory in support of activities in Guatemala. The problems now in these nations are different but intertwined, and the solutions are the same Significant weakening of This study briefly examines the c urrent situation in each of these three countries and then suggests potential policies which can effectively promote the continued independence of the nations in the area and protect the vital interests of the U.S. as well.

NICARAGUA: ECONOMIC PROBLEMS The Marxist Nicaraguan government (consisting of the Sandi nista Directorate and its subordinate Junta in power s.ince July 1979, is losing popular support because of its inability to cope with serious economic problems and to deliver on its promises to the b road spectrum of Nicaraguan society which supported its revolution. Economic shortcomings will become more serious.by December 1980 and might provoke at least limited civil unrest by the end'of the current harvest season (May-June 1981), when the nation w ill have an acute shortage of money unless it receives massive amounts of foreign aid.

The Carter Administration advocates financial support to the Sandinista government in the belief that an economic crisis within the next two or three years would llradic alizeil the revolu tion and make it more difficult for the relatively weak democratic forces to dislodge the Marxist Sandinista leadership. The finan cial aid.given by the U.S. since the July 1979 revolution (approxi mately $125 million disbursed or being disbursed), makes the U.S the principal contributor to the Sandinistas NICARAGUAN AID Development Assistance Reconstruction Assistance Title I Title I1 Economic Support Fund 18,062,000 15,000,000 15,000,000 1,590,000 75 000,000 5124.652.000 At a June 1980 party, the Soviet ambassador to Nicaragua commented that Nicaragua was an interesting experiment because it 3 may be the first socialist revolution aided by the local private sector and funded by the United States. For all of its aid, the U.S. has receive d little credit among the Nicaraguans. The U.S.

Embassy in Nicaragua states that the Sandinista government tries to minimize publicity of U.S. funding, and leading private sector representatives believe that one of the many mistakes our govern ment has mad e is to soft pedal our aid to Nicaragua; they say that the Nicaraguans hear more about the money the U.S. has not given that the money it has given. Private Nicaraguan economists believe that the level of foreign support has prevented the nation's populat ion from feeling the true effect of the country's deteriorating economy.

While mismanaging the economy, the Sandinista government is building up its security, military, and police forces, although they are still weak because of lack of organization and low morale. The government is politically indoctrinating the nation youth, starting at age four years, through a literacy campaign conducted by Sandinista and Cuban teachers. Local intelligence sources in Guatemala and El Salvador believe the Sandinistas are also providing logistical and moral support to insurgent forces in those two countries. I S RISING DISCONTENT IN NICARAGUA Despite their growing disenchantment with the Sandinista government, Nicaraguan workers continue to have an emotional attachment to t he revolutionary movement. This attachment can be expected to weaken as the economy deteriorates. There are already signs of increasing worker loyalty to their private sector em ployers and decreasing loyalty to their government-sponsored unions. Although the Nicaraguans have just emerged from a bloody civil war which killed 2.5 percent of the population, there are some indications of growing broadly based support to take to arms to overthrow the Sandinista government, and this support could increase as fu rther economic problems develop. There already have been locally-brewed, small-scale armed uprisings against the Sandinista government, and parts of the Nicaraguan countryside have become openly hostile to visiting government representatives.

There'-is no question these discontented Nicaraguans could be aided in an armed struggle against the Sandinistas by former national guardsmen now in exile, but these guardsmen have been associated in the minds of the people with former chief of state Somoza, who was u npopular with a wide spectrum of Nicaraguans.

What effect Somoza's death will have on the acceptability of some of the guardsmen by Nicaraguans will depend on how well the guardsmen, without Somoza, are able to overcome their reputation for corruption and brutality their degree of popular acceptability and enter the struggle they could solidify support for the Sandinistas If the guardsmen should overestimate 4 SANDINISTA DISUNITY In addition to their other problems, the Sandinistas are also beginning to sh o w signs of internal disunity. Initially Tomas Borge, the Interior Minister, and Sergio Ramirez, Junta member, were the key leaders of power by the Minister of Defense, Humberto Ortega, and his brother, Daniel, a Junta member. Minister of Agricultural Deve l op ment Jaime Wheelock's star is also rising, and one of the heroes of the revolution, Eden Pastora, has lost considerable influence acquired a rank structure and the trappings of protocol, much to the dismay of the young revolutionaries who fought in the hills against Somoza and now believe they have been misled. However any fight among the leaders and members of the Sandinistas unless influenced by non-communist Nicaraguans, might well result in a replacement of one communist government by another one Th e y have been replaced in terms Furthermore, the Sandinista army, initially rankless, has It will not be possible to dislodge the current communist government of Nicaragua, regardless of the degree of popular unhappiness, except through military action. Und e r the proper circumstances, the Nicaraguans themselves are prepared to initiate that action, and any U.S. military or parliamentary involvement would be unnecessary and counter-productive OPPOSITION FORCES Democratic forces in Nicaragua are present and ar e viable.

The Catholic Church is influential. There are many political parties, from moderate left to conservative right, united in their opposition to the Sandinistas. The Church and these politi cal parties plan to protest the recent announcement by the Sandi nista government that elections for a new government might be held in 1985 two or three years later than they had expected.

There is one free newspaper in Nicaragua, Prensa, influenced by a very brave young man, Pedro Joaquin Chamorro, son of its former owner.

Free labor unions are competing successfully for the loyalty of workers who are beginning to lose faith in the Sandinista sponsored unions. The private sector is united under an umbrella organization, COS EP, which speaks authoritatively for it. Although the private sector must work within the parameters set by the Sandinistas, COSEP does have influence because of its economic expertise in a nation managed by a government without in-depth economic skill an d because of increasing worker loyalty to it rather than to the government HUMAN RIGHTS Finally, among the free democratic forces in Nicaragua is the Permanent Commission on Human Rights, headed by Jose Esteban 5 Gonzalez. This man received considerable at tention from the U.S.

Embassy and the international press when he was reporting human rights violations under Somoza. Since the Sandinistas came into power, he has received little attention, despite the fact that the government's human rights record is mis erable. Gonzalez receives daily 50 to 60 persons who are concerned about missing or imprisoned relatives because his former benefactors have withdrawn their support (the U.S. Council of Churches, for example, stopped funding his office when the Sandinista s came into power because the Sandinistas promised to honor human rights).

Sandinistas that he must sleep in a different place each night He has no money to support his work He is now so harassed by the Meanwhile, the Sandinista government, recognizing the need to project a good human rights image, has established its own human rights office to present a white-washed account of its record, to diminish the influence of the Permanent Commission and to serve as liaison with international organizations, such a s Amnesty International and the OAS Human Rights Commission, which it has just invited to visit Nicaragua. This is human rights in practice, under the Carter formula.

NICARAGUA POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS The United States should aid the aspirations of the Nica raguan people to achieve the free society they have long sought. With regional security uppermost in our minds, we should be less concerned about the precise nature of that society and its govern ment than about the inclinations and ability of that govern m ent to serve as a continuing source of support for Marxist revolution aries elsewhere in Central America. In a well orchestrated program targeted against the Marxist Sandinista government, we should use our limited resources to support the free labor unio n s the Church, the private sector, the independent political parties the free press, and those who truly defend human rights. We should discontinue subsidizing a bankrupt government which clearly is planning on remaining in power through its police and sec u rity forces and whose interests are inimical to those of its neighbors and the U.S. The longer that government remains in power, the stronger its security apparatus will become, and the more difficult it will be to dislodge it. We should not abandon the N icaraguan people, but we must abandon the Sandinista government.

Subsidizing this government through U.S. financial aid which has little propaganda impact on the Nicaraguan people makes no sense. The U.S. should terminate large-scale funding of the Sandini sta government in order to send a clear signal to Central American revolutionaries that it does'not plan to support leftist movements in the region If the Soviets receive this message they may realize that their unexpected opportunity to establish another communist country in this hemisphere has ended.

Sixty percent of the funds in the recently released 75 million aid bill is slotted for the private sector. The private 6 sector doubts it will see all of this money, and whatever it does receive will have to be spent within parameters set by the Sandi nistas. help bail out the Sandinistas from their economic problems. Even to receive these funds under these restrictions, the private sector has advocated U.S. financial aid to the Sandinista govern ment becaus e the Carter Administration has not put forth any alternative formula of support for the private sector In any event, the remaining 40 percent will be used to As long as private sector support has been linked by President Carter to Nicaraguan government su p port, the Carter Administration has assured its policy of private sector blessing which the Administration has attempted to portray as private sector endorse ment of the Sandinista government. Appropriately channeled assistance to the democratic instituti ons in Nicaragua could be far more effective and far less expensive than our currently structured official U.S. aid program for the Sandinista government.

The Nicaraguans did not want Somoza, and they do not want the current Sandinista government. Despite its show of arms that government is still weak and could be dislodged through a determined, coordinated, and targeted effort. But to assist the Nicaraguans in achieving that goal will require a much more realistic understanding about regional Marxist thre ats than the current administration has exhibited.

EL SALVADOR: CURRENT ECONOMIC SITUATION The rapid deterioration of El Salvadorls economy, if unchecked could help the leftist guerrillas achieve the victory they have thus far been unable to obtain militar ily or politically. As in Nicaragua, the crisis will begin at the end of 1980 and will become acute at the close of the harvests in the spring of 1981.

Unemployment is officially acknowledged at 30 percent, but is probably higher. There is an acute shorta ge of working capital essential to the maintenance of agricultural production and to the reactivation of industry. The total amount immediately required to warrant the resumption of industrial activity is estimated at $60 to $80 million, and this does not include agricul ture, commerce, or any part of the public sector's requirements.

Foreign banks are unwilling to restore traditional lines of credit; letters of credit are now issued only against advance cash payments.

The government has prepared a Nation al Emergency Plan for 1980 which involves a consolidated public sector deficit of $541 million; internal financing is projected at $343 million. If the Plan is actually carried out and this amount is financed through Central Bank credit, the result would be a substantial acceleration of inflationary pressures.

A major component of El Salvador's financial requirements over the next four to five years is the financing of the agrarian 7 reform program; the USAID Mission estimates this financial require ment at over one billion dollars between 1980 and 19

84. The balance of payments deficit in 1980 could fall within the range of $150 to $190 million if a reactivation plan gets underway immediately; an even larger balance of payments deficit may be expected in 1981 if the National Emergency Plan is fully implemen ted. If the government sold its gold stock, it could cover its 1980 deficit and possibly part of that for 1981, but such action would'be tantamount to an admission of failure by the government and woul d further undermine popular confidence in it The U.S. Embassy in San Salvador has estimated that El Salvador would need a $200 million EY 81 Economic Support Fund and/or program loan to provide balance of payments assistance AGRARIAN REFORM PROGRAM This gr i m picture has occurred in a country which only a couple of years ago was economically viable and well respected in the international money markets. The economic deterioration has resulted from the nation's escalating violence as leftist guerril las push t h e nation closer to civil war and their goal of a Marxist revolutionary government. It has also resulted from the Carter Administration's experimentation with El Salvador's princi pal means of livelihood: its heretofore efficiently run farms which produced the primary cash crops of coffee, sugar, and cotton. This experimentation took the form of a three-phase agrarian reform program which was enacted in early March 1980.

The first phase, which consisted of the nationalization of all farms over 500 hectares, went into effect immediately The former owners of these fans have, thus far, received no compensa tion Production/efficiency estimates for Phase I properties vary betw e en U.S. Embassy/Salvadorean government and private agricul turalists. Accurate figures will not be available until the spring 1981 harvest is completed. In general, the embassy, the Salvadorean government, and the agrarian reform program's chief U.S. arch i tect, University of Washington Professor Roy Prosterman believe coffee and sugar production will compare favorably with last year's yields, and cotton production will be reduced by about 20 percent; they expect cotton to recover in the following year. The s e sources base their figures on assessments from field surveys and from satellite photography. They also report that Phase I has improved the lives and morale of the campesinos who have formed the cooperatives under which the Phase I properties are now be i ng run Although the campesinos have formed the cooperatives, the cooperatives are being managed by government technicians and bureaucrats The private cotton producers' association believes the number of hectares planted with cotton seed this year has been about half of normal, and it does not want to speculate on yield a at this early date. It bases this estimate on the amount of seed sold, which the association has monitored. The private sugar association is estimating this year's yield at somewhat over h a lf normal. The coffee crop should more or less equal last year's according to private sector estimates, but most of El Salvador's coffee is grown on land which has not yet been nationalized It is impossible to measure how happy the campesinos are but in c o nversations this observer had privately and individually with about a dozen of them in late August, not one felt as much job and personal security under the cooperative system as under the previously private management ness may be attributed to the abrupt changes which the Phase I reforms brought to a style of life they had experienced since birth, each of them expressed the more pragmatic concern that their income would drop because they do not expect this year's crop yields to be as good as last year's. T hey say the local government managers do not know what they are doing, and as a result, the land is not being utilized properly Although some of their uneasi Phase I1 properties (100 to 500 hectares) are still in private hands. These farms are even more i m portant to the nation's economy than those nationalized in Phase I because the bulk of the nation's cash crops are grown on Phase I1 land For example 92 percent of El Salvador's coffee is grown on farms under 500 hectares The present owners of these farms , however, anticipat ing nationalization of their land, are,investing little money in them to fertilize the soil and to control the coffee rust disease roya to insure future coffee trees, and they are cutting down shade trees to increase th.is year's harve s t, but at the expense of future harvests. The result of these acts is that El Salvador's future coffee production may suffer They are also not begining nursery seedlings necessary The embassy, the Salvadorean government, Professor Prosterman and private a g riculturalists all agree that Phase I1 land should not be nationalized until proper management techniques can be devised, lest the country's primary foreign exchange source be seriously, perhaps fatally, damaged. Private agriculturalists would like to see Phase I1 cancelled altogether. Nevertheless Napoleon Duarte, the leading Christian Democrat on the Junta anticipates Phase I1 nationalization in the spring of 1981.

In addition to Phases I and 11, a third phase, covered by Decree 207, calls for the deedin g of land to the campesinos who have rented and tilled it. Although the amount of land involved in Decree 207 is small and is of marginal cash crop productivity the number of campesinos who would benefit from the decree would be about 900,000, nearly one fifth of the nation's population.

Therefore, this phase of the agrarian reform program does have high political impact, does carry minimal economic risks to the nation, and is favorably supported by private agriculturalists in El Salvador, as well as by th e government and the U.S. Embassy. 9 El Salvador has an agriculturally based economy. With its population of five million expected to double by the year 2000, its long-term goal must be increased industrialization. All parties realize this. Thus, it is di f ficult to understand how those involved in the agrarian reform program believe the country can remain economically viable over the two or three decades needed to industrialize if its agricultural sector is badly mismanaged in the interim. The embassy, Pro s terman, and Duarte all seem more concerned about the short-term political and social aspects of the agrarian reform program than about its economic costs The banking reform, enacted at the same time as the agrarian extending bank credits to small and medi um-sized businessmen, who traditionally have had difficulties in obtaining loans for expan sion of their businesses sector members now in exile is that these smaller businessmen are not credit-worthy and might default on their loans.

Salvadoreans are indus trious, imaginative, and hard-working people, and it seems unlikely that so many of these smaller businessmen would default on their loans as to endanger the integrity of the banking system. Furthermore, one of El Salvador's most respected private bankers has said that the nationalization of the banks was necessary at the time and, with certain modifica tions, should be continued for the present reform, appears to have the potential of achieving its purpose of I I The objection raised by some private Howev e r THE MILITARY SITUATION An even more significant source of support for continuing the reforms enacted thus far comes from the strongly anti-communist leadership of the Salvadorean military. If El Salvador stays out of the hands of the communists, it will be primarily because of the efforts of these men in the military. One must, therefore respect and honor their points of view reforms have now become part of reality in El Salvador, and to dismantle them would run the risk of creating such civil and politi cal unrest as to be unrealistic and, hence, unacceptable to them.

This is not to say that these military men favor these reforms or would have planned them as they now exist simply that the reforms already enacted are here to stay. What must be done, they agree, is to improve the management of Phase I of the agrarian reform program, continue with Decree 207 and the banking reform, and seriously consider modifying or even cancelling Phase I1 of the agrarian reform They contend that certain The current milit a ry and security trends in El Salvador are favorable. The leftist guerrillas and their front organizations have lost much popular support; observers believe the Junta's popularity has been broadened at the expense of the leftists is more likely that the le ftists have lost popular support because It 10 the population is fed up with violence, but this loss of support for the left does not necessarily translate into increased support for the Junta.

The Salvadorean military forces have a combined strength of about 15,000; the armed leftists total about 5,0

00. Salvadorean military leaders are optimistic that they can control and eventual ly eliminate the bulk of the leftists if the enemy remains at present levels of manpower and equipment. Should, however, enem y forces be augmented through large numbers of foreign llvolunteersll and/or should the enemy receive more sophisticated equipment than it now has, the Salvadorean military, by all estimates, would be in serious trouble. For this reason, reports that Nica r agua has recently received large numbers of armored vehicles, long-range mortars and rockets, automatic and semi-automatic weapons, and certain aircraft all far in excess of Nicaragua's internal defense needs are particularly worrisome to El Salvador's mi litary leaders.

U.S. military assistance in FY 80 has amounted to $800,000 in the form of communication gear, tear gas grenades, gas masks generators, and ambulances. More offensively-oriented equipment has been offered but with human rights-related string s which the Salvadorean military has found unrealistic. The military command and the Junta acknowledge that excessive force is used by low ranking military units in the countryside. It is a failure of command and control, but the Salvadorean government do e s not believe that, under the circumstances, it should be blamed for the actions of its junior enlisted men in the field, who often are poorly educated, poorly trained, and lack officer supervision in their units. The government particularly doubts that n eeded arms and munitions should be withheld because of these human rights problems.

The unity of the Salvadorean military is a critical issue.

Most observers believe that it is divided into two camps: one pro-left, constitutes about 30-40 percent of the f orces, and the other, pro-right, about 60-70 percent. The degree of commitment that the pro-leftists have to their cause is a subject of specula tion; most local Salvadorean observers believe that this segment's greater loyalty is to the military as an in stitution and that it would not split away from the rightists if such a split threatened the survival of the armed forces.

These local observers further believe that the leftists and their leader, Junta member Colonel Majano, have drawn much of their suppo rt from the U.S. Embassy in San Salvador, and that if this support of Majano ended, the leftist problem within the military ranks would be reduced. If embassy support continues however, Malano's ability to split the military could increase.

These observer s state that the Junta cannot be allowed to shift more to the left or to incorporate more leftist elements into it as they believe our embassy wants. In fact, the majority of the Junta has shifted more to the right over the past few months and 11 thereby h as further isolated the leftist minority. The Junta has also started to cooperate with the private sector in certain areas of common interest. Thus, the Junta, supported by the non-communist military leadership, has come to serve a, useful role as a worka ble institution.

Any attempt to displace the Junta now or in the near future would generate unnecessary political turmoil and disrupt continui ty of the government at a time when continuity is needed. All responsible elements within the private sector resi ding in El Salvador and within the military now appear content to let the Junta remain in power until elections are held sometime in 1982 or 1983; these elements believe that any attempted rightist coup would fail and would yield major benefits to the lef tist guerril las. The neutralizing of Colonel Majano's influence is a delicate matter and is best left to the Salvadorean military leadership to handle, in order to avoid splitting the military forces.

BUSINESS AND CHURCH GROUPS For the first time in recent memory, the Salvadorean private sector is united, and its spokesman is an umbrella organiztion called the Productive Alliance. It is a workable and essential organization, and it has the respect and c ooperation of significant members of the private sector. Without such a broadly based organization representing diverse segments of the private sector rather than just an elitist element, the private sector in El Salvador could not become a potent force i n the reconstruction of the country xne LaxaoLLc Lnurcn appears LO nave Decorne less OL a aAvAsLve factor in El Salvador's political equation following the assassina tion of its controversial leader, Archbishop Romero. Although Romero received internationa l publicity as archbishop, his strident criticism of the government and of the right was representative of only the minority of his bishops. His replacement, who has not yet been confirmed as archbishop, is less vocal, more moderate and more representative of the Church than was Romero EL SALVADOR: POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS Under present U.S. policy, massive government loans and grants will be needed for El Salvador for at least the next three or four years. This aid could be reduced and greater efficiency inj ected into the management of the nation's economy if the role of the Salvadorean government were reduced and that nation's private sector allowed to rebuild and expand its activities.

With key members of the private sector now united and determined to move ahead with plans beneficial to the nation as a whole, the private sector in El Salvador has become a viable force in the reconstruction of that country tional private sector loans, as well as U.S. private sector loans EX-IM Bank financing and interna12 w ith oPIC support, should be explored as possible ways of channel ing funds into the Salvadorean private sector for maximum benefit.

The agrarian reform program cannot be dismantled without risking political turmoil and the anger of even the strongest anti- communist elements within the Salvadorean military. The program, however, can be better managed and attenuated. Phase I management should be turned over to the private sector, preferably to those with agricultural experience, but, at the very least, to pe r sons who understand efficient business practices, who would work together with the campesinos and eventually train them or their sons in certain managerial techniques. Decree 207 land reform should be allowed to progress because of its major politi cal im p act and minimal economic significance economy, should not be confiscated by the government. Instead Phase I1 should be cancelled so that the present land owners will resume proper care of the land and its crops before further deterioration occurs. However , since more abuses of campesinos have taken place on these smaller farms than on the land covered in Phase I, Phase I1 owners should be required to: pay their workers certain minimum wages; explore some form of profit sharing provide adequate housing, hea lth care and education; pay just taxes to the government; and maintain an acceptable standard of production. These modifications of Phase I1 would be supported by key Salvadorean military leaders.

Fair compensation should be paid to the owners of Phase I l and over a real.istic period of time in order to maintain the credibility of the government and to recruit these owners to put their skills and talents to work for El Salvador. Phase I land owners represent a valuable talent pool which the country cannot a fford to lose, but it will be lost unless the government makes a genuine effort to begin resolving this dispute Phase I1 properties, given their importance to the nation's The best signal that the U.S. government could send to the Salvadorean military wou l d be to supply it with the military equipment it needs for offensive warfare without human rights and other strings. The military needs helicopters, arms and munition communications equipment, armored vehicles, and an upgrading of its military medical fac ilities and intelligence capabilities.

Much of this needed assistance is currently blocked because of legislation, but a strong executive so disposed could influence the Congress and in other ways, explore avenues of assistance to the Salvadorean military.

With the Junta at long last moving in the proper direction our embassy in San Salvador should withdraw its backing of Colonel Majano and allow the moderate anti-communist tendencies within the military leadership to continue their correcting influence on past government initiatives. As long as these favorable trends continue, the Junta should continue to enjoy the support of the U.S. government until elections can be held in the next two or 13 three years. One of these favorable trends which should be en c ouraged is the emerging cooperation between the private sector and the Junta; the country cannot make progress unless representa tive members of the private sector assume key responsibilities within the government Regardless of the outcome of our November elections, the Salvadoreans should be encouraged to form alliances with their neighboring countries of Guatemala and Honduras and also with other nations in the hemisphere that have economic and military strength and' the inclination to use their resource s to prevent the spread of communism within Latin America. Having seen the results of our aberrant foreign policy in Central America over the past three years, we should find such alliances to be in our own long-term security interests as well as in the se curity interests of other nations in the region.

GUATEMALA: CURRENT SITUATION Carter Administration criticism of Guatemala's human rights record has severely strained relations between the two countries.

It has prevented Guatemala from receiving military equipment at affordable prices. It has been falsely blamed by Guatemalan meat exporters for the recently imposed U.S. restrictions on the importation of Guatemalan meat into the U.S The real reason is the high concentration of DDT in the meat It has promp t ed the Guatemalan government to ignore the nomination of a new U.S ambassador The previous ambassador, a popular man in Guatemala City, was pulled out prematurely because Washington considered him too soft on the human rights issue It has prompted serious and responsible Guatemalan leaders to speculate about the possibi lity of severing diplomatic relations with the U.S should President Carter win in November, to prevent the U.S. Embassy from serving as a seat of subversion in Guatemala, much as a Soviet e mbassy might.

On the other hand, it has done nothing to improve Guatemala's human rights record, a policy failure acknowledged even by Guatema lan Christian Democratic leaders and some State Department officials who now have judged the policy to have been counterproductive.

The shrill attention to human rights has obscured the very real progress the Guatemalan government has made in its social, educa tional, health, agricultural, and labor programs for its citizens particularly the 60 percent of them who a re Indian. The fine quality of this progress has been recognized by the State Depart ment but in a very low key has not undergone the wrenching dislocations that have afflicted El Salvador and Nicaragua. Its insurgency, although gaining momentum, is still containable by its military and security forces. The armed guerrillas number about 1,500 and are assisted in the opinion of key Guatemalan military leaders, by Cubans Guatemala is still a nation almost at peace. Its economy 14 Sandinistas, and Argentine M o ntoneros The Guatemalans are certain that the guerrillas use training and logistical support bases located across the Mexican border which are staffed by Cubans and Sandinistas. Over the past year, the Guatemalan military command has noted an improvement in the quality of guerrilla arms: they now have G-3s and automatic weapons, whereas a year ago they did not.

Despite the still favorable military picture in Guatemala the Guatemalan leaders have seen what has happened to El Salvador and Nicaragua under cur rent U.S. policies and are determined to avoid being the next Central American country to fall. According ly, they have instituted social and economic improvements needed to defuse certain of the leftist claims while, at the same time they have instituted necessary security measures to protect themselves. They realize the current battle has to be won in El Salvador, lest it be extended to Guatemalan soil, and they are prepared to form mutual protective alliances with El Salvador and Honduras. They appear r ealistic about the need to extend these alliances to include other nations in the hemisphere which could contribute to their security needs.

The Guatemalan private sector has not been subjected to the bitter class warfare experienced by their associates in El Salvador.

The private sector in Guatemala is united among itself and is also united with the military government. This unity with the government has been strained by various decrees and tax laws and by charges of corruption within the military, but th e private sector leaders are determined to let nothing come between them and the military while the country is experiencing guerrilla warfare. They recognize what happened in El Salvador and in Nicaragua when the government lost the support of the private sector, and they do not plan to let that happen in Guatemala.

Nevertheless, there is a strong feeling within the private sector that a civilian president will have to replace the current mili tary president in the 1982 Guatemalan elections The integrity of the Guatemalan government was not weakened by the recent res ignation of its vice president, Francisco Villa gran Kramer, an opposition politician who was brought onto the ticket with President Lucas Garcia in an attempt to obtain inter party unity. The vice president's duties were limited and minor.

He.had been at odds with the president and many members of the C.ongress since taking office and had little following within the country. He received publicity primarily from his frequent threats to resign, and when he finally did quit, he obtained the attention he had long sought, particularly from the international press. He has faded from the scene, and his absence has not been missed in the government.

The Catholic Church continues to be divided in Guatemala but its leader in Guatemala is conservative and speaks stro ngly on behalf of the Church. The National University of San Carlos a seat of leftist activity (generated by only a small number of 'I 15 students and professors), put out feelers to the government and the private sector in early August about beginning a Inhealing dialogue1' to return the university to the business of education.

Over the past few months, the university lost its rector, who decided to reside outside of Guatemala, and several militant leftist leaders at the university have been killed.

The petroleum picture in Guatemala has significantly improved in the past four months, thanks to a saner government policy towards the private oil companies especially towards the one private company now exporting crude. Crude export production by December 19 8 0 is expected to be 15,000 barrels per day (or 5.5 million per year), with the government getting 55 percent of the sale price. Guatemala currently uses about 12 million barrels per year. The bulk comes from Venezuela, with finished products from Aruba, C u racao, and the Bahamas. The Guatemalans have no desire to buy from Mexico, regardless of so-called favorable terms as part of the recently signed Mexican-Venezuelan agreement to share the supply of oil to the Central American countries As one Guatemalan p u t it, "Terrible oil, terrible prices, terrible politics GUATEMALA: POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS Whether Guatemala becomes simply a good friend of the U.S or the centerpiece 0.f American foreign policy in Central America its protection is essential to regional s ecurity. Human rights criticisms have to be muted in order to give responsible leaders in that country a chance to work out their own problems according to their own ground rules and outside of the glare of a U.S.-focused spotlight.

Technical help should b e given.to assist the Guatemalan military in blocking infiltration routes of enemy supplies and personnel from Mexico, Honduras, and El Salvador. Technical advisors are also needed in rural development civic action programs the literacy program, and commu n ity health programs. The Guatema lans also need arms and ammunition at reasonable prices, helicop ters for defense and for the civic action program, spare parts for helicopters and other equipment, and trucks. The Guatemalans also seek relaxed trade restr ictions so that their export markets to the U.S. can be expanded. A serious effort should be made to meet these requests promptly, given.the important security role Guatemala plays in Central America.

CONCLUSION The Carter Administration has prided itself as being a champion of human rights, but it is truly depressing to see the degree of human misery that its policies have brought to .all of the people of these countries from campesinos and laborers to oligarchs --who want to live their lives with some me asure of 16 physical and economic security and without communism. Restoring a semblance of order to these people's lives and bringing greater security to this region should be the objective of a reconstructed foreign policy for Central America.

Imaginative leaders in the public and private sectors of Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Guatemala have, over the past five or six months, analyzed their nations' economic and security problems and have become determined to beat them both rather than to flee to safe hav ens abroad. What they all say they need for their nations' survival is forceful U.S. government leadership. With it, they might make it.

Written at the request of The Heritage Foundation by C. Di Giovanni, Jr The author is currently vice president of the I nternational Consulting Group in Washington. He is a former senior CIA officer with extensive experi ence in South America and in recent years worked as a private business consul tant in El Salvador and Guatemala. This particular study is based upon exten sive research and personal interviews conducted in Central America in August 1980

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