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Viewing cable 04GUATEMALA504, SCENE SETTER FOR MARCH 5 PCC ON GUATEMALA

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
04GUATEMALA504 2004-03-01 21:04 2011-08-30 01:44 CONFIDENTIAL Embassy Guatemala
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 06 GUATEMALA 000504 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/23/2014 
TAGS: PREL EAID PGOV SNAR CVIS MASS KCOR OVIP PBTS GT
SUBJECT: SCENE SETTER FOR MARCH 5 PCC ON GUATEMALA 
 
 
Classified By: Ambassador John R. Hamilton, for reason 1.4 (d). 
 
1. (C) Summary and introduction: After only six weeks in 
office, the Berger government has generated high expectations 
among Guatemalans that it will spur economic growth, reduce 
violent crime and investigate and prosecute official 
corruption and organized crime.  Berger has also told us 
privately that he wants to greatly reduce the military and 
professionalize what is left.  He told the Belizeans he is 
committed to resolving the border demarcation with Belize, 
and will not send the dispute to the ICJ.  Recognizing the 
growing economic importance of remittances by Guatemalans in 
the US, Berger is also seeking greater protections for the 
large community of Guatemalans living out of status in the US. 
 
2. (C) To a large extent, Berger's priorities fit 
hand-in-glove with our own, and it is in our interest to take 
advantage of his political will and the energy of his capable 
team to ensure that our shared goals succeed.  The PCC offers 
a timely opportunity to review USG engagement in Guatemala. 
This cable outlines our thoughts on issues the PCC might wish 
to consider. Specifically, we propose: 
 
Short term actions: 
-- Supporting quick IDB disbursement of sector adjustment 
funds while the new GOG undertakes substantial fiscal reform; 
-- Ensuring a high-level reception, ideally with the 
President, when Berger visits Washington in May; and 
-- Using visa policy actively against corrupt Guatemalans; 
 
Medium term and continuing actions: 
-- Reversing planned cuts in AID funding (DA) to help the GOG 
build democratic, democratic and accountable institutions and 
crack down on corruption; 
-- Providing robust support to initiatives against organized 
crime and violence (CICIACS and community policing); 
-- Encouraging realistic GOG initiatives for dealing with 
Guatemalan immigrants in the US; and 
-- Including Guatemala early in post-Monterrey initiatives on 
facilitating remittances; 
 
Longer term commitments: 
-- Providing technical assistance for an ambitious military 
downsizing and FMF and IMET support (in FY-06) to those who 
remain once the reductions are irreversibly underway; and 
-- Restoring momentum to resolving the Belize border dispute, 
perhaps beginning with a visit of OAS A/SG Einaudi. 
 
End summary and introduction. 
 
Tackling the Budget Crisis 
-------------------------- 
3. (SBU) Guatemala is strapped for cash.  The Berger 
administration came to office with backlogs of unpaid 
salaries and bills and a court ruling that eliminated the 
"IEMA" asset-based tax that had provided ten percent of total 
revenues.  Tax reform is necessary and will be a Berger 
priority.  The administration has begun the process by 
resuscitating the Fiscal Pact that had been negotiated after 
the Peace Accords with some 650 civil society groups but was 
discarded by the Portillo government.  The administration 
calculates that a renewed Fiscal Pact will provide the 
mandate and legitimacy needed to push a 2004 budget and tax 
reform plan through an unfocused and politicized Congress. 
Until that happens, the government is choosing not to 
approach international debt markets or negotiate a new 
program with the IMF in order not to be seen as prejudicing 
the outcome of the Fiscal Pact discussions.  This leaves the 
government solely dependent upon austerity measures and a 
depleted tax base until the new Fiscal Pact can be agreed and 
implemented. 
 
4. (C) In the interim, $80 million of fast-disbursing funds 
are potentially available from the IDB under the Financial 
Sector Adjustment program.  Disbursement is contingent, 
however, upon IMF concurrence or compliance with an IMF 
program.  Guatemala currently is not fully compliant with its 
IMF stand-by, for two reasons that are relatively minor: 1) a 
law exempting the sale of bank asset portfolios from the 
value added tax is still stuck in Congress, and 2) outside 
auditors have not been brought in to look into the failed 
national mortgage bank (CHN).  The IMF stand-by agreement 
will likely lapse in mid-March without Guatemala's full 
compliance, and the government does not expect to seek 
another Fund program until later in the year.  Members of the 
Berger economic team will be in Washington at the same time 
as the PCC seeking the concurrence of the Fund and Treasury 
to release the $80 million from the IDB.  They will say that 
there has been abundant good faith in pursuing banking reform 
and that they need funds to stay afloat as they undertake 
more fundamental fiscal and governance reforms.  We believe 
strongly that we should accommodate this request. 
 
Matching USG Assistance to Improved Opportunities 
--------------------------------------------- ---- 
5. (SBU) The climate for promoting change in Guatemala 
improved across the board with the inauguration of the Berger 
government, but AID has planned a 60% cut in DA levels 
between FY03 and FY05.  We understand that the cut is being 
reconsidered and it could be restored.  We would use restored 
DA levels to support rural economic growth through trade 
capacity building, improved competitiveness, and 
decentralization.  ESF as well as DA are needed to support 
the GOG's national anti-corruption campaign and to respond to 
its specific request for internal vulnerability assessments 
of major GOG institutions.  ESF and INL funding is needed for 
a community policing program and to support the UN-sponsored 
CICIACS initiative against organized crime.  Guatemala 
received about $10 million of DA annually during the Portillo 
years, comparable to what was given less populous neighbors 
Honduras, Nicaragua, and Salvador.  We should be willing to 
invest that much and more now that we have a government 
attuned to our interests. 
 
Supporting A New, Greatly Reduced Guatemalan Military 
--------------------------------------------- ------------ 
6. (C) President Berger has made military reform a central 
part of his opening agenda. His plan, centered on a 50% cut 
in the size of the Army and the shedding of excess 
infrastructure, envisions a smaller, better trained, and more 
operationally capable Guatemalan Army.  His proposal would 
put an end once and for all to the war-time military that 
grew out of control during the internal conflict, and was 
poorly managed by post-conflict governments until now.  We 
have in hand a perhaps one-time opportunity to partner with 
the Berger administration to positively influence the future 
of one of hemisphere's most insular and stodgy militaries. 
Although pockets of high-level corruption and a culture 
resistant to reform still exist within the force, Berger's 
determination to dramatically downsize the institution 
appears to have finally galvanized serious planning efforts 
within the institution, including focusing on missions 
previously shunned by "ground-centric" forces such as 
maritime operations under our recently signed bilateral 
agreement.  Lack of local civil-military technical expertise 
on defense transformation, however, and unimaginative 
military planning mean we need move quickly to help sustain 
the momentum of the President's reform agenda.  We must also 
be alert for signs of resistance or even rebellion from the 
military, a concern that Berger raised with the Ambassador on 
February 25.  We should use opportunities such as the 
upcoming visit of the Commander, U.S. Army South, to remind 
Guatemala's military that we have no tolerance for 
insubordination to civilian command. 
 
7. (C) Under Portillo, progress was achieved on most 
benchmarks for military reform outlined in the 1996 Peace 
Accords, and some of our benchmarks for restoring a regular 
military assistance relationship.  The infamous Estado Mayor 
Presidencial (EMP) was finally disbanded.  Military support 
to national civil police and USG law enforcement on 
counter-narcotics operations has been excellent and was 
unquestionably pivotal in achieving 2004 narcotics 
certification benchmarks (military support was a contributing 
factor in nearly 90% of the nearly nine metric tons of 
cocaine seized). Navy assistance with operations aimed at 
containing ship-bound alien smuggling is pivotal to the 
repatriation of hundreds of illegal aliens each year who 
might otherwise reach the U.S. Human rights training and 
reporting systems were instituted throughout the Army, with 
reports of military human rights abuses falling to near zero. 
 The first Defense White Paper was published last year; it 
laid out unequivocal benchmarks on civilian control of the 
military, including the requirement to maintain a culture of 
respect for human rights within the armed forces, and defined 
roles and missions for the military in the 21st century. 
Work remains on other benchmarks, however, including seeking 
greater military budget oversight by congress, naming a 
civilian Minister of Defense, and accounting for abuses 
committed during the war.  We expect progress on the first 
two, but are frankly pessimistic on the third. 
 
8. (C) The Portillo government fell short in several other 
areas too, choosing not (or unable) to reign in corrupt 
high-level military officers or take costly and unpopular 
steps needed to rid the force of a hugely bloated officer 
corps. Portillo used the military budget, shielded by archaic 
wartime secrecy laws, to launder large amounts of "off the 
books" money, leaving the impression of large increases in 
military spending, when in fact the institution was 
progressively starved of resources. The unattended issue of 
the size and salaries of the senior officer ranks, and the 
high costs of retiring them under the current self-funded 
pension system, stymied the most urgent of all reforms -- 
downsizing the force.  Berger inherited the most expensive 
military in Central America, but one without any significant 
operational capability and no modernization plan -- an 
untenable situation for both the military and the incoming 
Berger government.  President Berger was recently briefed by 
the military that it would take $200 million to draw down the 
force by 16,000. 
 
9. (C) While we have stated unambiguously that USG funding 
for retiring excess officers is not possible, we believe 
targeted and phased assistance and advice designed to assist 
Guatemalan efforts to modernize and increase operational 
effectiveness would serve to shore up the military during 
this time of uncertainty and transformation -- including 
preparing a battalion-sized unit for international 
peacekeeping duty.  First, we propose providing Berger 
technical advice on how to best approach the defense 
transformation.  We already have E-IMET scheduled visits by 
the Center for Civil Military Relations and the Defense 
Resource Management Institute which we will use to lay 
groundwork, but dedicated expert assistance on executing a 
large personnel draw down and how to profitably dispose of 
resulting excess bases and facilities could conceivably save 
the GOG tens of millions of dollars. 
 
10.  (C) After consulting with various supporting 
institutions, we are confident we can effectively use more 
current year E-IMET funds to support this effort should 
additional funds due to ASPA reallocations become available. 
Starting in FY-06 and beyond )- and assuming that military 
reform proves real -- restoration of IMET and FMF eligibility 
would allow for the carefully targeted release of $3.2 
million in currently frozen MAP and FMF funds.  Also, the 
quick transfer of Excess Defense Articles (for which 
Guatemala is eligible) is an additional low-cost method to 
support Guatemalan military transformation. Excess equipment 
and parts could be targeted to improving Guatemalan Air Force 
rotary and fixed wing transportation and surveillance 
capabilities used in the war on drugs. Also, INCLE funds can 
and should be used to support fuel and limited parts support 
to bolster Guatemalan Military counter narcotics support to 
the national civil police. 
 
11.  (C) Spare parts and fuel are issues with a moral 
dimension as well.  Under the implicit threat of 
decertification, we are pushing the Guatemalans to a greatly 
increased tempo of counter narcotics operation, in helos and 
fixed wing aircraft where airworthiness is open to question. 
We understand the reluctance to violate the spirit of 
Congressional intent inherent in FMF and IMET prohibitions, 
but believe denial of funds for aircraft spare parts and fuel 
to be too purist. Similarly, visits by USCG Training Ship 
Gentian (Caribbean Support Tender) would serve to greatly 
improve Guatemalan Navy's abilities to patrol territorial 
waters.  Together, these targeted assistance initiatives 
would improve Berger's ability to plan for a historic defense 
transformation, boost Guatemala's capability to participate 
in international peacekeeping, enforce territorial 
sovereignty, and reclaim ungoverned spaces, which in turn 
improve regional stability and support U.S. Homeland defense. 
 
Helping Berger Reach Out to Guatemalan Immigrants 
--------------------------------------------- ---- 
12. (SBU) The status of Guatemalans in the U.S. is a 
high-priority item for the new GOG, to which we need to be as 
responsive as possible, in the interest of keeping the 
bilateral dynamic as positive as it is right now.  We should 
look for ways to help the new government develop a realistic 
approach for this issue.  Berger traveled to the U.S. during 
his campaign to seek the support of expat Guatemalans and to 
express his government's commitment to address their 
concerns.  The legal and illegal Guatemalan community in the 
U.S. numbers about 1 million persons and sends an estimated 
$2 billion in remittances annually to Guatemala.  They have a 
growing, direct economic and indirect political effect on 
Guatemalan voters, particularly in economically depressed 
rural towns and cities, where they support large extended 
families.  A recent IOM survey concluded that nearly one of 
every three persons in Guatemala depends on remittances from 
the U.S. to meet their basic needs. 
 
13. (SBU) The GOG would like to help regularize the status of 
illegal Guatemalans.  The GOG perceives recent extensions of 
TPS for Salvadorans and Hondurans less as a function of the 
devastation caused by Hurricane Mitch in 1998 than as 
effective lobbying by their governments. We have told Berger 
that the President's immigration proposal clearly indicates 
that any new non-emergency TPS or other unilateral 
immigration remedies are not in the cards and have encouraged 
his government instead to work through its embassy and 
consulates to support the President's proposal.  We need to 
remind the GOG periodically that immigration reform is an 
enduring issue in the U.S. and that they need to follow and 
participate in the public debate.  Meanwhile, and as a 
palliative, we have suggested that the GOG might initiate a 
search for U.S. employers needing Guatemalan farm workers 
under the H2A visa program.  There would be no direct role 
for the USG in this effort.  We have pointed out that a 
number of workers have failed to return under our current H2B 
visa program for other unskilled workers. 
14.  (SBU) The GOG would also like to reduce, as possible, 
the cost of remittances and find ways to use them to help 
fund basic infrastructure and services in rural areas.  Vice 
President Eduardo Stein is particularly interested in this 
issue.  He was an IOM consultant before joining the Berger 
campaign, and he was personally involved in exploring with 
banks various mechanisms for facilitating remittances to 
individuals or community associations.  He is aware of the 
language on remittances from the Monterrey Summit, and we can 
expect that he will ask periodically if any progress has been 
made.  Guatemala would be an excellent target or test bed for 
any new initiatives Washington may be considering, and we 
would encourage that Guatemala be given priority attention as 
initiatives emerge. 
 
Depriving Corrupt Former Officials of Safehaven in the U.S. 
--------------------------------------------- -------------- 
15. (SBU) Growing press accounts of corruption during the 
Portillo administration have renewed calls for prosecuting 
corrupt officials.  Since 2001, consular officers have been 
working closely with other Embassy offices, primarily at 
monthly Visas Viper meetings, to gather information and 
review the continued visa eligibility of these individuals. 
These efforts have resulted in findings that many influential 
people were ineligible to retain their non-immigrant visas 
(NIVs), and the visas have been revoked. The Embassy's 
actions have attracted heavy media coverage and received 
widespread support from the Guatemalan public. 
 
16. (SBU) Since 2001, we have revoked the visas of 170 
high-profile individuals.  The majority of these 170 cases 
were revoked under Section 214(b), which prohibits visas for 
intending immigrants.  Our reasoning is that many of these 
individuals are flight risks because they are under 
investigation or indictment by Guatemalan authorities with 
judicial orders prohibiting departure ("arraigos"). 
 
17. (C) Press reports in the US and Guatemala about an 
ongoing US criminal investigation into money laundering 
activities of high-level Portillo administration persons and 
an associated Grand Jury in Miami are essentially accurate. 
Although the investigation is not all-inclusive of the fraud 
purportedly committed by GOG functionaries in recent years, 
it does focus on four main areas, consolidated in two cases. 
The first case deals with the National Mortgage Bank (CHN) 
fraud and Caso Panama issues; the second covers the looting 
of the Social Security Institute (IGSS) and the Military 
Retirement Fund (IPM).  There is some overlap among these 
cases as well as with other fraud and thefts reported in the 
press over the last few years; however, in these listed 
cases, the apparently ill-gotten gains have at least passed 
through the U.S., making it a violation of US law.  These 
cases involve private individuals, past GOG officials and 
institutions within and out of Guatemala.  Many of the 
persons investigating, including two assigned Assistant U.S. 
Attorneys, also were active in the U.S. case against former 
President Aleman of Nicaragua. 
 
18. (C) The targets of the US investigation include, on the 
high end, former President Alfonso Portillo, former VP Juan 
Francisco Reyes Lopez, former private secretary to Portillo 
Julio Giron, and some of their family members and associates. 
 Evidence and statements are still being collected, but the 
indicators are strong for substantial fraud and money 
laundering activities having been committed by those under 
investigation.  As the cases have progressed, persons 
knowledgeable in the criminal actions of the targets, many 
due to participation, have come forward to offer testimony in 
place of prosecution.  Regrettably, the current lack of 
confidence and trust in the GOG Public Ministry (prosecutor) 
has not allowed US investigators to cooperate with local 
judicial authorities to share information.  This element of 
the investigation makes providing an anticipated time-line 
for action in the US cases difficult to do; however, the 
rising public pressure on both the Public Ministry and the 
targets  (including the revocation of US visas when doing so 
is appropriate) is anticipated to create investigative 
opportunities. 
 
19. (C) The ongoing investigation by a South Florida grand 
jury and new local revelations of Portillo-era corruption are 
contributing to a case for revoking the visas of these former 
officials, some of whom have already fled the country.  The 
Embassy has now forwarded a recommendation.  Visa revocations 
would not only appropriately apply US law, but would also 
send a strong message to officials of the new government that 
corrupt officials will never again be welcome in the United 
States, whether or not they escape prosecution in Guatemala. 
 
Combating Organized Crime and the Growth of Violent Common 
Crime 
--------------------------------------------- ------------- 
20. (SBU) The power of organized crime and clandestine groups 
in Guatemala has risen to the point where local police and 
prosecutors are overwhelmed.  Narco-traffickers and corrupt 
officials have operated with virtual impunity; combined with 
the gang violence spawned by street level drug distribution 
organizations, this has created the public perception that 
crime has grown beyond the capacity of democratic government 
to control.  This problem has to be attacked at both the 
organized crime and the street level if democracy and the 
rule of law are to be sustained in Guatemala. 
 
21. (SBU) CICIACS -- the proposal for a U.N. investigative 
and (possibly) prosecutorial mission -- presents an 
innovative plan to marshal international assistance against 
organized criminal enterprises in Guatemala. A two- to 
three-year mission, CICIACS will empower experienced 
international investigators and prosecutors to work (at least 
initially) independently of the police and Public Ministry, 
but under Guatemalan law.  By pursuing emblematic cases 
through the Guatemalan courts, CICIACS will strengthen, not 
supplant, national institutions while remaining insulated 
from their weaknesses.  A competent, credible, and 
incorruptible international investigative capability is 
perhaps the only way to successfully prosecute the heads of 
Guatemala's entrenched criminal organizations.  A U.S. 
contribution of relatively modest resources (several hundred 
thousand in FY-04, $2 to 3 million in FY-05 and $5 million in 
FY-06 an 07) could well avoid the necessity of a "Plan 
Colombia" for Guatemala five years hence.  We submit this as 
an instance of seeing around the corner and acting 
accordingly. 
 
22. (SBU) Community policing offers a proven method to break 
the stranglehold that street gangs have gained over poor 
neighborhoods in urban and semi-urban areas throughout 
Guatemala.  These gangs are the street level distribution 
network for the cocaine that remains in Guatemala after local 
narco-traffickers are paid for assisting the transit of 
cocaine on its way to the U.S.   A survey sponsored in 2002 
by NAS Guatemala indicates that there are between 68,000 and 
97,000 Guatemalan youths (ages 12 to 20) who have belonged to 
or were then participating in street gangs.  With a 
population of only 12 million, this is a shocking statistic, 
and indicative of a problem that is on the verge of spinning 
out of control.  Community policing has worked effectively to 
control gang crime throughout the U.S. and has had great 
results in El Salvador.  New ESF (with requisite legal 
authority) or INCLE funding of $2 million in FY-05 and $3 
million in FY-06 and 07 to support community policing could 
have a significant impact on helping the Berger government 
control crime. 
 
23. (SBU) Fully funding the original NAS budget request of $5 
million for FY-05 (currently, we are funded for only $2.82 
million) would allow us to assist efforts of the narcotics 
police and special task forces to implement better systems 
for tracking, investigating and prosecuting major drug and 
corruption cases.  It would also enable us to implement 
Culture of Lawfulness and precursor chemical control programs. 
 
Getting to "Yes" on Belize 
--------------------------- 
24. (C) The Berger government has been cautious on its public 
statements as to how it proposes to address the border 
demarcation dispute with Belize, cognizant that there is no 
popular groundswell of support in Guatemala for any solution. 
 However, Berger told reporters on inauguration day that he 
intends to resolve the border dispute through a national 
referendum, and told representatives of the Belizean 
Government that the OAS facilitators' process remains the 
GOG's preference for reaching an agreement.  He categorically 
ruled out sending the matter to the ICJ, and has since said 
that (for fiscal reasons) the GOG will close its Embassy in 
The Hague. 
25. (C) The next step in resolving this 135-year old dispute 
is getting both sides (especially Guatemala) to renew the 
OAS-sponsored confidence building measures, which are 
scheduled to expire soon.  Following that, it will be 
important to get the momentum of the facilitators' process 
back on track.  With the need to impose unpopular fiscal 
measures increasingly inevitable, and with the growing cost 
in political capital for establishing CICIACS, the Berger 
government will not have an excess of political good will to 
spend on persuading Guatemalans to approve a referendum on 
Belize in the short term.  However, it is important that the 
momentum be restored.  A visit to Guatemala by OAS A/SG 
Einaudi, who is widely respected in Guatemala, could go a 
long way to reminding the Berger government of the priority 
the international community places on resolving once and for 
all its disagreements with Belize. 
 
High-level GOG Visits to Washington 
---------------------------------------- 
26. (C) President Berger has accepted a Council of the 
Americas invitation to speak at an event in Washington on May 
3.  This visit offers an opportunity for him to meet with 
President Bush at a time when such a meeting would convey to 
Guatemalans, especially in the military and the opposition, 
our support for his program for profound reforms.  Greatly 
reducing the military, getting CICIACS approved by Congress, 
concluding an Article 98 Agreement with us, raising taxes and 
addressing the Belize border dispute will all require a 
substantial amount of political capital and the good will of 
the opposition.  A highly publicized meeting in the Oval 
Office would give Berger a lift that would strengthen his 
hand in carrying out these unpopular measures.  It would also 
greatly strengthen our ability to secure his support for 
issues of importance to us.  Berger has conveyed to us his 
willingness to stay through May 4 in order to meet with the 
President if the May 3 date itself is not convenient for the 
White House.  We believe this visit would pay dividends for 
advancing our bilateral interests throughout the Berger 
presidency. 
 
27. (C) Berger wants to send Vice President Eduardo Stein to 
Washington in mid-March to meet with senior USG officials and 
members of Congress to explain Berger's program of government 
and to seek support for specific initiatives.  Stein knows us 
well and can be a good interpreter for Berger and his team of 
US perspectives on Guatemala.  We would hope that he could be 
received at the highest levels; more on this septel. 
 
Carpe diem 
---------- 
28. (C) With the inauguration of President Oscar Berger we 
have the best chance for significant change in Guatemala 
since the restoration of democracy in 1985, and an 
unparalleled opportunity to advance a large number of our 
highest priority goals in this country that forms the border 
with NAFTA.  It is important that we be prepared to respond 
to these opportunities with the resources -- political and 
financial to ensure their success. 
HAMILTON