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Viewing cable 05SANSALVADOR3485, OIG INSPECTION OF EMBASSY SAN SALVADOR -

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
05SANSALVADOR3485 2005-12-15 15:28 2011-08-30 01:44 SECRET Embassy San Salvador
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 03 SAN SALVADOR 003485 
 
SIPDIS 
 
FOR OIG FROM AMBASSADOR BARCLAY 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/15/2015 
TAGS: AMGT ASIG BBG
SUBJECT: OIG INSPECTION OF EMBASSY SAN SALVADOR - 
AMBASSADOR'S POST MEMORANDUM - INTRIGUING OPPORTUNITIES AND 
SERIOUS CHALLENGES 
 
REF: STATE 210813 
 
Classified By: AMBASSADOR H. DOUGLAS BARCLAY FOR REASONS 1.4 (B) AND 
(D) 
 
(C) Our relationship with El Salvador offers Embassy San 
Salvador both intriguing opportunities and serious 
challenges.  During the 1980s, El Salvador suffered the most 
devastating internal conflict in all of Central America; 
fourteen years after the peace accords, it is the most 
politically stable country in the region.  Its people are 
famously industrious, yet the country is critically poor. 
The government?s economic policy is largely on the right 
road; yet El Salvador still lacks the institutional bases 
necessary for a strong and stable economy.  The nation?s 
leadership is capable, but its ranks are thin.  Although the 
center-right has gradually democratized, the left is still 
dominated by its hard-line, orthodox element.  The 
development of a democratic left ? capable of governing and 
willing to depart office following an electoral defeat ? is 
an important medium-term goal for the mission. 
 
(C) President Tony Saca?s ARENA government, elected in 2004, 
is an unabashedly pro-American administration in a rough 
neighborhood.  The GOES has sent five rotations of troops to 
Iraq ? it is the only Latin American force still present -- 
has been a vocal supporter of the Free Trade Area of the 
Americas.  El Salvador will benefit from the entry-into-force 
of the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) in early 
2006; although most attention has focused on increased trade 
with the US, El Salvador will also benefit both from the 
reduction of tariff barriers among Central American nations 
as well as from the series of reforms required for CAFTA 
certification.  El Salvador has also qualified to compete 
with two other lower-middle-income countries for Millennium 
Challenge Account Funds.  I expect the Millennium Challenge 
Corporation to choose El Salvador?s project, which focuses 
on developing the country?s poor, northern region, for 
funding sometime in mid-2006. 
 
Mission Goals 
 
(U) Our principal challenges into five broad groups.  Our FY 
2008 MPP, which will be submitted just prior to the 
inspection team?s arrival at post, will address these in 
considerably greater detail. 
 
(U) Economic: We want to create a diversifying private 
sector-led economy that grows by approximately four percent 
per year; to address bottlenecks that constrain domestic and 
international investment; and to promote further market 
opening and regional integration, as well as increased 
exports of US goods and services.  We have worked with the 
Salvadoran Government toward the early, effective 
implementation of CAFTA-DR, which will be one of the most 
important pro-growth developments for El Salvador into the 
medium term future.  CAFTA will help El Salvador increase its 
national competitiveness, institute more transparent business 
practices and better government services for local and 
foreign investors, and maintain momentum on economic reform 
and integration.  USDA-funded programs continue to support 
agricultural diversification and non-traditional exports, 
reflected in agricultural sector growth rates that have 
reached 5%.  Strong Embassy support for El Salvador?s 
interest in the Millennium Challenge Account has resulted in 
GOES measures to reduce the costs of doing business and the 
corruption that undermines economic growth. 
 
(U) Homeland Security: We need to stem the flow of illegal 
Salvadoran aliens to the United States; increase deportations 
those detained in the US; and strengthen El Salvador?s 
capacity to control its borders.  We provide training and 
equipment to immigration officials to ensure that they can 
identify fraudulent passports and visas.  We are working 
closely with DHS and the GOES to establish an agreement on 
expediting the deportations of Salvadorans detained on 
immigration charges in the United States.  We also offer 
extensive training and equipment to the border police in 
furtherance of their efforts against human smuggling and 
trafficking. 
 
(U) Democracy and Human Rights:  We are working with 
Salvadoran officials in improving public institutions; 
seeking to increase the average citizen?s participation in 
politics and community civic activities; addressing the 
capability of the armed forces to operate in support of 
peacekeeping, counter-terrorism, humanitarian/disaster relief 
and counter-drug operations; and encouraging development of a 
national security strategy that emphasizes military 
subordination to civil authorities. 
 
(U) Law Enforcement: We will seek to strengthen the rule of 
law through reform of the justice system and modernization of 
laws and institutions while utilizing and improving 
international mechanisms for regional cooperation against 
crime.  We have initiated a program to pair Spanish-speaking, 
U.S. federal judges with Salvadoran judges for the purpose of 
exchanging information and offering advice.  USAID is working 
closely with Salvadoran counterparts to reform the legal 
system.  The International Law Enforcement Academy, which was 
recently approved by the Salvadoran Legislature, will bring 
police officers and prosecutors from all over the western 
hemisphere to El Salvador to receive high-caliber training 
and to foster regional cooperation on law enforcement issues. 
 
(U) Administrative Services: We will take advantage of 
collocation of USAID within the mission compound to carry out 
a model consolidation of State-USAID administrative 
resources.  This process has not yet begun, in part due to 
skepticism on the part of USAID.  However, our FY 2008 MPP 
submission will press this matter, with performance 
indicators reflecting a) study of overlap and decisions on 
how to resolve it, and b) actual implementation of the 
decision. 
- 
 
Migration Issues the Biggest Headache 
 
(C) Of these, the border issue is likely to be the greatest 
political challenge.  The United States is an enormous 
attraction to Salvadorans of all ages, but especially to the 
young.  One recent survey showed that seventy percent of 
Salvadorans would immigrate to the US if possible.  The GOES 
suggests that up to two million Salvadoran citizens currently 
live in the US.  Bands of immigrant smugglers, popularly 
known as ?coyotes,? find illegal immigration to be a 
profitable undertaking, and have achieved folk hero status in 
parts of the country.  Salvadorans resident in the US sent 
approximately $3 billion in remittances to El Salvador during 
calendar year 2005, seventy percent of El Salvador?s foreign 
exchange as well as a sum that provided a life-line to many 
Salvadorans, particularly in small towns and rural areas. 
Extension of temporary protected status for several hundred 
thousand qualified Salvadorans currently in the US is a major 
priority for Saca?s government.  The GOES has, however, 
cooperated with US efforts to pursue the Border Security 
Initiative (BSI), participating actively in a bilateral 
working group (chaired by the Deputy Minister of Governance 
and the Embassy?s Political Counselor) seeking to work 
through the issues involved.  Our efforts to pursue the BSI 
will have indirect costs for the US; much of El Salvador?s 
pro-Americanism is based on family ties with Salvadorans 
living (legally and illegally) in the US, as well as on the 
typical Salvadoran?s moving adherence to the American dream. 
 
(C) Addressing deficiencies in El Salvador?s legal and law 
enforcement systems will also be a major challenge.  The 
creation of the National Civilian Police (PNC) following the 
end of the civil war has been a model for the region. 
Nonetheless, the police force is underfunded, and struggling 
without success against steadily increasing criminality. 
Street crime and extortion is of increasing concern here. 
Salvadoran gang crime is a threat both here and in the US; 
issues surrounding the deportation of gang members illegally 
in the US form an important concern within our bilateral 
relationship.  The criminal and civil justice system is slow, 
cumbersome and unpredictable.  A perceived lack of judicial 
security could prove an important disincentive to foreign 
investment here. 
- 
 
High Embassy Morale 
 
(U) Embassy morale is high, although the fact that El 
Salvador is a critical crime-threat post is a concern. 
Approximately five hundred employees (including security 
contractors) work on our twenty-six acre embassy campus. 
Housing is good, and schools adequate.  We have an active and 
effective CLO office.   Entry-level officers play an 
important role in the Embassy?s operations and social-life; 
they enjoy a model mentoring program that couples ELOs with 
experienced mid-level officers in their cone.  I am proud 
that San Salvador is considered a very family-friendly post. 
We have an experienced and capable Management section.  I am 
particularly proud of our Consular section, which is known 
throughout the Department for its originality and 
professionalism. 
- 
 
Interagency Challenges 
 
(S/NF) Sixteen agencies are represented at our mission, and 
we are likely to add one other (the Millennium Challenge 
Corporation) sometime next year.  Relations among the 
mission's sections are cordial and good, but coordination of 
our work (especially among the many agencies with 
law-enforcement responsibilities) requires considerable 
front-office attention.  The reestablishment of San 
Salvador?s CIA station as a country-specific (rather than a 
regional) station will help reinforce collection of 
intelligence specifically related to Salvadoran domestic 
politics and foreign policy, which I have found 
disappointing.  The creation of a permanent Legal Attach ,s 
office (following coverage by TDY personnel from the FBI) 
will reinforce cooperation with Salvadoran officials on 
international crime, particularly that related to gangs.  So 
will the permanent establishment of the International Law 
Enforcement Academy (ILEA) San Salvador, which will bring law 
enforcement personnel (police, prosecutors and judges) from 
throughout Latin America to El Salvador for training.  I look 
forward to talking to you about State-USAID consolidation 
issues. 
 
(U) One OIG recommendation remains unresolved from the last 
inspection.  We have repeatedly sought to obtain funding that 
would allow us to expand Consular Section space.  We will be 
pleased to discuss our options for addressing this problem, 
and will ask for your support in resolving it. 
- 
 
Welcome to San Salvador 
 
(U) I think you will agree that we have a great team, across 
the board, here in Embassy San Salvador.  I look forward to 
seeing you early next year. 
Barclay