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News | Aug. 20, 2018

Mattis Impressed With Colombian Progress, Concerned About Venezuela

By Jim Garamone DoD News, Defense Media Activity

Defense Secretary James N. Mattis said he came away from Colombia impressed by the progress he witnessed there, but that he’s concerned about the unrest in neighboring Venezuela.

Colombia's president is flanked at a conference table by nine men, including Defense Secretary James N. Mattis.
Defense Secretary James N. Mattis meets with Colombian President Ivan Duque, Aug. 17, 2018. Mattis said Colombia is now one of the United States’ most reliable partners in Latin America. Courtesy photo
Colombia's president is flanked at a conference table by nine men, including Defense Secretary James N. Mattis.
Meeting
Defense Secretary James N. Mattis meets with Colombian President Ivan Duque, Aug. 17, 2018. Mattis said Colombia is now one of the United States’ most reliable partners in Latin America. Courtesy photo
Photo By: Courtesy photo
VIRIN: 180817-D-ZZ999-132

Mattis spoke to reporters traveling with him on the homeward leg of his trip to South America last week.

“I don't always leave a theater saying, ‘Boy, what a fortunate theater that is,’” he said. “And yet, there are a lot of reasons to look at this as a fortunate hemisphere here. But, that just means we work more on it. We don't get complacent. We go to work.”

Colombia was close to being a failed state in the 1980s and 1990s. An insurgency threatened the government, and transnational criminal organizations used their financial and paramilitary might freely. Mattis noted that at one point, Bogota, the capital of the country, was almost surrounded by enemies.

Reliable U.S. Partner

Today, Colombia is one of America’s “most capable, and certainly, most reliable partners both in Latin America and even in the world in many ways,” Mattis said.

Colombia’s police and military -- once known for lawlessness -- now set the regional standard for operational effectiveness and for respecting human rights.

“We stand with them as they continue to strengthen their democracy,” the secretary said. “We saw that in the election, the series of elections, the runoff and all that just occurred.”

Today, Colombia is exporting stability, helping neighboring states develop their police and military capabilities.

Colombia is also hosting the Unitas exercise next month. Unitas is Latin for unity. This is the longest-running annual multinational maritime exercise, and it will encompass ships and personnel from all over the hemisphere.

Colombia is just one example of the spread of democratic ideas in the region. In fact, Mattis said, “this has also become more the norm, except for three countries of course: Nicaragua, Cuba and Venezuela.

Crisis in Venezuela

The crisis in Venezuela is being felt around the region. Hyperinflation in that country is expected to hit 1 million percent this year. Officials in Colombia estimate that a million Venezuelans are in Colombia now, and tens of thousands of people are fleeing the country to other neighbors. Neighboring nations are helping with these refugees and looking to ensure peace along a desperate border.

“We are working with them as well. “A subject [that] came up in both of my meetings this morning … was on what we're working on in terms of the Venezuelan refugees and their destabilizing impact they have,” Mattis said. “Probably a million or more that are in Colombia now, and you know about the thousands, tens of thousands, elsewhere, and … it's an enormous challenge.”

The U.S. State Department is providing $56 million in aid to refugees. DoD is sending the hospital ship USNS Comfort to the region to help.

“It is absolutely a humanitarian mission,” the secretary said. “We're not sending soldiers; we're sending doctors. And it's an effort to deal with the human cost of [Venezuelan President Nicolas] Maduro, and his increasingly isolated regime.”

(Follow Jim Garamone on Twitter: @GaramoneDoDNews)

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