Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05GUATEMALA1191
2005-05-12 13:15:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Guatemala
Cable title:  

GUATEMALA: LATEST DEVELOPMENTS ON MILITARY ROLE IN

Tags:  PGOV PHUM KCRM MOPS SNAR MCAP KJUS ASEC EAID GT 
pdf how-to read a cable
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 02 GUATEMALA 001191 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/10/2015
TAGS: PGOV PHUM KCRM MOPS SNAR MCAP KJUS ASEC EAID GT
SUBJECT: GUATEMALA: LATEST DEVELOPMENTS ON MILITARY ROLE IN
INTERNAL SECURITY

REF: USDAO GUATEMALA IIR 6 838 9928 05 (DTG 141910Z
APR 05)

Classified By: Ambassador John R. Hamilton, Reason: 1.4 (d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 GUATEMALA 001191

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/10/2015
TAGS: PGOV PHUM KCRM MOPS SNAR MCAP KJUS ASEC EAID GT
SUBJECT: GUATEMALA: LATEST DEVELOPMENTS ON MILITARY ROLE IN
INTERNAL SECURITY

REF: USDAO GUATEMALA IIR 6 838 9928 05 (DTG 141910Z
APR 05)

Classified By: Ambassador John R. Hamilton, Reason: 1.4 (d)


1. (C) Summary: Worried about continuing problems with
public security, Guatemala has formalized arrangements for
police-military cooperation by forming a dedicated unit for
this purpose that has a combined police-military staff and
leadership. The GOG has explicitly named gangs, organized
crime, drug trafficking, illegal migration, and other types
of crime as the threats that this unit will combat. Defense
Ministry plans for expanding the unit's geographic coverage
to include the entire country remain in flux. The new GOG
approach does not involve any expanded powers for the
military personnel in the unit. End Summary.


2. (C) Following a briefing about a new police-military Task
Force that the GOG Minister of Defense presented to Embassy
DATT (reftel),PolMilOff sought confirmation of GOG plans in
meetings with Civilian National Police (PNC) Operations
Director Commissioner General Julio Hernandez Chavez, Vice
Minister of Government (Interior) Alfredo Caceres, Armed
Forces Operations Chief (D-3) Colonel Miguel Perez Lopez, and
Defense Ministry Legal Department Director Colonel Juan
Recinos. While differing somewhat on the details, the GOG
police and military officials confirmed that civilian and
military authorities are in agreement on a dedicated unit for
joint police and military operations.


3. (C) To recap, this unit consists of approximately 900
military personnel and 500 PNC personnel, organized in a
military police brigade and a police patrol brigade. This
force, called Joint Task Force Guatemala (JTF-G) by the
Guatemalan military, has a joint staff structure, with police
and military personnel in more or less equal numbers in the
five staff sections: S-1 (Personnel),S-2 (Intelligence),S-3

(Operations),S-4 (Logistics),and S-5 (Civil Affairs). The
operational joint commanders of the unit are Brigadier
General Edgar Escobar, Deputy Chief of the National Defense
Staff, and Vice Minister of Government Alfredo Caceres.
(Note: Colonels Perez and Recinos claimed that the police
would take the lead in recruitment of informants to gain
intelligence on gangs. End Note.)


4. (C) According to Defense Minister Aldana, the military's
plan is to assign a company from the Joint Task Force to each
of the five infantry brigades deployed outside of the
capital. However, the military does not have funds to
execute such deployments. In addition, Vice Minister Caceres
and Commissioner General Hernandez appeared to view national
deployments as more of a long-term process as they spoke of
the eventual creation of an additional three police brigades
to cover other parts of Guatemala.


5. (C) The Defense Ministry drafted an interagency agreement
to govern the operations of the new Joint Task Force. After
revision by Ministry of Government lawyers, the decree was
signed by President Berger during an April 25 cabinet
meeting. However, the signed decree then went to the
Secretary General of the Presidency for further review.

SIPDIS
According to Col. Recinos, Secretary General lawyers
significantly watered down the decree and deleted all
references to the Joint Task Force. As of May 9, Recinos had
still not seen the final version of the decree, nor had it
been published in GOG's version of the Federal Register.
Recinos opined that the only substantive effect of the decree
was to formalize interagency financial arrangements for
funding the task force.


6. (C) The Joint Task Force has undertaken limited
operations in Guatemala City only, with the military
executing its customary role as perimeter security for the
police. Col. Perez reported that the military has not
participated in any of the highly publicized, large-scale
sweeps of high-crime zones conducted by the police members of
the Joint Task Force, operations that have been criticized by
the Human Rights Ombudsman (PDH) and the Government
Commission on Human Rights (COPREDEH) for their alleged
arbitrary detentions (septel). Col. Perez stated that the
Joint Task Force would not begin full-scale operations until
the decree's status was clarified.


7. (C) Comment: The Guatemalan public is increasingly
alarmed by violent crime, which shows no sign of abating.
The cash-starved GOG is desperate to show some success in
improving public security but has been unable to deploy
additional resources to address the situation. The police,
prosecutors and courts are still perceived as largely
ineffective in preventing or punishing crime. In this
context, it is not surprising to see the GOG direct the
military to support police patrols as a force multiplier.
Concentration of police and military members in dedicated
units for joint patrols (as opposed to the previous ad hoc
arrangements),and formation of a combined police and
military staff to direct this force, were widely reported in
the media as two major new developments in the military's
role in support of public security. To the best of our
knowledge, the actual tasks performed by the military
members, and the legal authorities of these members, have not
changed with the formation of the new task force. National
deployment, and even an expansion of the targets of the task
force to include organized crime, etc., will require
additional funding as well as closer coordination between the
military and police.
HAMILTON