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last updated: 9/25/06
Nicaragua

Military and Police Aid | Social and Economic Aid | Sales | Training Institutions | Training Deployments | Bases and Other Presences | Overview

Overview
Country Snapshot

Population: 5,128,517 (July 2003 est.)
Size, comparable to U.S.: slightly smaller than the state of New York
Per Capita GDP, not adjusted for PPP (year): (2001 est.): $470
Income, wealthiest 10% / poorest 10%: 63.6/.7 (1998)
Population earning less than $2 a day: 94.5%
Ranking, Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index: 88 out of 133
Defense Expenditure as a percentage of GDP: 1.1% (2001)
Size of armed forces: 16,000 (2001-2002)
U.S. military personnel present: 12 (2003)

  • Click here to read the Nicaragua overview from the 1999 edition of Just the Facts
Military and Police Aid
 
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006 est
2007 req
Funding
Trainees
Funding
Trainees
Funding
Trainees

International Narcotics Control (INC)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.99
 
0.00
 
0.00

Foreign Military Financing (FMF)

 
0.50
 
1.00
 
0.94
 
0.50
 
0.59
 
0.50

International Military Education and Training (IMET)

 
0.37
62
 
0.60
78
 
0.78
92
 
0.27
 
0.59
 
0.59

"Section 1004" (Defense Dept. Counternarcotics)

 
0.17
2
 
0.17
120
 
0.17
17
 
0.17
 
0.17
 
0.17

"Section 1033" (Defense Dept. Counternarcotics)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Emergency Drawdowns

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Antiterrorism Assistance (NADR/ATA)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Export Control / Border Security (NADR/EXBS)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
Demining (NADR/HD) 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Small Arms / Light Weapons (NADR/SALW)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.30
 
0.03
 
0.00
 
0.00

Peacekeeping Operations (PKO)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.50
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Counter-Terrorism Fellowship Program (CTFP)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.01
1
 
0.01
 
0.10
 
0.10

Regional Defense Centers (CHDS)

 
0.01
2
 
0.02
4
 
0.01
1
 
0.01
 
0.01
 
0.01

Discretionary Funds from ONDCP

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Excess Defense Articles (EDA)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Aviation Leadership Program (ALP)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Enhanced International Peacekeeping Capabilities (EIPC)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Sales, JCETS, exchanges and unspecified

 
0.05
31
 
0.05
48
 
 
 
 

Total

1.09
97
1.84
250
2.70
111
1.97
1.46
1.36

**All numbers in millions of U.S. dollars.
**Underlined numbers are estimates based on the last available year.

 
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
Funding
Trainees
Funding
Trainees
Funding
Trainees
Funding
Trainees

International Narcotics Control (INC)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Foreign Military Financing (FMF)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

International Military Education and Training (IMET)

 
0.00
 
0.06
 
0.07
26
 
0.20
55
 
0.19
135
 
0.22
76

"Section 1004" (Defense Dept. Counternarcotics)

 
?
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.01
 
0.17

"Section 1033" (Defense Dept. Counternarcotics)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Emergency Drawdowns

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Antiterrorism Assistance (NADR/ATA)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Export Control / Border Security (NADR/EXBS)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
Demining (NADR/HD) 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Small Arms / Light Weapons (NADR/SALW)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Peacekeeping Operations (PKO)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Counter-Terrorism Fellowship Program (CTFP)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Regional Defense Centers (CHDS)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.02
3
 
0.03
4
 
0.04
5

Discretionary Funds from ONDCP

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Excess Defense Articles (EDA)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Aviation Leadership Program (ALP)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Enhanced International Peacekeeping Capabilities (EIPC)

 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00
 
0.00

Sales, JCETS, exchanges and unspecified

 
 
 
25
 
0.41
13
 
0.21
5
 
0.12
4

Total

0.00
0.06
0.07
51
0.64
71
0.45
144
0.55
85

**All numbers in millions of U.S. dollars.

Social and Economic Aid
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006 est
2007 req
International Narcotics Control (INC)
 
Economic Support Funds (ESF)
 
0.00
7.11
1.00
0.00
0.00
1.50
2.80
0.00
0.00
4.47
3.37
3.00
Development Assistance (DA)
 
14.03
15.65
23.56
16.60
14.45
16.39
16.60
23.46
25.54
26.06
20.84
13.00
Child Survival and Health (CSH)
 
0.00
0.00
0.00
11.94
7.93
7.01
8.47
9.83
7.41
7.70
7.70
6.66
P.L. 480 "Food for Peace"
 
6.47
2.88
5.47
23.99
6.70
7.81
15.14
16.20
7.05
9.71
11.73
12.50
Peace Corps
 
1.57
1.67
1.90
1.87
2.41
2.33
2.64
2.67
2.50
2.68
2.65
2.58
Transition Initiatives
 
Counterterrorism Financing (NADR/CTF)
 
Millennium Challenge
                  
20.40
41.30
52.50
HIV/AIDS
 
Total
22.08
27.30
31.92
54.40
31.49
35.03
45.65
52.16
42.49
71.02
87.59
90.24
**All numbers in millions of U.S. dollars.

Sales
Program1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003
Foreign Military Sales
Government-to-government sales of defense articles, training and services
$0 (Agreements)$0 (Agreements)$0 (Agreements)$0 (Agreements)$0 (Agreements)$0 (Agreements)$0 (Agreements)$0 (Agreements)
$0 (Deliveries)<$500 (Deliveries)$0 (Deliveries)$0 (Deliveries) $0 (Deliveries) $0 (Deliveries) $0 (Deliveries)  
Direct Commercial Sales
Sales from U.S. companies licensed by the U.S. government (Licenses)
$21,685
$80,409
$7,864
$2,818,493
$1,238,878 $908,754$429,869$698,669


Training Institutions
Program1996 actual1997 actual1998 actual1999 actual2000 actual2001 actual2002 actual
Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies
Defense Department initiative to improve civilians' defense planning and management skills
05 students3 students3 students4 students7 students*
Navy Small Craft and Technical Training School
The U.S. Navy's Spanish-language training school for Latin American militaries
NANA 0 studentsNANA13 students10 students
School of the Americas
The U.S. Army's Spanish-language training school for Latin American militaries
00003 students10 students
*Total number of students as given by the Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies

Training Deployments
Program1996 actual1997 actual1998 actual1999 actual2000 actual2001 actual

Exercises

   
Humanitarian Civic Assistanceincidental costs$21,941.64$24,787$48,181$668,189$209,945$79,392
Special Operations Forces deployments 0 to 40 to 41  


Bases and Other Presences
 

U.S. security assistance to Central America, 2000-2001

The focal point of U.S. security assistance to the hemisphere in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Central America has since been eclipsed by the Andean ridge drug source-zone countries. A wide variety of U.S. military operations continue in the isthmus, however, and Washington continues to offer a great deal of aid to the region’s police forces and militaries.

Many of these activities have a counter-drug mission; the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy estimated, for instance, that 59 percent of South American cocaine en route to the United States passed through the “Mexico-Central America corridor.” [1] This mission predominates especially in Guatemala, Panama, and Costa Rica, which are receiving significant amounts of counternarcotics police and military aid, and in El Salvador, which is hosting a staging area for aerial U.S. counternarcotics operations. The U.S. Southern Command also continues to offer non-drug related aid, largely training and engagement activities, regular exercises, and humanitarian assistance.

Humanitarian and Civic Assistance (HCA)

The Defense Department’s annual report on its “Humanitarian and Civic Assistance” (HCA) program revealed that the four countries most affected by Hurricane Mitch in October 1998 – El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua – accounted for 65 percent of HCA funding for the whole hemisphere in 1999. Together with the Dominican Republic, which was hit by Hurricane Georges in 1998, these countries were the world’s top five recipients of HCA assistance in 1999. [2] “More than 23,000 Guardsmen and Reservists from 45 states deployed into the region in two-week increments from February to August 1999,” Southern Command chief Gen. Charles Wilhelm (since retired) explained to a congressional committee in March 2000.

Collectively, the Guardsmen and Reservists built 7 bridges, 6 low water crossings, 15 culvert bridges, 27 schools, 1 community center, 5 dikes, and 240 km of roadway. They also drilled 21 water wells, diverted two rivers into their normal beds, and provided medical treatment to more than 262,000 people. [3]

With Hurricane Mitch relief efforts over, HCA deployments continued throughout the region in 2000; a full accounting of 2000 activities will not be available until March 2001. During 2000 the Southern Command planned to carry out its regular “New Horizons” series of HCA exercises in Belize, El Salvador, and Nicaragua. [4]

Training

The United States trained 1,854 Central American police and military personnel in 1999, according to the annual Foreign Military Training Report.* Most of this training occurred through the State Department-managed International Military Education and Training (IMET) program and the Special Forces’ Joint Combined Exchange Training (JCET) program. The countries that hosted the most JCETs, Belize (4), Costa Rica (3) and El Salvador (2), led the region in trainees with 436, 402 and 355 respectively. [5]

The past few years’ appropriations laws have banned grants to Guatemala of Foreign Military Financing (FMF) and IMET (except for “Expanded” IMET, which does not fund combat or technical courses). This prohibition remains in place for 2001.

IMET and JCET are not designated for counter-narcotics training. In 1999, the programs that directly support counternarcotics training – the State Department’s International Narcotics Control (INC) program and the Defense Department’s “section 1004” activities – were active only in Belize, Costa Rica, Guatemala and Panama. Counternarcotics did not appear to be a major training mission in El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua. [6]

U.S. counter-drug military presence

Counternarcotics, however, is the rationale behind the first new U.S. military installation in the region in years. A Forward Operating Location (FOL) at El Salvador’s Comalapa airport will host U.S. aircraft detecting maritime drug trafficking, especially in the Pacific. The FOL – similar to facilities recently established at Manta, Ecuador and Aruba and Curacao, Netherlands Antilles – will station small numbers of U.S. military, DEA, Coast Guard and Customs personnel to support the U.S. aircraft and to coordinate communications and intelligence.

In March 2000, the U.S. and Salvadoran governments signed a ten-year agreement for the Comalapa facility, which was ratified by the legislature on July 7. The FOL will host four medium-sized aircraft, such as E-2 and P-3, or ARL reconnaissance planes or C-130 cargo planes. While it is capable of accommodating the larger AWACS radar planes, there is no plan to station them at Comalapa for the time being. The Colombia aid package signed into law in July 2000 included $1.1 million for planning and design of the El Salvador FOL. The Defense Department plans to request funding for improvements, such as paving and support facilities, in its 2002 military construction appropriations request to Congress. [7]

The only other long-term U.S. military presence in Central America is Joint Task Force Bravo, a Southern Command component and a semi-permanent presence stationed since 1983 at the Enrique Soto Cano  air base, a facility near Comayagua, Honduras.* Though it played a central role in the post-Hurricane Mitch relief effort, the U.S. presence at Soto Cano did not change significantly in 2000.

The United States has signed treaties with Belize and Costa Rica that allow U.S. forces on counternarcotics missions to enter national waters or airspace to board ships suspected of smuggling, to pursue fleeing vessels or aircraft, and to overfly national territory. The United States and Panama have signed a “shiprider” treaty, which allows Panamanian law enforcement officials to ride on U.S. vessels, authorizing actions that the vessels may take. [8]

Central America and Colombia

U.S. policymakers express concern about the potential spillover of drug trafficking and political instability from Colombia into Central America. They most frequently cite Panama, which borders Colombia’s highly conflictive Urabá region and hosts the Panama Canal. The U.S. military, which was present at several bases in Panama since the beginning of the 20th century, left Panama at the end of 1999 in compliance with the Carter-Torrijos Panama Canal treaties.

“Panama is being tested by violent incursions into the Darién and San Blas regions by Colombian guerrillas and paramilitaries,” U.S. “Drug Czar” Gen. Barry McCaffrey warned in November 2000. “Panama's inadequately trained and equipped police forces are no match for the insurgents.” [9] The Southern Command’s Gen. Charles Wilhelm acknowledged that Colombia’s armed groups “present no immediate and direct threat to Canal operations,” but warned that “the insurgents could easily overwhelm the limited capability of the Panamanian National Police stationed along the border.” [10]

Concerns about the spread of instability and drug trafficking are reflected in the $1.3 billion U.S. aid package for Colombia and its neighbors. The package increases assistance for the security forces of Panama, Costa Rica and El Salvador.* Panama will receive $4 million to create a 25-member Technical Judicial Police (PTJ) task force, to support the National Maritime Service’s patrol boats, and to support border control programs. Costa Rica will get coast guard boats, maintenance and training valued at $1.9 million, while El Salvador will get $3 million for a new anti-narcotics police headquarters, an inter-agency narcotics operations center, search, detection and interdiction equipment, and training for judges, police and prosecutors. [11]

* This number includes a few dozen civilians who were either funded through Expanded IMET or attended the Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies. As the March 2000 version of the Foreign Military Training Report listed the students’ units in a classified volume, this study was unable to determine which trainees were civilians.
* While the FOLs are governed by ten-year agreements, the Soto Cano agreement has no end date, hence its “semi-permanent” status.
* In the cases of armyless Costa Rica and Panama, the “security forces” are the national police forces.

Sources

Country Snapshots

    • U.S. Department of State Background Notes
      http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/
    • Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index 2003
      http://www.transparency.org/pressreleases_archive/2003/2003.10.07.cpi.en.html
    • The World Factbook 2003
      http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/
    • Human Development Index
      http://hdr.undp.org/reports/global/2003/pdf/hdr03_HDI.pdf
    • Nationmaster Military-Armed Forces Personnel
      http://www.nationmaster.com/red/graph-T/mil_arm_for_per&int=-1
    • Department of Defense: Active Duty Military Personnel Strengths by Regional Area and by Country
      http://www.dior.whs.mil/mmid/M05/hst1203.pdf

International Narcotics Control 1996: United States, Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, Fiscal Year 1998 Budget Congressional Presentation (Washington: Department of State: March 1997).
International Narcotics Control 1997: United States, Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, Fiscal Year 1999 Budget Congressional Presentation (Washington: Department of State: March 1998).
International Narcotics Control 1998: United States, Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, Fiscal Year 2000 Budget Congressional Presentation (Washington: Department of State: March 1999).
International Narcotics Control 1999: United States, Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, Fiscal Year 2001 Budget Congressional Presentation (Washington: Department of State: March 2000) <http://www.state.gov/www/global/narcotics_law/fy2001_budget/latin_america.html>.
International Narcotics Control 2000: United States, Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, Fiscal Year 2002 Budget Congressional Justification (Washington: Department of State: April 2001): <http://www.state.gov/g/inl/rls/rpt/cbj/fy2002/index.cfm?docid=3701>.
United States, Department of State, Report to Congress on Plan Colombia and Related Programs (Washington: Department of State, July 2000) <http://ciponline.org/colombia/080102.htm>.
International Narcotics Control 2001: United States, Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, Fiscal Year 2003 Budget Congressional Justification (Washington: Department of State: April 2002) <http://www.state.gov/g/inl/rls/rpt/cbj/fy2003/>.
International Narcotics Control 2002: United States, Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, Fiscal Year 2004 Budget Congressional Justification (Washington: Department of State: June 2003) <http://www.state.gov/g/inl/rls/rpt/cbj/fy2004/>.
International Narcotics Control 2003: United States, Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, Fiscal Year 2005 Budget Congressional Justification (Washington: Department of State: April 2004) <http://www.state.gov/p/inl/rls/rpt/cbj/fy2005/>.
International Narcotics Control 2004-6: United States, Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, Fiscal Year 2006 Budget Congressional Justification (Washington: Department of State: April 2005) <http://www.state.gov/p/inl/rls/rpt/cbj/fy2006/>.
United States, White House, Office of Management and Budget, 2003 Supplemental Appropriations Request to Congress (Washington: White House, March 25, 2003) <http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/amendments/supplemental_3_25_03.pdf>.
Foreign Military Financing 1996: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 1998 (Washington: March 1997).
Foreign Military Financing 1997: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 1999 (Washington: March 1998).
United States, General Accounting Office, "Drug Control: U.S. Counternarcotics Efforts in Colombia Face Continuing Challenges," GAO/NSIAD-98-60 (Washington: GAO, February 12, 1998) <http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/useftp.cgi?IPaddress=waisback.access.gpo.gov&filename=ns98060.txt&directory=/diskb/wais/data/gao>.
Foreign Military Financing 1998: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2000 (Washington: March 1999).
Foreign Military Financing 1999: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2001 (Washington: March 2000). <http://www.state.gov/www/budget/fy2001/fn150/forops_full/150fy01_fo_military-asst.html>.
United States, Department of Defense, Department of State, Foreign Military Training and DoD Engagement Activities of Interest in Fiscal Years 1999 and 2000: A Report to Congress (Washington: March 2000) <http://www.state.gov/www/global/arms/fmtrain/toc.html>.
Foreign Military Financing 2000: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2002 (Washington: April 2001) <http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/cbj/2002/>.
United States, Department of State, Department of Defense, Foreign Military Training and DoD Engagement Activities of Interest In Fiscal years 2000 and 2001, Volume I (Washington: March 2001) <http://www.state.gov/t/pm/rls/rpt/2001/fmtrpt/>.
Foreign Military Financing 2001: United States, Department of State, FY 2003 Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations (Washington, DC: Department of State, April 15, 2002) <http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/cbj/2003/>.
Foreign Military Financing 2002: United States, Department of State, FY 2004 Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations (Washington, DC: Department of State, February 2003) <http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/cbj/2004/>.
United States, White House, Office of Management and Budget, 2003 Supplemental Appropriations Request to Congress (Washington: White House, March 25, 2003) <http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/amendments/supplemental_3_25_03.pdf>.
Foreign Military Financing 2003: United States, Department of State, FY 2005 Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations (Washington, DC: Department of State, February 2004) <http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/cbj/2005/>.
Foreign Military Financing 2004-6: United States, Department of State, FY 2006 Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations (Washington, DC: Department of State, February 2005) <http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/cbj/2006/>.
International Military Education and Training 1996: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 1998 (Washington: March 1997).
International Military Education and Training 1997: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 1999 (Washington: March 1998).
International Military Education and Training 1998: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2000 (Washington: March 1999).
International Military Education and Training 1999: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2001 (Washington: March 2000). <http://www.state.gov/www/budget/fy2001/fn150/forops_full/150fy01_fo_military-asst.html>.
International Military Education and Training 2000: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2002 (Washington: April 2001) <http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/cbj/2002/>.
International Military Education and Training 2001: United States, Department of State, FY 2003 Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations (Washington, DC: Department of State, April 15, 2002) <http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/cbj/2003/>.
International Military Education and Training 2002: United States, Department of State, FY 2004 Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations (Washington, DC: Department of State, February 2003) <http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/cbj/2004/>.
International Military Education and Training 2003: United States, Department of State, FY 2005 Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations (Washington, DC: Department of State, February 2004) <http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/cbj/2005/>.
International Military Education and Training 2004-6: United States, Department of State, FY 2006 Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations (Washington, DC: Department of State, February 2005) <http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/cbj/2006/>.
"Section 1004" 1997: H. Allen Holmes, coordinator for drug enforcement policy and support, United States Department of Defense, letter in response to congressional inquiry, Jan. 23, 1998.
"Section 1004" 1998: Ana Maria Salazar, deputy assistant secretary of defense for drug enforcement policy and support, United States Department of Defense, letter in response to congressional inquiry, Mar. 19, 1999.
"Section 1004" 1999: United States, Department of Defense, Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Drug Enforcement Policy and Support, correspondence with authors, September 21, 2000.
"Section 1004" 2000: United States, Department of Defense, Report on Department of Defense Expenditures To Support Foreign Counterdrug Activities, Washington, December 29, 2000.
United States Congress, Conference Report 106-701 on H.R. 3908, June 29, 2000 <http://ciponline.org/colombia/confrept.pdf>.
"Section 1004" 2001: United States, Department of Defense, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict, Report required by the Floyd D. Spence National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 (P.L. 106-398), (Washington: April 18, 2002).
United States, Department of Defense, "DoD Andean Initiative FY02 Colombia", Washington, Document obtained September 19, 2001.
"Section 1004" Colombia 2001-5: Congressional Research Service, "Andean Counterdrug Initiative (ACI) and Related Funding Programs: FY2005 Assistance," Washington, December 9, 2004 <http://ciponline.org/colombia/041209crs.pdf>.
Emergency Drawdowns 1997: United States, Department of State, "Summary Sheet," fax document, September 16, 1997.
Emergency Drawdowns 1998: United States, Department of State, "Memorandum of Justification for use of Section 506(a)(2) special authority to draw down articles, services, and military education and training," September 15, 1998.
Emergency Drawdowns 1999: United States, White House, "Draft Working Document: FY99 506(a)(2) Drawdown List Requested Items," Memorandum, September 30, 1999.
"Section 1033" 1998-2002: same as "Section 1004" above.
Anti-Terrorism Assistance Colombia 2002: United States, White House, Office of Management and Budget, "Technical Language" for supplemental appropriations request (Washington: March 21, 2002): 80 <http://ciponline.org/colombia/02supp_technicallanguage.pdf>.
Excess Defense Articles: United States, Department of Defense, Defense Security Cooperation Agency, Excess Defense Articles online database <http://www.dsca.osd.mil/home/excess_defense_articles_bbs.htm>.
ONDCP Discretionary Funds: United States, Executive Office of the President, Office of National Drug Control Policy, memo in response to congressional inquiry, February 1998.
Trainees 1998: United States, Department of State, Department of Defense, Foreign Military Training and DoD Engagement Activities of Interest in Fiscal Years 1998 and 1999 (Washington: 1999).
Trainees 1999: United States, Department of Defense, Department of State, Foreign Military Training and DoD Engagement Activities of Interest in Fiscal Years 1999 and 2000: A Report to Congress (Washington: March 2000) <http://www.state.gov/www/global/arms/fmtrain/toc.html>.
Trainees 2000: United States, Department of Defense, Department of State, Foreign Military Training and DoD Engagement Activities of Interest in Fiscal Years 2000 and 2001: A Report to Congress (Washington: January 2001) <http://www.state.gov/t/pm/rls/rpt/fmtrpt/2001/>.
Trainees 2001: United States, Department of Defense, Department of State, Foreign Military Training and DoD Engagement Activities of Interest in Fiscal Years 2001 and 2002: A Report to Congress (Washington: March 2002) <http://www.state.gov/t/pm/rls/rpt/fmtrpt/2002/>.
Trainees 2002: United States, Department of Defense, Department of State, Foreign Military Training in Fiscal Years 2002 and 2003: Joint Report to Congress (Washington: May 2003).
Trainees 2003: United States, Department of Defense, Department of State, Foreign Military Training in Fiscal Years 2003 and 2004: Joint Report to Congress (Washington: July 2004) <http://www.state.gov/t/pm/rls/rpt/fmtrpt/2004/>.
Trainees 2004: United States, Department of Defense, Department of State, Foreign Military Training in Fiscal Years 2004 and 2005: Joint Report to Congress (Washington: April 2005) <http://www.state.gov/t/pm/rls/rpt/fmtrpt/2005/>.
Economic and Social Assistance 1996: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 1998 (Washington: March 1997).
Economic and Social Assistance 1997: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 1999 (Washington: March 1998).
Economic and Social Assistance 1998: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2000 (Washington: March 1999).
Economic and Social Assistance 1999: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2001 (Washington: March 2000). <http://www.state.gov/www/budget/fy2001/fn150/forops_full/index.html>.
United States, U.S. Agency for International Development, FY 2002 Congressional Budget Justification (Washington, USAID, 2001) <http://www.usaid.gov/pubs/cbj2002/cbj2002_table02a.html>.
Economic and Social Assistance 2000: United States, Department of State, Office of Resources, Plans and Policy, Congressional Presentation for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2002 (Washington: April 2001) <http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/cbj/2002/>.
United States, U.S. Agency for International Development, FY 2002 Congressional Budget Justification (Washington, USAID, 2001) <http://www.usaid.gov/pubs/cbj2002/cbj2002_table02a.html>.
Economic and Social Assistance 2001: United States, Department of State, FY 2003 Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations (Washington, DC: Department of State, April 15, 2002) <http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/cbj/2003/>.
Economic and Social Assistance 2002: United States, Department of State, FY 2004 Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations (Washington, DC: Department of State, February 2003) <http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/cbj/2004/>.
All others: United States, Department of State, Congressional Budget Justifications for Foreign Operations available at <http://www.state.gov/s/d/rm/rls/cbj/>.
United States, Department of Defense, Department of State, Foreign Military Training Reports available at <http://www.state.gov/t/pm/rls/rpt/fmtrpt/>.

 

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