MANAGUA,
Nicaragua — Russia is rekindling its once-strong ties to Nicaragua,
possibly including providing the Central American nation with jet
fighters, stoking unease as far away as the Andes in South America.
Later this week, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
Lavrov will arrive in Nicaragua as part of a swing through four Latin
American nations, the culmination to a series of high-level Russian
visits to this Central American nation in the past year. Last month,
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu paid a two-day visit, and in
January the head of Russia’s upper house of Parliament arrived. Russian leader Vladimir Putin visited in June.
The rumored provision of the Russian jet
fighters to Nicaragua has spawned fears of an arms race in Central
America and once again made Nicaragua a bit player in the geopolitical
to-and-fro between Washington and Moscow.
The chief spokesman for the Sandinista Front on
international matters, National Assembly Deputy Jacinto Suárez, defended
the possible acquisition of the fighter planes on Thursday and said
Nicaragua’s relations with Russia have taken “a qualitative leap.”
“Everyone has the right to defend their national sovereignty. Why should anyone feel
threatened by this?” Suárez said at a news conference, declining to
confirm whether Nicaragua would obtain the aircraft and adding that they
might come as a donation rather than a purchase.
The former Soviet Union was a patron of the
Sandinista Front when it toppled a U.S.-backed dictatorship in 1979 and
remained in power until 1990. During that period, Moscow provided
Antonov AN-26 and AN-32 light transport aircraft and Mi-8 and Mi-24
helicopters.
Former Sandinista President Daniel Ortega won
elections and returned to power in 2007. He was re-elected in 2011.
While strongly anti-U.S. in his political rhetoric, aimed at his
domestic and regional supporters, Ortega has been pragmatic on matters
key to Washington, such as immigration and counter-drug efforts.
Word of the possible acquisition of the jet
fighters came Feb. 10 when Adolfo Zepeda Martínez, the Nicaraguan army’s
inspector general, acknowledged that the nation had “taken a few steps
to obtain interceptor fighters” to catch drug flights. He described the
fighters as “completely defensive, not attack aircraft.”
Zepeda didn’t mention the type of jet fighter,
but both Nicaraguan and Russian media reported it might be the MiG-29
aircraft, a fighter developed in the 1970s and worth about $29 million
each.
Nicaragua’s neighbors recoiled.
“One doesn’t combat drug trafficking with that
kind of heavy military equipment for fighting wars,” Costa Rican Foreign
Minister Manuel González said in late February after bringing up the
matter with Secretary of State John Kerry.
A former armed forces commander in Honduras,
Romeo Vásquez Velásquez, told media there that Nicaragua’s possible
acquisition would create “an imbalance for the region.”
Colombia has been more muted, but its air force
contains aged C-7 Kfir fighters from Israel and Cessna A-37 Dragonfly
light strike jets, neither of which are a match for the MiG-29s.
Colombia maintains a dispute with Nicaragua over maritime territory,
following a 2012 ruling by the International Court of Justice in The
Hague that expanded Nicaragua’s sea boundaries to the detriment of
Colombia.
Following the breakup of the Soviet Union,
relations between Nicaragua and Russia cooled. But in 2008, when Russia
sponsored the breakaway provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia after an
armed conflict with Georgia, Nicaragua became one of only four
countries to recognize the two rump states.
Some analysts see the dust-up over the jet fighters as part of a global chess game
between the United States and Russia, which has been under U.S. and
European Union sanctions since its annexation of Crimea from Ukraine a
year ago. Nicaragua supported the annexation.
“Because of the U.S. presence in countries
abutting Russia, Russia may be looking to do the same in our region,”
said Carlos Rivera Bianchini, president of the Foundation for Peace and
Democracy in San José, Costa Rica.
Nicaragua, the second poorest country in the
Americas after Haiti, spends far less on defense than its neighbors to
the north, partly because of its success at fending off organized crime
and drug trafficking.
Rivera said it would be “irresponsible” of Nicaragua to buy jet fighters when so much of its population lives in poverty.
“The maintenance of these planes – even if they are donated – is extremely high,” Rivera said.
A senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of
anonymity in order not to interfere in bilateral relations, said speedy
jet fighters are not so useful in identifying and intercepting
drug-laden aircraft.
“For narcotics work, what you need are spotter planes,” the official said.
The official noted that Nicaragua’s military
often doesn’t “have the funding for the basics” and voiced surprise at
the suggestion that Russia might donate the aircraft to Nicaragua.
“In my time, I haven’t seen a whole lot of free military equipment, but anything is possible,” the official said.
Since Ortega’s return to power, Russia has
boosted aid, providing 100,000 tons of wheat each year since 2011 and
turning over 520 Russian-made public buses. In 2013, Russia agreed to
offer patrol gunboats to Nicaragua.
As part of the Russian defense minister’s visit
in February, Nicaragua agreed to ease rules to allow Russian warships to
enter Nicaraguan ports.
In addition, Russia’s top counter-drug official,
Viktor Ivanov, visited Managua last September, announcing the
construction of a Russian-financed training center to fight narcotics
trafficking.
More than 45 military cadets and officers left Nicaragua last September for extended training in Russia.
Other Central American nations have sought to
expand and fortify their military capacity in recent years, creating
frictions in the region.
In 2013, El Salvador paid $8.5 million to buy 10
used A-37 Dragonfly aircraft from Chile, a move that drew protests from
neighboring Honduras, which has traditionally wielded the strongest air
force in the region.
Last year, Honduras bought two Super Tucano
turboprop combat planes from Brazil’s Embraer and received aircraft
worth $36 million from Taiwan, including four U.S.-built helicopters.
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