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US defense chief woos Brazil as Chinese influence grows
By Sebastian Smith
Rio De Janeiro (AFP) Aug 14, 2018

US defense chief hears shots during visit to Rio de Janeiro
Rio De Janeiro (AFP) Aug 14, 2018 - US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis got some alarmingly direct insight into Rio de Janeiro's violent crime wave when gunfire burst out close to his hotel during an official visit to the Brazilian city.

Mattis, at the start of a South American tour, said Tuesday the sound of shots overnight had been upsetting.

"You remember every time you hear one of those shots somebody's life could be changing," he told reporters aboard his airplane. "So I didn't make light of it. I was sad to hear it frankly."

Mattis was staying near Copacabana beach, an area where wealthy residents live a stone's throw from an impoverished favela called Chapeu Mangueira.

Rio's many favelas are almost daily witnesses to shootings, either between rival drug gangs or police and drug gangs. Stray bullets are a constant menace to favela residents and also to people living in the surrounding streets.

Mattis acknowledged that parts of the United States also suffer serious gun violence.

"We have some cities in America that we know are tragically having this problem as well. This is what happens if we don't keep, I would call it consensual policing where the whole community helps police and is able to keep lawless elements at arm's length," he said.

US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis urged closer strategic ties with Brazil on Tuesday in what appeared to be part of a concerted pushback against growing Chinese influence in Latin America.

Mattis, who is starting a tour of the region, told military officers at Rio de Janeiro's war college that Brazil and the United States had interests built on shared geography, democracy and battlefield history dating to World War II.

Mattis said the United States wants a "stronger relationship," with a focus on using the Brazil's Alcantara space center, whose location near the equator makes launches more effective.

China is developing its space infrastructure in Latin America, with a base in southern Argentina's Patagonia region. It has also pushed deep into the continent's economies as an investor and major client for agricultural, mineral and other commodities.

Mattis said that US interest in Alcantara was "not because it lies along the equator, a happy accident of geography, but because we want to work with Brazilians -- our hemispheric neighbors whose values we share politically, as well as your technological orientation."

"Others cannot credibly say the same," he said in what appeared to be a pointed reference to China.

China's regional rise comes after long decades of deep, sometimes controversial US influence in Latin America. Mattis, due to visit Argentina, Chile and Colombia next, made clear that Washington is in no mood to give way.

"We see Latin America as our neighbor. Some people say we don't pay much attention to it. That is certainly not the case in the military," Mattis said in separate comments issued by the Pentagon's press office.

Adam Isacson, director for defense oversight at the Washington Office on Latin America, a research organization, told AFP that Mattis is trying to make up for lost time.

"He's going to South America now simply to raise the United States' defense profile in a region that hasn't had a visit from a defense secretary since 2014," Isacson said.

"The Pentagon probably feels a need to raise the US profile amid concerns about increasing Russian and Chinese influence on the continent."

- Brazil lead on Venezuela -

Mattis told officers in Rio that following an April discussion with Brazil's defense minister, Joaquim Silva e Luna, he ordered staff "to transform our defense relationship with Brazil, to reenergize it."

Mattis singled out Brazil as a regional leader, praising the country's record of multiple peacekeeping missions and its stand against the deeply anti-US government in chaotic Venezuela.

Mattis described the Venezuelan leadership as a "power-hungry, oppressive regime that forces refugees into Brazil and into Colombia, and elsewhere."

The Brazilian defense minister said Monday after talks with Mattis that his US counterpart believed "the solution (in Venezuela) should be led by Brazil."

In an interview with Brazil's O Globo newspaper earlier this week, Mattis again emphasized what he said were the shared democratic values in the US-Latin American partnerships, specifically comparing this to the nature of the new regional rivals China and Russia.

Admiral Kurt Tidd, commander of the US Southern Command, explicitly underlined Washington's fears in a speech in June, warning that Latin America tends to get forgotten in strategic considerations.

Russia has made "a noticeable increase" in its military and intelligence presence in Latin America during the last six years, as well as leveraging the effect of its international state-controlled media to "discredit, distort or outright fabricate stories about the United States," Tidd said.

China, he said, could be using its massive investment activities as cover "for China's strategic interests at the expense of others."


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Sri Lanka gets US military funding as China vies for influence
Colombo (AFP) Aug 13, 2018
The United States announced Monday it would grant Sri Lanka $39 million to boost maritime security as China develops its strategic hold on the Indian Ocean island. The State Department will provide the funds as "foreign military financing", pending congressional approval, the US embassy in Colombo said. "We look forward to discussing with the government of Sri Lanka how this contribution can support our Bay of Bengal initiative and Sri Lanka's humanitarian assistance and disaster response priori ... read more

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