El Salvador FOREIGN RELATIONS
Relations with the United States
President José Napoleón Duarte Fuentes confers with
President Ronald Reagan, October 1987
Courtesy
As the civil conflict intensified after 1981 and its effects
rippled through the economic and political life of the nation, El
Salvador turned toward the United States in an effort to stave
off a potential guerrilla victory. The administrations of
presidents Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan responded to the
Salvadorans' appeals, and by the mid-1980s government forces
appeared to have the upper hand in the field
(see The United States Takes a Hand
, ch. 1).
Total United States aid to El Salvador rose from US$264.2
million in fiscal year
(FY--see Glossary)
1982 to an estimated
US$557.8 million in FY 1987. On average over this period,
economic aid exceeded military aid by more than a two-to-one
ratio. Economic aid was provided in the form of Economic Support
Funds (ESF), food aid under Public Law 480 (P.L. 480), and
development aid administered by the United States Agency for
International Development (AID). ESF was intended to provide
balance of payments support to finance essential non food
imports. Assistance with food imports as well as the direct
donation of foodstuffs was accomplished through the P.L. 480
program. Development aid covered a broad spectrum of projects in
such fields as agriculture, population planning, health,
education, and training. For FY 1987, regular non supplemental
ESF appropriations totaled US$181.7 million, and combined food
and development aid amounted to US$122.7 million. The regular FY
1987 appropriation for military aid was US$116.5 million.
This aid was crucial to the survival of the Salvadoran
government and the ability of the armed forces to contain the
insurgency. The situation amplified the personal importance of
Duarte after his 1984 election to the presidency. Well known and
respected in Washington, Duarte was able to foster a consensus
within the United States Congress for high levels of aid as a
show of support for the incipient democratic process in his
country. These large aid allocations, in turn, promoted stability
by deterring possible coup attempts by conservative factions of
the military and other opponents of PDC rule. At the same time,
the lifeline of aid also rendered El Salvador dependent to a
large degree on the United States. A certain amount of popular
resentment over this dependence was reflected in adverse reaction
from some Salvadoran politicians, journalists, and other opinion
makers to Duarte's October 1987 gesture of kissing the United
States flag while on a visit to Washington. Some analysts also
identified an element of anti-United States sentiment in Arena's
March 1988 electoral victory.
El Salvador's dependence on United States support sometimes
led to policy moves or public pronouncements that were perceived
as responses to pressure from Washington. The 1986 economic
austerity measures were one example. Another was Duarte's
repeated call for the Nicaraguan government to negotiate with its
armed opposition--the so-called contras--in spite of the
president's public refusal to endorse the United States policy of
aid to the contras. El Salvador also was quick to condemn
Panamanian strongman General Manuel Antonio Noriega Moreno for
his February 1988 ouster of President Eric Arturo Delvalle; most
Latin American countries were somewhat circumspect with regard to
the Panamanian situation, not wishing to be seen as favoring
United States intervention in that country. Some actions by the
Salvadoran government were clearly and unequivocally influenced
by direct United States pressure, such as Duarte's April 1987
decision to deny political amnesty to the convicted killers of
six United States citizens and others in a June 1985 terrorist
attack in San Salvador. By taking this action, Duarte averted the
loss of US$18.5 million in economic aid.
Although the United States exerted significant influence over
government policy in El Salvador, it did not enjoy the absolute
control ascribed to it by leftist propaganda. In some areas,
Washington's policy goals were frustrated by the intransigence of
certain political actors. The obstruction of full implementation
of agrarian reform by conservative legislators was one example;
another was resistance among the officer corps to the
introduction of counterinsurgency tactics. Perhaps the most
vexing issue for United States policymakers was human rights.
Despite an impressive statistical decline in the mid-1980s,
political killings continued. These acts, perpetrated by both
right-wing and left-wing groups, helped to feed the climate of
violence that inhibited the institutionalization of the
democratic process.
United States influence in El Salvador was also diminished
temporarily by the 1986-87 revelations surrounding the so-called
Iran-Contra Affair. The Reagan administration's preoccupation
with these revelations, its loss of international prestige in
connection with them, and the embarrassing disclosure of covert
Salvadoran military involvement in the contra supply
network all combined to lessen United States involvement in and
influence over Salvadoran affairs. Many observers have seen
evidence of waning United States influence in Central America in
the Duarte administration's decision to sign the Central American
Peace Agreement in August 1987 at Esquipulas, Guatemala, despite
the last-minute announcement of an alternative peace plan by
Reagan and United States speaker of the House of Representatives,
James Wright.
Another point of contention between the two governments was
United States immigration reform. By most estimates, there were
some 500,000 Salvadorans residing illegally in the United States
in the late 1980s. Modifications of the United States immigration
law enacted in 1987 technically mandated the expulsion of
illegals who had entered the country after 1982. Since the bulk
of Salvadoran illegal immigration took place after that date, the
new law threatened the majority of this population with
repatriation. This prospect was worrisome to the Duarte
government for two major reasons: such a large influx was certain
to place added strain on employment and public services, already
areas of serious concern for the government; and the return of
Salvadorans resident in the United States meant the loss of
dollar-denominated remittances regularly transmitted to family
members who had remained behind in El Salvador. Estimates of the
total amount of remittance income--a valuable source of foreign
exchange for the economy--ranged as high as US$1.4 billion a
year. Duarte's pleas for a Salvadoran exemption from the
immigration reform were denied by the White House. Action to
deport Salvadoran illegals, however, was held up pending
consideration in the United States Congress of bills granting
exemptions to Salvadoran and Nicaraguan immigrants.
Relations between the United States and El Salvador appeared
to be entering a period of transition after the March 1988
elections. Under both the Carter and the Reagan administrations,
United States policy had supported the centrist PDC as the surest
path to the development of a functional democratic system. The
decline of the PDC and the ascendancy of Arena called for some
adjustment in that policy. Despite some marked anti-United States
sentiment among the areneros, there were no early
indications of potential friction between the United States and
an Arena government. The nomination of Cristiani as the party's
1989 presidential candidate instead of the more controversial
D'Aubuisson was seen by some observers as a conciliatory gesture
toward Washington.
Data as of November 1988
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