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Ecuador will not sign a pact to grant U.S. military personnel special immunity
from the International Criminal Court, even if that means more aid cuts from Washington,
the foreign minister said Thursday.
"If the United States decides it cannot provide aid if we do not sign
this, well, we very much regret that we will not receive the aid," Antonio
Parra told Channel 6 television.
President Bush opposes the International Criminal Court, which started operating
in 2003. His administration argues it could be used for frivolous or politically
motivated prosecutions of American troops.
Last year, Bush signed into law a measure to cut off hundreds of millions of
dollars in foreign aid to countries that belong to the court but have not signed
a bilateral immunity agreement with the United States.
As a result, Ecuador last year forfeited $15.7 million in aid, much of it for
military equipment, according to Citizens for Global Solutions, a nonprofit
organization based in The Hague, Netherlands.
If military funding is cut, "that will impede our armed forces' effectiveness
in the entire struggle against terrorism and narcotics trafficking inside our
national territory," Parra warned.
He said he doubted the Bush administration would take more drastic action against
Ecuador — a key South American ally in Washington's battle against drug
trafficking.
Since 1999, the United States has used an Ecuadorean air base near the Pacific
port city of Manta as an operations center for drug surveillance flights in
the region.