The Borneo Post

US military joins Brazil army exercises in Amazon

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TABATINGA, Brazil: US military personnel are taking part this week in the largest internatio­nal army operation ever held deep in the Amazon jungle of northern Brazil, in a sign of closer US-Brazil defense ties.

Troops from Brazil, Colombia and Peru will set up a temporary military base in their tri-border region for a week-long logistics exercise in humanitari­an assistance and disaster relief, Brazilian army officials said.

About 50 US personnel will be present for the exercise, including 19 observers and 31 members of the Montana Air National Guard who will be based out of Manaus providing air transporta­tion, a US embassy statement said.

The United States will provide a Hercules C-130 transport plane to move personnel and equipment, the Brazilian army said.

The presence of U. S military personnel in Brazil’s Amazon region underscore­d improving defense relations between the two most populous countries in the Western Hemisphere after more than a decade of distancing under leftist Brazilian government­s.

In March, then- commander of the US Army South, Major General Clarence K. K. Chinn visited military installati­ons in the Amazon and was decorated in Brasilia.Bilateral agreements on defense cooperatio­n and informatio­n security have taken effect recently after years of stalling in Brazil’s Congress.

The Brazilian general in charge of the operation said he was ‘astounded’ by criticism of the US involvemen­t in the exercise in a globalized world where Brazil maintains good relations with China, Russia and the United States.

“It’s a senseless conspiracy theory raised by leftist parties,” General Guilherme Theophilo Gaspar de Oliveira, the Brazilian Army’s logistics commander, told reporters, as he praised deep US experience and know how in disaster relief.

The Brazilian Army said it was the first time such a large military exercise has been held in the Amazon and would help prepare the armed forces of the three neighborin­g countries for a humanitari­an crisis such as mass migration.

Brazil has kept a close eye on economic and political upheaval in neighborin­g Venezuela that could trigger such an exodus. — Reuters

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