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US Fears Terrorist Access to
Nicaraguan Missiles
Nicaraguan President Daniel
Ortega has a tough choice to
make: Destroying a powerful
arsenal of SA-7 missiles would
appease the US and other donors,
but it would also make him
appear weak to his anti-American
friends.
Newly elected Nicaraguan
President, Daniel Ortega finds
himself the new caretaker of a
powerful arsenal of Russian SA-7
missiles from the 1980s - an
arsenal the US has wanted
destroyed for years.
Only days after Ortega's 10
January inauguration, the
political opposition, echoing
the long-time position of the
US, began pressuring his
administration to destroy the
remaining ground-to-air
missiles, but Ortega has
resisted.
It is a geopolitical issue that
underlines the balanced position
Ortega must maintain between
remaining loyal to his leftist
political roots and aware of the
international aid his country
needs from Washington.
As the president of one of the
region's poorest countries he
must placate international
donors in order to keep the
Nicaraguan economy afloat. As
the leader of his country's
Sandinista party, he has an
established record as an enemy
of the US, an internationally
known status that gives him
instant credit with Venezuelan
President Hugo Chavez and Iran's
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, among
others.
What Ortega eventually decides
to do with the missiles could
indicate the international
partners he is likely to
embrace.
The Man Portable Air Defense
Systems (MANPADS) have been
called the terrorists' delight.
Their alleged use by the Iraqi
insurgency against US
helicopters has been a cause for
concern. Stinger missiles the
CIA sold to the Mujahedeen in
Afghanistan during the Russian
occupation there in the 1980s
leveled the playing field
between rebels on the ground and
the deadly Russian helicopters.
During roughly the same time,
the Russians provided some 2,000
SA-7 MANPADS to the Sandinista
government, led by Ortega, for
use in combating the US-backed
insurgency determined to stop
the spread of communism in
Nicaragua and Central America.
One thousand of these missiles
have been destroyed but just as
many remain. Stockpile controls
and security are a concern. The
potential weakness of
Nicaragua's weapons stockpile
control system was revealed in
2001 when an arms broker in
Guatemala persuaded the
Nicaraguan army to sell him
3,000 AK-47 rifles and 2.5
million rounds of ammunition.
These weapons were eventually
delivered to Colombia's
paramilitary forces.
The Nicaraguan army guards the
Russian missiles still in its
arsenal. US leaders are worried
that some of these missiles
could be illegally transferred
to terrorists or others
operating in the region who may
use them to shoot down
international commercial
flights.
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