
Putting the Pieces Together: A Global Guide to U.S. Security Aid Programs
The U.S. government arms, equips, trains, builds facilities for, shares intelligence with, and operates alongside military and police forces in…
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The U.S. government arms, equips, trains, builds facilities for, shares intelligence with, and operates alongside military and police forces in…
In the vast areas of Colombia’s countryside where evidence of government is scarce, you can see the bright green bushes…
The Trump administration’s likely secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, has declared an intention “to review the details of Colombia’s recent…
Documents Show Special Ops Training in the Region Tripled From 2007 to 2014 The U.S. military’s most elite forces have…
Throughout the nearly four years of Colombia’s negotiations with the FARC guerrillas, President Juan Manuel Santos has promised to submit a final peace accord…
With Congress debating a Department of Homeland Security funding bill, the issue of border security is in the spotlight. But while some in Washington quarrel over a nebulous “crisis” at the border, a lesser-known—but in many ways more grim—situation is playing out in Texas’s Rio Grande Valley region.
In February 2014, WOLA investigators paid a 12-day visit to several points along Mexico’s southern border with Guatemala. Their new report examines border security conditions, migration trends, and the push factors that force Central American migrants to abandon their countries of origin.
As the likelihood of an accord increases, the United States–which provided billions for Colombia’s war effort–must prepare to help consolidate peace.
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