Uruguay
The level of cooperation and intelligence sharing on counterterrorism
related issues greatly improved in 2007, especially at the
working level where officers in law enforcement and security
services recognized the importance of conducting proactive
investigations, sharing intelligence with the United States,
and working cooperatively with its regional partners. The
Government of Uruguay generally cooperated with the United
States and international institutions on counterterrorism
efforts, but has not devoted great resources to the effort.
Uruguayan banking and law enforcement agencies professed
to search for financial assets, individuals, and groups
with links to terrorism, but discovered neither terrorist
assets in Uruguayan financial institutions nor terrorist
operatives in Uruguay.
While Uruguay supported the fight against international
terrorism in principle, it has been hesitant for many years
to permit joint military training on its soil. Part of the
reluctance to engage in robust security cooperation can
be explained by the painful experiences endured during a
thirteen-year period of military dictatorship when security
forces ruthlessly conducted a campaign against violent insurgents.
Instead, the Government of Uruguay focused its participation
on efforts to promote global security through collective
action within multinational organizations such as the UN
and OAS.
Uruguay provided the greatest number of UN peacekeepers,
in per capita terms, of any UN member state. Although these
efforts are not specifically focused on counterterrorism,
Uruguay believed that using its diplomatic and military
resources to fight global instability served to address
the conditions that terrorists exploit, such as political,
economic, and social instability.
Uruguay is a member of the MERCOSUR Permanent Working Group
on Terrorism, together with Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay,
and Bolivia. The group facilitated cooperation and information
sharing among countries combating terrorism. The focus was
expanding from the Tri-border region of Argentina, Paraguay,
and Brazil, to include the Uruguayan-Brazilian border, although
with limited tangible results. Uruguay was also active in
a range of international counterterrorism efforts, particularly
in the Rio Group and the OAS.