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Many in the U.S. are taking a wait-and-see approach to Perez given his military background. President Barack Obama took two weeks to congratulate Perez on his November election victory, something some read as a chilly sign. "They want to sort of say, look, we're prepared to cooperate, but it depends on who is in the government, what priorities they have," said Cynthia Arnson, director of the Latin America program at the Wilson Center in Washington. "It doesn't come with a free ride." Sen. Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat who wrote legislation prohibiting aid, was more direct about what Guatemala needs to change. "The army has a role in border security and in protecting against external threats, but it needs to demonstrate that it is accountable to civilian authority for atrocities during the internal armed conflict," said a statement from Leahy, who is chairman of the appropriations subcommittee that funds the State Department and international aid programs. The appropriations act says Guatemala can regain aid once the U.S. secretary of state certifies that the military is "respecting internationally recognized human rights" and cooperating with judicial investigations of former military personnel and with the International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala. The act says Guatemala's military must cooperate with the U.N.-backed commission, including facilitating testimony before the team of police and prosecutors from 25 nations that has rankled the political elite by going after senior officials. Caballeros, the incoming foreign minister, and Stein, the Perez adviser, said the new president will support the commission, which is up for reauthorization in September. Stein said Perez will work to help transfer its prosecutorial capacity to Guatemala authorities. But Stein also said Perez can't afford to wait on the U.S. "If the ban is lifted it will take many months for this to materialize, and the president-elect wants to show results in security issues as quickly as we take office," Stein said. "He will have to resort to other resources" if U.S. aid isn't authorized.
[Associated
Press;
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