
		
		Stretching beneath 
		Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay, 
		
		South America's Guaraní 
		Aquifer is larger than Texas and California combined. 
		
		Critics fear that the 
		United States is secretly taking over the underground reservoir. 
		
		
		But experts say the 
		conspiracy theorists are all wet
		
		 
		
		 
		
		Conspiracy theorists fear the United States 
		is secretly taking control of South America's largest underground 
		reservoir of fresh water. 
		 
		
		The accusations are clouding international 
		efforts to develop the Guaraní Aquifer. And the rumors come at a time 
		when water may be joining oil as one of the world's most fought-over 
		commodities (related:
		"UN Highlights World Water Crisis" 
		- June 5, 2003.)
 
	
	 
	
	Stretching beneath parts of,
	
		
			- 
			
			Argentina 
- 
			
			Brazil 
- 
			
			Paraguay 
- 
			
			Uruguay,  
	
	...the Guaraní Aquifer is an underground system of 
	water-bearing rock layers covering 460,000 square miles (1.2 million square 
	kilometers) - an area larger than Texas and California combined. 
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	 
	
	The International Atomic Energy Agency says the 
	Guaraní may be big enough to supply drinking water to 360 million people on 
	a sustainable basis. 
	
	 
	
	Already, some 500 cities and towns across Brazil 
	tap the aquifer for drinking water. Officials worry that overuse and 
	expanding agricultural activities are threatening the reservoir's future 
	health. 
	 
	
	Currently experts are studying the sandstone 
	aquifer's structure and devising ways to sustainably develop and manage the 
	cross-border resource for farming, drinking supplies, and geothermal energy.
	
	 
	
	The Global Environment Facility (GEF), a U.S.-based 
	funding consortium managed by 
	the United Nations and 
	
	the World Bank, has put 
	the equivalent of 13.5 million U.S. dollars into the project. 
	 
	
	That funding plus contributions from national 
	governments adds up to a total of 27 million dollars for the first phase of 
	the Guaraní project, which began in 2003 and ends in 2009. 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	
	Distrust of the U.S.
	
	 
	
	But local distrust of U.S.-backed lending 
	institutions - along with the presence of U.S. troops in Paraguay - has spawned 
	suspicions that Washington is exerting slow control over the aquifer as 
	insurance against water shortages in the U.S. 
	
		
		"The United States already has water problems in 
	its southern states," said Adolfo Esquivel, an Argentine activist and Nobel 
	Peace Prize laureate. 
		
		 
		
		"And it is clear that humans can live without oil, 
	gold, and diamonds but not water. The real wars will be over water, not 
	oil." 
	
	
	Esquivel points to a recent military deal, under 
	which U.S. Special Forces will train with Paraguayan soldiers. 
	
	 
	
	He says this 
	is evidence of Washington's creeping control - a claim that's been further 
	popularized by an Argentine documentary, 
	Sed: Invasión Gota a Gota - Thirst: Invasion Drop by Drop 
	- below video:
	
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	Sed: Invasión Gota a Gota
	
	
	
	Acuífero Guaraní
	
	by 
	
	DANIEL CAAMAÑO 
	
	May 15, 2012 
	from YouTube Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	The theory centers on an ill-reputed jungle area 
	known as 
	
	the Triple Border, where Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay meet.
	
	 
	
	The area is home to thousands of Muslim 
	merchants who immigrated to South America from Syria and is known as a 
	hotbed of smuggling, drug dealing, and arms sales.
	 
	
	U.S. officials have repeatedly said that 
	merchants in the area launder money from illegal activities to Middle East 
	terrorist groups, including Hezbollah. 
	 
	
	At an August 24, 2004, press briefing in 
	Washington, D.C., for example, the U.S. Treasury Department's Assistant 
	Secretary for Terrorist Financing, Juan Zarate, referred to a "Hezbollah 
	financier" imprisoned in Paraguay who Zarate said had been operating in the 
	Triple Border. 
	
		
		"He was engaged in a panoply of different 
	financial activities used to support Hezbollah, everything from extortion to 
	counterfeiting of currency to… smuggling," Zarate said. 
		
		 
		
		"Really, it was a 
	potpourri of financial criminal activity that he was using and his 
	counterparts were using to support Hezbollah and to send funds back to 
	Lebanon." 
		
		(Read the
		
		full 
	transcript of the press briefing.) 
	
	
	But critics say the State Department's claims 
	are little more than pretext for a subtle invasion. 
	
		
		"They have no evidence but claim a terrorist 
	presence in the area so they can install a military base and exert control 
	over the water," said Elsa Bruzzone, a policy specialist for the Buenos 
	Aires-based CEMIDA, a pro-democracy group founded by retired Argentine 
	military personnel. 
	
	
	Bruzzone also worries that loan conditions from 
	foreign lenders will force national governments to privatize the aquifer to 
	pay back funds. 
	 
	
	She and other activists have pressured Mercosur 
	- a 
	regional trade bloc made up of the four countries that the aquifer 
	underlies, plus Venezuela - to fight any foreign control over the aquifer.
	
	 
	
	Mercosur has recently proclaimed the aquifer to 
	be the property of those national governments and initiated a committee to 
	study the issue, Bruzzone says. 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	
	Overblown? 
	 
	
	But many in South America feel the conspiracy 
	theories are overblown, and U.S. officials have denied the allegations.
	
	
		
		"The United States has no interest in the 
	Guaraní Aquifer, which the U.S. government recognizes as an important 
	resource for the inhabitants of the region," said a January statement 
	released by the U.S. embassy in Paraguay. 
	
	
	Jorge Rucks is an Argentina-based official for 
	the Organization of American States (OAS). The four Guaraní countries 
	
	have 
	elected the OAS to serve as executor of the aquifer-development project.
	
	 
	
	Rucks stresses that the four Guaraní countries 
	have power over the aquifer project. 
	 
	
	He adds that the money managed by the UN and 
	World Bank comes without strings. 
	
		
		"We are talking about grants, no credits," he 
	said. "The money does not have to be paid back, and it carries no 
	conditions." 
	
	
	But the history of colonial domination on this 
	resource-rich and largely untapped continent keeps suspicions alive. Miguel Auge is a hydrology professor at the 
	University of Buenos Aires and was one of the first academics to initiate 
	studies of the aquifer. 
	
	
	 
	
	He says South American governments and lawmakers 
	should be careful. 
	
		
		"We can't forget the invasions that Latin 
	American countries have suffered throughout history, because it is happening 
	again," he said. 
	
	
		
		"Governments here have handed the most important 
	patrimony we have - water, soil, oil, gas, and minerals - to foreign groups from 
	North America and Europe." 
	
	
	The Guaraní Aquifer uproar recently affected a 
	millionaire conservationist from the United States. 
	
	 
	
	Douglas Tompkins, an ecologist and former owner 
	of Esprit clothing line, owns large chunks of Chile and Argentina, some of 
	which sit atop the aquifer. Earlier this month Argentina's populist 
	undersecretary of land and housing, Luis D'Elía, decided to cut chains and 
	padlocks at Tompkins's ranch, allowing a group of Indian activists onto the 
	property, located in the Esteros del Iberá wetlands in the north of 
	Argentina. 
	 
	
	D'Elía has told local media he is pushing 
	legislation to seize Tompkins's land, in part because, D'Elía claims, the 
	conservationist is part of the United States' effort to "grab control of our 
	water."