Panama: Political and Economic Conditions
and U.S. Relations

Mark P. Sullivan
Specialist in Latin American Affairs
March 1, 2011
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RL30981
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress

Panama: Political and Economic Conditions and U.S. Relations

Summary
With five successive elected civilian governments, the Central American nation of Panama has
made notable political and economic progress since the 1989 U.S. military intervention that
ousted the regime of General Manuel Noriega from power. Current President Ricardo Martinelli
of the center-right Democratic Change (CD) party was elected in May 2009, defeating the ruling
center-left Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD) in a landslide. Martinelli was inaugurated to a
five-year term on July 1, 2009. Martinelli’s Alliance for Change coalition also captured a majority
of seats in Panama’s National Assembly. Panama’s service-based economy has been booming in
recent years, largely because of the ongoing Panama Canal expansion project (slated for
completion in 2014), but economic growth slowed in 2009 because of the global financial crisis
and U.S. economic recession. Nevertheless, the economy rebounded in 2010, with a growth rate
approaching 7%, and strong growth is continuing in 2011.
President Martinelli still retains high approval ratings, but he has been criticized by some civil
society groups for taking a heavy-handed approach toward governing and for not being more
consultative. The country experienced labor unrest in July 2010 after the government approved
legislation that would have allowed companies to suspend contracts of striking workers and hire
replacement workers during strikes, but the government ultimately agreed to repeal the
provisions. In February 2011, the government amended the country’s mining law to allow foreign
investment. Indigenous groups have protested the change even though President Martinelli has
vowed that his administration would not approve any mining concessions in indigenous areas.
The United States has close relations with Panama, stemming in large part from the extensive
linkages developed when the Canal was under U.S. control and Panama hosted major U.S.
military installations. The current relationship is characterized by extensive counternarcotics
cooperation, assistance to help Panama assure the security of the Canal, and a proposed bilateral
free trade agreement (FTA). U.S. bilateral assistance amounted to $7.6 million in FY2009 and
$7.3 million in FY2010. The FY2011 request is for $10.6 million, while the FY2012 request is
for $2.6 million. This funding does not include assistance in FY2008 and FY2009 under the
Mérida Initiative to assist Central American countries in their efforts to combat drug trafficking,
gangs, and organized crime; beginning in FY2010, Panama has been receiving assistance under
the successor Central America Regional Security Initiative.
The United States and Panama signed a bilateral FTA in June 2007, and Panama’s National
Assembly overwhelmingly approved the agreement in July 2007. Neither the 110th nor the 111th
Congress considered the agreement. Issues that have raised congressional concern relate to
worker rights and to Panama’s tax transparency. On November 30, 2010, Panama and the United
States signed a Tax Information Exchange Agreement that had been a prerequisite of some
Members of Congress for the consideration of the FTA. In the 112th Congress, several measures
have been introduced that would express support for the FTA with Panama: S.Res. 20 (Johanns)
and S. 98 (Portman), both introduced January 25, 2011; and H.Res. 86 (Frelinghuysen),
introduced February 11, 2011. For additional information, see CRS Report RL32540, The
Proposed U.S.-Panama Free Trade Agreement
, CRS Report R40622, Agriculture in Pending U.S.
Free Trade Agreements with Colombia, Panama, and South Korea
, CRS Report RL34112, Gangs
in Central America
, and CRS Report R41215, Latin America and the Caribbean: Illicit Drug
Trafficking and U.S. Counterdrug Programs
.

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Panama: Political and Economic Conditions and U.S. Relations

Contents
Political and Economic Conditions.............................................................................................. 1
From the Endara to the Torrijos Administration ..................................................................... 1
Endara Government (1989-1994) .................................................................................... 1
Pérez Balladares Government (1994-1999) ..................................................................... 1
Moscoso Government (1999-2004) ................................................................................. 2
Torrijos Government (2004-2009) ................................................................................... 3
Martinelli Government (2009-2014)...................................................................................... 5
May 2009 Elections ........................................................................................................ 5
Challenges for the Martinelli Government ....................................................................... 6
Human Rights Issues............................................................................................................. 9
U.S.-Panama Relations.............................................................................................................. 11
U.S. Foreign Aid and Other Support.................................................................................... 12
Port Security and Other Counterterrorism Efforts ................................................................ 13
Drug Trafficking and Money Laundering ............................................................................ 14
Tax Haven Status ................................................................................................................ 15
U.S. Trade Relations ........................................................................................................... 17
Potential Free Trade Agreement .................................................................................... 18
Operation and Security of the Panama Canal ....................................................................... 21
Historical Background and the Panama Canal Treaties .................................................. 21
Canal Transition and Current Status .............................................................................. 21
Canal Expansion Project ............................................................................................... 22
Background on the 1989 U.S. Military Intervention............................................................. 23
Status of Manuel Noriega .............................................................................................. 24

Figures
Figure 1. Map of Panama .......................................................................................................... 26

Appendixes
Appendix A. Links to U.S. Government Reports ....................................................................... 27

Contacts
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 28
Acknowledgments .................................................................................................................... 28

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Panama: Political and Economic Conditions and U.S. Relations

Political and Economic Conditions
Panama has made notable political and economic progress since the December 1989 U.S. military
intervention that ousted the military regime of General Manuel Antonio Noriega from power. The
intervention was the culmination of two and a half years of strong U.S. pressure against the de
facto political rule of Noriega, commander of the Panama Defense Forces. Since that time, the
country has had five successive civilian governments, with the current government of President
Ricardo Martinelli of the center-right Democratic Change (CD) party elected in May 2009 to a
five-year term. Inaugurated on July 1, 2009, Martinelli is a businessman and former government
minister. His electoral alliance, known as the Alliance for Change, also won a majority of seats in
the unicameral National Assembly. Panama’s largely service-based economy has been booming in
recent years, spurred on by the Panama Canal expansion project that begun in 2007 that is
expected to be completed in 2014.
From the Endara to the Torrijos Administration
Endara Government (1989-1994)
Before the U.S. intervention, Panama had held national elections in May 1989, and in the
presence of a large number of international observers, the anti-Noriega coalition, headed by
Guillermo Endara, prevailed by a three-to-one margin. The Noriega regime annulled the election,
however, and held on to power. By the fall, the military regime was losing political power and
relied increasingly on irregular paramilitary units, making the country unsafe for U.S. forces and
U.S. citizens. On December 20, 1989, President George H. W. Bush ordered the U.S. military into
Panama “to safeguard the lives of Americans, to defend democracy in Panama, to combat drug
trafficking, and to protect the integrity of the Panama Canal Treaty.” Noriega was arrested on
January 3, 1990, and brought to the United States to stand trial on drug trafficking charges. (Also
see “Status of Manuel Noriega” below.)
As a result of the intervention, the opposition coalition headed by Guillermo Endara that had won
the May 1989 election was sworn into office. During his term, President Endara made great
progress in restoring functioning political institutions after 21 years of military-controlled
government, and under his administration, a new civilian Public Force replaced Noriega’s
Panama Defense Forces. But Endara had difficulties in meeting high public expectations, and the
demilitarization process was difficult, with some police and former military members at times
plotting to destabilize, if not overthrow, the government.
Pérez Balladares Government (1994-1999)
In May 1994, Panamanians went to the polls to vote in presidential and legislative elections that
observers called the freest in almost three decades. Ernesto Pérez Balladares, candidate of the
former pro-Noriega Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD), who led a coalition known as
“United People,” won with 33% of the vote. Placing a surprisingly strong second, with 29% of
the vote, was the Arnulfista Party (PA) candidate, Mireya Moscoso de Gruber, heading a coalition
known as the “Democratic Alliance.”
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In the electoral race, Pérez Balladares campaigned as a populist and advocated greater social
spending and attention to the poor. He stressed the need for addressing unemployment, which he
termed Panama’s fundamental problem. Pérez Balladares severely criticized the Endara
government for corruption, and he was able to overcome attempts to portray him as someone
closely associated with General Noriega. (Pérez Balladares served as campaign manager during
the 1989 elections for candidate Carlos Duque, who the Noriega regime had tried to impose on
the electorate through fraud.) Instead, Pérez Balladares focused on the PRD’s ties to the populist
policies of General Omar Torrijos, whose 12-year (1969-1981) military rule of Panama ended
when he died in a plane crash in 1981.
President Pérez Balladares implemented an economic reform program that included liberalization
of the trade regime, privatization of state-owned enterprises, the institution of fiscal reform, and
labor code reform. Tariffs were reduced to an average of 8%.
Pérez Balladares also worked closely with the United States as the date of the Panama Canal
turnover approached. Under his government, Panama and the United States held talks on the
potential continuation of a U.S. military presence in Panama beyond the end of 1999 (the date
Panama was to assume responsibility for defending the Canal). Ultimately negotiations ended
without such an agreement.
Although Panama’s constitution does not allow for presidential reelection, President Pérez
Balladares actively sought a second term in 1999. In 1997, the PRD had begun studying the
possibility of amending the constitution to allow a second bid for the presidency in the May 1999
elections. Ultimately, a referendum was held on the issue in August 1998 but failed by a large
margin.
Late in his administration, Pérez Balladares became embroiled in a scandal involving the illegal
sale of visas to Chinese immigrants attempting to enter the United States via Panama. As a result,
U.S. officials cancelled the former president’s U.S. tourist visa in November 1999.1
Moscoso Government (1999-2004)
In her second bid for the presidency, Arnulfista Party (PA) candidate Mireya Moscoso was
victorious in the May 1999 elections. Moscoso, who was inaugurated September 1, 1999, for a
five-year term, captured almost 45% of the vote and soundly defeated the ruling PRD’s candidate
Martin Torrijos (son of former populist leader Omar Torrijos), who received almost 38% of the
vote. Until March 1999, Torrijos had been leading in opinion polls, but as the election neared, the
two candidates were in a dead heat. A third candidate, Alberto Vallarino, heading a coalition
known as Opposition Action, received about 17% of the vote.
President Moscoso, a coffee plantation owner and Panama’s first female president, ran as a
populist during the campaign, promising to end government corruption, slow the privatization of
state enterprises, and reduce poverty. She also promised to ensure that politics and corruption did
not interfere with the administration of the Canal. The memory of her husband Arnulfo Arias, a
nationalist who was elected three times as president, but overthrown each time, was a factor in the

1 “Ex-Leader of Panama Linked to Visa Sales,” Washington Post, November 27, 1999; Pablo Bachelet, “U.S. Uses
Visas to Combat Corruption,” Miami Herald, February 21, 2006.
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campaign, particularly since Arias was last overthrown in 1968 by General Omar Torrijos, the
father of the PRD’s 1999 and 2004 presidential candidate.
Although Moscoso took the presidency, the PRD-led New Nation coalition won a majority of 41
seats in the 71-member unicameral Legislative Assembly. Just days before her inauguration,
however, Moscoso was able to build a coalition, with the support of the Solidarity Party, the
Christian Democratic Party (which later became the Popular Party), and the National Liberal
Party, that gave her government a one-seat majority in the Assembly. In August 2000, the
Christian Democrats deserted the coalition and formed an alliance with the principal opposition,
the PRD. However, corruption scandals in 2002 led to five PRD legislators defecting to support
the Moscoso government, once again giving the president majority support in the Legislative
Assembly.
The Moscoso government partially reversed the trade liberalization process of the Pérez
Balladares by raising tariffs on some agricultural products, some of which reached the maximum
rate allowed under Panama’s World Trade Organization obligations.2
As noted above, Moscoso was elected as a populist, with pledges to end government corruption
and reduce poverty, but her campaign pledges proved difficult to fulfill amid high-profile
corruption scandals and poor economic performance. As a result, the president’s popularity
declined significantly from a 70% approval rating when she first took office in 1999 to only 15%
in 2004.3
Torrijos Government (2004-2009)
In the May 2004 presidential race, Martín Torrijos of the PRD won a decisive victory with 47.5%
of the vote, defeating former President Guillermo Endara, who received 30.6% of the vote, and
former Foreign Minister José Miguel Alemán, who received 16.4% of the vote. Torrijos’ electoral
alliance also won a majority of seats in the unicameral National Assembly (formerly known as the
Legislative Assembly), 43 out of 78 seats, which should provide him with enough legislative
support to enact his agenda. Elected at 40 years of age, Torrijos—the son of former populist
leader General Omar Torrijos (1968-1981)—spent many years in the United States and studied
political science and economics at Texas A&M University. He served four years under the Pérez
Balladares government as deputy minister of interior and justice, and as noted above, became the
PRD’s presidential candidate in the 1999 elections.
Leading up to the election, Torrijos had been topping public opinion polls, with 42%-49%
support. In the campaign, he emphasized anti-corruption measures as well as a national strategy
to deal with poverty, unemployment, and underdevelopment. He was popular among younger
voters and had a base of support in rural areas. Torrijos maintained that his first priority would be
job creation.4 He called for the widening of the Canal, a project that would cost several billion
dollars, and would seek a referendum on the issue. During the campaign, all three major
candidates supported negotiation of a free trade agreement with the United States, maintaining
that it would be advantageous for Panama. Endara and Alemán appeared to emphasize the

2 United States Trade Representative, 2006 National Trade Estimate Report on Foreign Trade Barriers, p. 501.
3 “Toss Up Between Torrijos and Endara,” Caribbean and Central America Report, February 17, 2004.
4 Frances Robles, “Ex-leader’s Son Wins Presidency in Panama,” Miami Herald, May 3, 2004.
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protection of some sensitive Panamanian sectors such as agriculture, while Torrijos stressed that
such an agreement would make Panama’s economy more competitive and productive.5
During his five years in office, President Torrijos faced such major challenges as dealing with the
deficits of the country’s social security fund (Caja de Seguro Social, CSS); developing plans for
the expansion of the Panama Canal; combating unemployment, poverty, and increasing crime;
and contending with the effects of the global financial crisis and U.S. recession on the
Panamanian economy.
After protests and a protracted strike by construction workers, doctors, and teachers in June 2005,
the Torrijos government was forced to modify its plans for reforming the social security fund.
After a national dialogue on the issue, Panama’s National Assembly approved a watered-down
version of the original plan in December 2005. The enacted reform did not raise the retirement
age but will gradually increase required monthly payments into the system and introduces a dual
pension system that combines aspects of privatization with the current system.6 In mid-December
2007, an almost six-week strike by doctors in the public healthcare system was resolved, with the
government offering a 26.7% increase in salaries equivalent and a commitment not to privatize
the system.7
In April 2006, the government unveiled its ambitious plans to build a third set of locks that would
double the Canal’s capacity, and allow larger post-Panamax ships to transit the Canal. Panama’s
Cabinet approved the expansion plan in June, and the National Assembly approved it in July
2006. A referendum on the expansion project took place on October 22, 2006, with 78%
supporting the project. The referendum was viewed as a victory for the Torrijos government,
which advanced the project as integral to Panama’s future economic development and one that
helped restore the president’s popularity.8
The Torrijos government’s agenda also included judicial, penal and anti-corruption reforms, as
well as an economic development strategy to target poverty and unemployment. The government
implemented a new penal code in May 2008 that took a tougher stance on crime by increasing
sentences on serious crimes and other measures. In early July 2008, Panama’s National Assembly
gave President Torrijos powers to carry out security sector reforms over the next two months. In
August 2008, President Torrijos enacted five decree laws reorganizing Panama’s law enforcement
and security services, including the establishment of a National Border Service and a National
Intelligence and Security Service (SENIS). Some critics fear that the actions will lead to
Panama’s re-militarization, while Torrijos maintains that the new agencies are needed to combat
growing drug crimes.9 In mid-December 2008, the Torrijos government approved additional

5 “Panama: Presidential Candidates Remark on FTA with US,” La Prensa (Panama), January 24, 2004, translated by
Foreign Broadcast Information Service.
6 Marion Barbel, “Panamanian Congress Approves Modified Social Security Reform,” World Markets Research,
December 22, 2005.
7 “Panama: Country Report,” Economist Intelligence Unit, January 2008, p. 2.
8 Richard Lapper, “Good Luck, Good Timing,” Financial Times, July 24, 2007.
9 “Panama: Torrijos to Undertake Security Reform by Decree,” Latin American Weekly Report, July 3, 2008; “Torrijos
Forges Ahead with Security Decrees,” Latin American Regional Report, Caribbean and Central America, September
2008.
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changes to the penal code that increased penalties for the illegal possession of firearms and
introduced sentences for attacking a police official.10
In order to deal with the effects of the global financial crisis, President Torrijos announced the
establishment of a $1.1 billion fund in January 2009 to allow for eased credit access and loans to
financial institutions in Panama. The fund—financed with support from the Inter-American
Development Bank, the Andean Development Corporation, and the National Bank of Panama—
was established in order to counter the tightening of credit because of the global financial crisis.11
Martinelli Government (2009-2014)
May 2009 Elections
Because Panama’s Constitution does not allow for immediate re-election, Torrijos was ineligible
to run in the May 3, 2009, presidential election, which supermarket mogul and former
government minister Ricardo Martinelli of the small center-right Democratic Change (CD) party
won in a landslide. Despite strong economic growth and reductions in poverty, support for the
Torrijos government in its last year in office eroded because of concerns about rising crime, the
effects of the global financial crisis, and problems in improving infrastructure and public services.
This contributed to the PRD’s poor showing in the 2009 presidential and legislative elections.
While initially in 2008 it appeared that the candidate of the ruling PRD, former housing minister
Balbina Herrera, was favored to win, opinion surveys late in the year reflected a significant shift
in favor of Ricardo Martinelli. Polls in January 2009 showed Martinelli with 43% support
compared to 25% for Herrera and almost 15% for Juan Carlos Varela of the center-right
Panameñista Party (PP).12 In late January 2009, Martinelli and Varela struck a deal to run together
in a four-party coalition dubbed the Alliance for Change, with Martinelli leading the ticket and
Varela as his running mate. The new alliance further widened Martinelli’s lead in opinion polls.
Ultimately, Martinelli captured 60% of the vote compared to almost 38% of the vote for
Herrera.13
Martinelli’s Alliance for Change also won a majority of seats in the unicameral National
Assembly that will increase the chances that the president will be able to secure enough votes to
enact his legislative agenda. The Alliance for Change parties captured 42 out of 71 seats in the
legislature, with Martinelli’s CD winning 15 and the PP winning 21 seats. The opposition PRD,
however, still remains the largest single party in the legislature, with 26 seats although internal
divisions could weaken its power.14 The Alliance for Change coalition faces some internal
divisions that could jeopardize its cohesion, especially if President Martinelli’s popularity begins
to falter.

10 "Panama: Torrijos Pushes Through Changes to Penal Code," Latin American Weekly Report, December 18, 2008.
11 Marion Barbel, "President Unveils U.S. $1.1 billion Anti-Crisis Fund in Panama," Global Insight, January 23, 2009.
12 “Panama: Martinelli’s Presidential Prospects Strengthen,” Latin American Weekly Report, January 15, 2009,
“Panama Mogul Extends Lead in Election Race – Poll,” Reuters, January 11, 2009.
13 Tribunal Electoral de Panama, “Elecciones Generales del 3 de mayo de 2009.”
14 Asamblea Nacional de Panama, listing of deputies, available at: http://www.asamblea.gob.pa/diputados/index.html
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Challenges for the Martinelli Government
President Martinelli still retains high approval ratings, measured at over 70% in December
2010,15 although this strong popularity masks some of the difficulties that the president has faced
since taking office. Moreover, the president has been criticized by civil society groups for taking
a heavy-handed approach toward governing and not being consultative with civic groups.16 In
early January 2011, a bill initiated by a deputy from President Martinelli’s CD that would have
amended the constitution to allow for consecutive presidential re-election was rejected by a
congressional committee. Panama’s next presidential election is scheduled for May 2014. During
the 2009 presidential race, Martinelli reportedly agreed that the Panameñista Party would head
the coalition in 2014, although some reports indicate that there are concerns that President
Martinelli will not adhere to this and might support another candidate.17
In 2009, a significant economic challenge facing the Martinelli government was dealing with the
fallout stemming from the global financial crisis, but the economy weathered the storm and
avoided the contraction experienced by many Latin American economies. Panama’s service-based
economy had been booming in recent years, largely because of the Panama Canal expansion
project, but the global financial crisis and the related decline in U.S. import demand stemming
from the U.S. recession slowed Panama’s economic growth. The economy grew 12.1% in 2007
and 10.1% in 2008. Initially, some economists were predicting that the economy would contract
in 2009, but the economy ended up growing an estimated 3.2%. This made Panama’s economy
one of the few in the region registering positive economic growth in 2009. In 2010, the economy
grew even faster, with an estimated growth rate approaching 7%, and the forecast for 2011 is for
growth over 6%.18
Although Panama is categorized by the World Bank as having an upper-middle-income economy
because of its relatively high per capita income level of $6,180 (2008), one of the country’s major
challenges is highly skewed income distribution with large disparities between the rich and
poor.19 In order to tackle poverty, the previous Torrijos government initiated a social support
program of conditional cash transfers to poor families (Red de Oportunidades) and in mid-2008,
the government extended the program to include the elderly living in extreme poverty. Poverty
rates have been reduced from almost 37% in 2002 to almost 26.4% in 2009. Extreme poverty or
indigence in Panama declined from 18.6% in 2002 to 11.1% in 2009.20 Since taking office,
President Martinelli has fulfilled his campaign pledge to provide $100 a month to poor seniors.
During the 2009 presidential campaign, Martinelli pledged to simplify the tax system by the
introduction of a flat tax for individuals and for corporations in order to discourage tax evasion.
Instead, however, the government enacted two tax reform measures, the first in September 2009
and the second in March 2010, that increased reliance on indirect taxes, reduced income tax rates,
and broadened the tax base. These measures are expected to increase government revenue by
more than 2%, according to the International Monetary Fund.21 The tax reform in March 2010

15 “Re-Election Motion Chucked Out in Panama,” LatinNews Daily, January 6, 2011.
16 "Country Report: Panama," Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), January 2011, p. 11.
17 Ibid, p. 10; and “Re-Election Motion Chucked Out in Panama,” LatinNews Daily, January 6, 2011.
18 "Country Report: Panama," EIU, February 2011, p. 13.
19 World Bank, World Development Report 2010.
20 U.N. Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, Social Panorama of Latin America 2010.
21 International Monetary Fund, “Panama: 2010 Article IV Consultation—Staff Report,” October 2010, IMF Country
(continued...)
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reduced corporate and personal income tax rates, and offset the loss of revenue by raising the
sales tax from 5% to 7% (not including food) and raising other taxes on banks, casinos, airlines,
and the free-trade zone, with a projected net increase in revenue. The government maintains that
additional revenue from the reform will be used to augment social expenditures (such as
scholarships and cash transfers to the elderly), but critics of the measure maintain that the poor
will be hit by an increase in the cost of living. The tax measure in 2010 prompted protests against
the government in March, with violent clashes between police and demonstrators, and some 200
people were detained.22 The tax measure, however, also led to an upgrading of Panama’s
investment-grade credit rating that could improve the country’s financing costs and its
attractiveness for foreign investment.23
During the 2009 campaign, Martinelli also called for a number of large public infrastructure
projects, including a subway system for Panama City, a light rail system on the outskirts of
Panama City, regional airports and roads, and a third bridge over the Canal. The government has
already begun to move ahead on some projects. It has set up a body to oversee a plan to construct
a subway system in Panama City, and in October 2010 awarded the $1.4 billion project to a
Brazilian and Spanish construction consortium.
Another challenge for the Martinelli government has been dealing with Panama’s rising crime,
which increased significantly in 2008 and 2009, but declined in 2010. From 2000-2006, the
annual homicide rate averaged between 10 and 11 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants.24 The rate
subsequently increased from 13 per 100,000 in 2007 to 19 in 2008 and 24 in 2009. Panama had
806 murders in 2009, up 23% from 2008, with drug trafficking the driving force behind the
increase.25 During the 2009 electoral campaign, Martinelli proposed a safe streets program that
included increasing the number of police and raising police pay. In February 2010, President
Martinelli announced an expansion of the national police force with an additional 4,000 officers
that would raise the total force to over 15,000.26 In late 2010, Panama’s minister of public security
said that the number of murders in 2010 had declined about 15% to 692.27
The Martinelli government initiated a number of anti-corruption investigations against officials
from the PRD who served in government, including former President Ernest Pérez Balladares
(1994-1999), but the PRD maintains that Martinelli is using an anti-corruption crusade to
prosecute its political opposition. In late January 2010, Panama’s Supreme Court voted to
suspend Attorney General Ana Matilde Gomez on allegations of abuse of authority. Gomez had
been appointed by the Torrijos government in 2005 to a 10-year post, but the Martinelli

(...continued)
Report No. 10/314.
22 Inti Landauro, “Panama Approves Tax Bill to Boost Revenue, Cut Deficit,” Dow Jones Newswires, March 16, 2010;
Sean Mattson, “Panama: President Ricardo Martinelli Moves His Agenda Forward,” Noticen: Central American &
Caribbean Affairs
, March 18, 2010; “Panama Unions Show New Signs of Life,” Latin American Regional Report:
Caribbean & Central America
, April 2010.
23 “Panama: Credit Update,” EIU – Business Latin America, March 29, 2010.
24 U.N. Development Program, Informe Sobre Desarrollo Humano Para América Central 2009-2010: Abrir Espacios a
la Seguridad Ciudadana y el Desarrollo Humano
, October 2009.
25 “Panama: Drug-Fueled Violence on the Increase,” Noticen, Central American & Caribbean Affairs, January 28,
2010.
26 “Panama Politics: President’s Popularity Slips,” EIU ViewsWire, March 23, 2010.
27 “Panama, Colombia Build Police Stations on Border to Control Crime,” BBC Monitoring Americas, December 28,
2010.
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government had criticized her for failing to act in cases involving former high-ranking PRD
government officials. Gomez’s interim successor, Giuseppe Bonissi (reportedly a close associate
of Martinelli), resigned in December 2010 after accusations that some government prosecutors
had given preferential treatment to suspected drug-traffickers. President Martinelli then appointed
career official José Ayú Prado to finish out the rest of Gómez’s term until 2015. The appointment
reportedly was lauded by civic groups who had feared that President Martinelli would again
designate a close ally.28
Some observers have criticized President Martinelli for undermining the independence of the
judiciary because of his nomination of two political allies to the Supreme Court in December
2009. The National Assembly quickly approved the nominations, and the two justices took office
in January 2010. A complaint on this and the broader issue of problems with Panama’s judicial
system was heard by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights in March 2010, with
representatives of the Citizens Alliance for Justice (Alianza Ciudadana Pro Justicia). The alliance
represents 20 Panamanian civil society organizations dedicated to implementing judicial reform
and improving the administration of justice.29 In January 2011, Panama’s Supreme Court revived
legislation approved in 1999 under the Pérez Balladares government that expanded the court from
9 to 12 judges and established a “court of constitutional guarantees” within the Supreme Court.
President Moscoso’s government subsequently repealed the legislation expanding the court and
the membership of the court returned to 9 members. But in January 2011, the Supreme Court
declared the Moscoso government’s action unconstitutional so that the court will return to 12
members. Critics maintain that it will give President Martinelli more influence over the court.30
In July 2010, Panama experienced labor unrest in response to controversial legislation that would
have allowed companies to suspend contracts of striking workers, allowed companies to hire
replacement workers during strikes, and ended the obligatory payment of union dues. Two
striking workers in the banana sector were killed in clashes with police in Bocas del Toro and
more than 120 people were injured. The strike was suspended after the Martinelli government
agreed to suspend some of the controversial aspects of the law. In October 2010, the government
agreed to repeal the law altogether, including the controversial labor provisions as well as
provisions that would have relaxed environmental standards. The law had included provisions
that would have allowed the government to eliminate environmental-impact studies for public
works deemed of “social interest.”31
On February 10, 2011, Panama’s National Assembly approved legislation initiated by the
Martinelli government that amended the country’s mining law to allow foreign government
investment in the sector. Changes to the law were reportedly motivated by plans of Canada’s
Inmet Mining company to secure financing from Singapore and South Korea for a mining project
known as Cobre Panama.32 Indigenous and environmental groups have protested the amendment

28 "Country Report: Panama," EIU, January 2011, p. 9; “People Profile, José Eduardo Ayú Canals, Panama,” Latin
NewsDaily
, January 25, 2011
29 See the website of the Citizens Alliance for Justice at: http://www.alianzaprojusticia.org.pa/ ; The Washington, D.C.-
based Due Process of Law Foundation has also done work on the issue of Panama’s judicial system. For more
information, see: http://www.dplf.org/index.php?c_ID=395&catID=1
30 "Country Report: Panama," EIU, February 2011, p. 10.
31 Sean Mattson, “Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli Reverses Course on Controversial Legislation,” Noticen,
Central & Caribbean Affairs
, November 11, 2010; “Panama: Martinelli Performs Major U-Turn,” Latin American
Regional Report, Caribbean & Central America
, October 2010.
32 “Panama: Martinelli Hits Another Nerve,” Latin American Weekly Report, February 24, 2010.
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of the mining law and have called for its repeal. President Martinelli has vowed that his
administration would not approve any mining concession in indigenous areas, including in the
Cerro Colorado, believed to hold the country’s largest copper reserves, which lies in the
indigenous Ngöbe-Buglé comarca (semi-autonomous region) in Chiriquí province. Nevertheless,
indigenous and environmental groups have vowed more protests, with some calling for a
referendum to settle the dispute.33
Human Rights Issues
The Panamanian government generally respects human rights, but, as noted by the State
Department in its 2009 human rights report (issued in March 2010), human rights problems
continue in a number of areas. Prison conditions overall remain harsh, with reported abuse by
prison guards, and prolonged pretrial detention remains a problem. According to the report, the
judiciary is marred by corruption and ineffectiveness, and is subject to political manipulation.
Other serious problems include discrimination and violence against women, trafficking in
persons, discrimination against indigenous communities, and child labor.
Administration of Justice. As noted above, there has been some criticism in Panama regarding
the administration of justice and the independence of the judicial branch. Some observers have
criticized President Martinelli for undermining the independence of the judiciary because of his
nomination of two political allies to the Supreme Court in December 2009. A complaint on the
issue regarding the justice system was heard by the Inter-American Commission on Human
Rights on March 23, 2010, with representatives of the Citizens Alliance for Justice (Alianza
Ciudadana Pro Justicia). The alliance represents 20 Panamanian civil society organizations
dedicated to implementing judicial reform and improving the administration of justice.34
Freedom of the Press. In past years, Panama had been criticized by the State Department and
international human rights groups for vestiges of “gag laws” used by the government to silence
those criticizing policies or officials, but the legislature repealed these laws in May 2005.
Nevertheless, as noted in the State Department’s human rights report, the legislature approved
penal code amendments in May 2007 that allow for the prosecution of journalists who violate the
privacy of public officials or who publish classified information. The new penal code went into
effect in May 2008. Nongovernmental organizations assert that the new code threatens freedom
of speech and press.
As noted in the State Department human rights report, there have been some official attempts to
impede freedom of speech and the press. International press rights groups such as the Committee
to Protect Journalists and Reporters Without Borders have expressed concern about several cases.
In September 2008, a judge ordered the seizure of a local newspaper, El Periódico, because it
published the tax returns of a prominent businessman. The paper subsequently went out of
business, but the case remains under appeal. In February 2009, a Panamanian court sentenced
Jean Marcel Chéry, the director of the daily El Siglo, to two years in prison for trespassing in
connection with reporting on alleged corruption involving a Supreme Court Justice. Chéry has

33 “Decree Fails to Resolve Panama Mining Row,” Agence France Presse, February 23, 2011.
34 See the website of the Citizens Alliance for Justice at: http://www.alianzaprojusticia.org.pa/; The Washington, D.C.-
based Due Process of Law Foundation has also done work on the issue of Panama’s judicial system. For more
information, see: http://www.dplf.org/index.php?c_ID=395&catID=1
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appealed the decision. In September 2009, a Panamanian court convicted a journalist from La
Prensa
of libel against a former vice president.
In October 2010, a Panamanian court convicted two television journalists of defamation and
banned them from working as journalists for a year, but President Martinelli immediately issued a
pardon after their conviction. Press rights groups welcomed Martinelli’s action, but called for
legal reforms to fully decriminalize defamation.35 In early January 2011, a draft law that would
have allowed anyone convicted of insulting the president or an elected official to be sentenced to
prison was withdrawn from consideration in the National Assembly. The bill had been criticized
by journalists and press rights groups, and President Martinelli had warned that he would veto the
measure.36
Past Human Rights Abuses Under Military Rule. In an attempt to redress human rights abuses
that occurred under military rule (1968-1989) and to prevent their recurrence, the Moscoso
government established a Truth Commission in 2001 that documented 70 cases of murder and 40
disappearances, but progress has been slow in investigation and prosecution of these cases. In
2008, Panama’s attorney general announced that investigations had either been opened or
reopened in 47 of these cases because of new evidence. According to the State Department’s 2009
human rights report, more than half of these cases have been temporarily dismissed or closed, but
19 are at various stages of the trial process.
In 2008, the Panamanian government opened an investigation into the alleged killings of more
than 20 persons who reportedly were thrown from helicopters in the Darién region in 1982-1983.
In November 2009, Panama’s attorney general asked a court to call to trial former Minister of
Government and Justice Daniel Delgado for a killing in 1970 when he was a member of Panama’s
National Guard.
In July 2006, just as a human rights trial was approaching an end, a former military officer
implicated in the 1970 killing of activist Heliodoro Portugal died from an apparent heart attack. In
September 2008, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights ordered the Panamanian
government to pay restitution to the family of Portugal.
Displaced Persons. In recent years, violence from the civil conflict in neighboring Colombia has
resulted in hundreds of displaced persons seeking refuge in the neighboring Darién province of
Panama. Many of the Colombians have lived in Panama for years, have given birth to children in
Panama, and do not want to return to Colombia because of family and cultural ties to local
Panamanian communities. While many of the displaced are Afro-Colombians, there have also
been indigenous people from Colombia who have fled to Panama because of the violence.
The State Department’s 2009 human rights report notes that there are around 1,000 officially
recognized refugees in Panama, but also reports that the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) classifies some 15,000 people in the country as “persons of concern” in
need of international protection. UNHCR has a permanent office in Panama and was generally
allowed access to provide services to refugees, internally displaced persons, and persons under
temporary humanitarian protection.

35 “In Panama, Defamation Conviction Draws Outcry,” Committee to Protect Journalists, October 7, 2010.
36 “Withdrawal of Proposal to Introduce Jail Terms for Insulting the President,” Reporters Without Borders, January
12, 2011.
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In April 2008, UNHCR lauded Panama for the approval of a new law that allows long-standing
refugees (those residing 10 years or more) the opportunity to apply for permanent residency.
According to UNHCR, the new law will largely affect refugees from Nicaragua and El Salvador
who arrived in Panama during the Central American conflicts of the 1980s, and will not affect the
more recent refugees from Colombia.37 According to the State Department’s 2009 human rights
report, 41 cases have been approved under the law and another 140 cases are pending.
Worker Rights. With regard to worker rights in Panama, the State Department’s 2009 human
rights report notes that while Panamanian law recognizes the right of private-sector workers to
form and join unions of their choice, the law requires a minimum of 40 persons to a form a union,
and only one trade union is allowed per business. The International Labor Organization (ILO)
Committee of Experts criticizes both provisions as violations of workers’ rights to organize,
according to the State Department human rights report. Public servants may not form unions, but
they may form associations, which can bargain collectively, and there is a limited right to strike
with the exception of those areas vital for public welfare and security. The National Federation of
Public Servants (FENASEP), an umbrella organization of 21 public-sector worker associations, is
not permitted to call strikes, and the ILO has expressed concerns about this. The State Department
report also noted that child labor was a problem, with violations occurring most frequently in
rural areas at harvest time and in the informal sector. (Also see “Remaining FTA Issues” below.)
Human Trafficking. According to the State Department’s 2010 Trafficking in Persons (TIP)
report, issued in June 2010, Panama is a source, transit, and destination country for women and
children trafficked domestically for commercial sexual exploitation. Non-governmental
organizations report that some Panamanian children are subjected to involuntary domestic
servitude. The report maintained that the government showed little evidence of progress in
combating human trafficking, with weak law enforcement, no penal code prohibition against
forced labor, and failure to provide adequate assistance to trafficking victims and to identify
trafficking victims among vulnerable populations. As a result, Panama was placed on the Tier 2
Watch List.38
Panama previously had been on the State Department’s Tier 2 Watch List in 2008 for failing to
show evidence of increasing efforts to combat human trafficking and for failing to provide
adequate victim assistance. After the 2008 TIP report was issued, the government increased
prevention efforts, enacted a legislative reform package to strengthen its anti-trafficking laws, and
eliminated a special visa category that had been used to facilitate the trafficking of Colombian
women into the sex trade. As a result in Panama was placed on the Tier 2 List in June 2009
because of the government’s anti-trafficking efforts.
U.S.-Panama Relations
Since the 1989 U.S. military intervention that ousted the regime of General Manuel Antonio
Noriega from power (see “Background on the 1989 U.S. Military Intervention”), the United
States has had close relations with Panama, stemming in large part from the extensive history of
linkages developed when the Panama Canal was under U.S. control and Panama hosted major

37 “UNHCR Welcomes New Panama Law,” UNHCR Briefing Notes, April 1, 2008.
38 U.S. Department of State, “Trafficking in Persons Report,” June 2010. Also see CRS Report RL33200, Trafficking in
Persons in Latin America and the Caribbean
, by Clare Ribando Seelke.
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U.S. military installations. Today, about 27,000 U.S. citizens reside in Panama, many retirees of
the former Panama Canal Commission, and there are growing numbers of other American retirees
in the western part of the country.39
The current U.S. relationship with Panama is characterized by extensive cooperation on
counternarcotics efforts, U.S. assistance to help Panama assure the security of the Canal, and a
proposed bilateral free trade agreement (FTA) that was signed in 2007. Panama is seeking the
FTA as a means of increasing U.S. investment in the country, while the United States has stressed
that an FTA with Panama, in addition to enhancing trade, would further U.S. efforts to strengthen
support for democracy and the rule of law.
The United States turned over control of the Canal to Panama at the end of 1999, according to the
terms of the 1977 Panama Canal Treaty, at which point Panama assumed responsibility for
operating and defending the Canal. All U.S. troops were withdrawn from Panama at that time and
all U.S. military installations reverted to Panamanian control. However, under the terms of the
Treaty on the Permanent Neutrality and Operation of the Panama Canal, or simply the Neutrality
Treaty, the United States retains the right to use military force if necessary to reopen the Canal or
restore its operations.
U.S. Foreign Aid and Other Support
Because of Panama’s relatively high per capita income level, the United States has not provided
large amounts of foreign aid to Panama in recent years. Nevertheless, aid has included
development assistance to improve business competitiveness and trade-led economic growth;
child, survival, and health assistance to help in the fight against HIV/AIDS; and security
assistance to improve Panama’s counterterrorism capabilities, security programs, and maritime
interdiction. In recent years, U.S. bilateral assistance (not including Peace Corps assistance)
amounted to $3.7 million in FY2008, $7.6 million in FY2009, and $7.3 million in FY2010.
For FY2011, the Obama Administration requested $10.6 million in assistance for Panama,
including $7.5 million in Development Assistance and $2.1 million in Foreign Military Financing
(FMF). According to the State Department’s FY2011 Congressional Budget Justification for
Foreign Operations, the United States will work in partnership with Panama to advance common
interests in improving citizen safety, strengthening democratic institutions, enhancing the health
and education of all citizens, addressing income inequality, and supporting sustainable economic
growth. Congressional action on FY2011 assistance has not been completed. FY2012, the
Administration did not request any Development Assistance, but requested $2.6 million in
military assistance, with $1.8 million in FMF and $800,000 in International Military Education
and Training (IMET).
These aid figures do not reflect additional assistance that Panama has been receiving since
FY2008 under the Mérida Initiative, a program providing assistance to Mexico and Central
American countries in their efforts to combat drug trafficking, gangs, and organized crime. In
March 2009, Panama and the United States signed a letter of agreement for $2 million in funding
under the initiative; overall, Panama will receive an estimated $11 million in Mérida Initiative
assistance for FY2008/2009. For FY2010, instead of funding under the Mérida Initiative, Panama

39 U.S. Department of State, Background Note: Panama, September 16, 2010.
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will receive a portion of the $83 million in assistance under the Central America Regional
Security Initiative (CARSI), a successor to the Mérida Initiative for Central America. For each of
FY2011 and FY2012, the Obama Administration requested $100 million in assistance for CARSI.
The lack of details for actual and proposed country funding for Panama under the Mérida
Initiative and CARSI makes it difficult to provide an overall picture of U.S. assistance going to
Panama.
A number of U.S. agencies provide support to Panama. The U.S. Agency for International
Development has a mission in Panama administering U.S. foreign aid programs, and the Peace
Corps has over 180 volunteers in the country working on a range of development projects. The
State Department, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the U.S. Coast Guard, and the
Department of Homeland Security are involved in providing counternarcotics support to Panama.
The Department of Health and Human Services provided support in 2007 to launch a Regional
Training Center for health-care workers in Panama City that trains students from throughout
Central America. The U.S. Southern Command (Southcom) also provides support to Panama
through military exercises providing humanitarian and medical assistance, and at times provides
emergency assistance in the case of natural disasters such as floods or droughts. Southcom also
has sponsored annual multinational training exercises since 2003 focused on the defense of the
Panama Canal. Panama also hosts the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute dedicated to
studying biological diversity.
Port Security and Other Counterterrorism Efforts
Panama also participates in the Container Security Initiative (CSI) operated by the U.S. Customs
and Border Protection of the Department of Homeland Security, and the Megaports Initiative run
by the National Nuclear Security Administration of the Department of Energy. Three Panamanian
ports—Balboa, Colón, and Manzanillo—participate in the CSI, while those three ports plus the
port of Cristobal participates in the Megaports Initiative. The CSI uses a security regime to ensure
that containers that pose a potential risk for terrorism are identified and inspected at foreign ports
before they are placed on vessels destined for the United States. The Megaports Initiative
involves deploying radiation detection equipment in order to detect nuclear or radioactive
materials.
The State Department’s Country Reports on Terrorism, 2009, issued in August 2010, maintained
the main terrorist concerns in Panama remained the presence of the Revolutionary Armed Forces
of Colombia (FARC) in the Darién province bordering Colombia and potential actions against the
Panama Canal. The report noted that Panama continued to work in both areas. A small number of
FARC members from the guerrilla group’s 57th Front were reported to operate in the Darién,
using the area as a safe haven and drug trafficking base. The members also were responsible for
the kidnapping of a U.S.-Cuban citizen near Panama City in April 2008 who was held until
February 2009. Panama turned over several FARC members to the United States for prosecution
in 2009. In January 2010, three FARC members were killed and two were captured in a clash
with Panamanian forces in the Darién. In late 2010, Panama and Colombia agreed to establish
police stations near each side of the border in order.
With regard to the Panama Canal, the United States and Panama have continued to work together
to plan for potential incidents that could close the Canal. Since 2003, Panama has participated in
annual PANAMAX exercises with the United States and a number of other Latin American
countries focused on ensuring the security of the Canal. The most recent exercise was held in
August 2010 involving 16 nations in the region in addition to the United States and Panama.
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Drug Trafficking and Money Laundering
An important concern for U.S. policymakers over the years has been securing Panamanian
cooperation to combat drug-trafficking and money-laundering. Panama is a major transit country
for illicit drugs from South America to the U.S. market because of its geographic location and its
large maritime industry and containerized seaports. Moreover, the country’s service-based
economy, with a large banking sector and trading center (Colón Free Zone, CFZ), makes Panama
vulnerable to money laundering. The State Department’s March 2010 International Narcotics
Control Strategy Report
(INCSR) maintains that there was increased narcotics trafficking by
Colombian, Mexican, and other drug trafficking organizations through Panama. According to the
report, the increased trafficking and the presence of Colombian illegally armed groups in the
Darién region contributed to rising crime, violence, and gang presence throughout the country.
The country’s murder rate increased from 11.1 per 100,000 to 23.2 in 2009 according to the
INCSR.40 The report also maintains that the majority of money laundering in the country relates
to proceeds from drug trafficking (especially the sale in the United States and Europe of cocaine
produced in Colombia) or from the transshipment of smuggled, pirated, and counterfeit goods
through the CFZ.
Drug traffickers use fishing vessels, cargo ships, small aircraft, and go-fast boats to move illicit
drugs—primarily cocaine—through Panama. Some of the drugs are transferred to trucks for
northbound travel or are placed in sea-freight containers for transport on cargo vessels.
Traffickers also utilize hundreds of abandoned or unmonitored airstrips as well as couriers who
transit Panama by commercial air flights. There also has been increasing domestic drug abuse,
particularly among youth.
According to the 2010 INCSR, the Martinelli government “continued Panama’s history of strong
cooperation with the U.S. on counternarcotics operations.” In 2009, according to the report, the
government seized 54 metric tons of cocaine and over $11 million in cash linked to drug
trafficking.
U.S. support has included programs to improve Panama’s ability to intercept, investigate, and
prosecute illegal drug trafficking; strengthen Panama’s judicial system; improve Panama’s border
security; and promote stricter enforcement of existing laws. The United States also has provided
resources to modernize and maintain vessels and bases of the National Aero-Naval Service
(SENAN), the National Border Service (SENAFRONT), and the National Police (PNP); assisted
with training and maintenance for aircraft involved in interdiction efforts; provided training and
support for a multi-agency drug interdiction team at Tocumen Airport; trained a quick response
motorcycle team; and continued support for a PNP law enforcement modernization program to
develop police leadership and implement community-based policing procedures.
Looking ahead, the 2010 INCSR encourages Panama to devote more resources to the
modernization of its security services and to continue with reform efforts that improve public
sector accountability and transparency.

40 In addition, see: United Nations Development Programme, Human Development Report for Central America, 2009-
2010, Opening Spaces to Citizen Security and Human Development
, p. 12; and Louisa Reynolds, “Panama: Drug-
Fueled Violence on the Increase,” Noticen: Central American & Caribbean Affairs, January 28, 2010.
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Panama has made significant progress in strengthening its anti-money-laundering regime since
June 2000, when it was cited as a non-cooperative country in the fight against money laundering
by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), a multilateral anti-money-laundering body.
Subsequently, the government undertook a comprehensive effort to improve its anti-money-
laundering regime by enacting two laws and issuing two decrees in 2000. As a result of these
efforts, the FATF removed Panama from its non-cooperative country list in June 2001.
Nevertheless, the 2010 INCSR maintains that while Panama has a comprehensive legal
framework against money laundering and financial crimes, it lacks the investigative and judicial
infrastructure to prosecute cases. According to the report, Panama has not prosecuted a money
laundering case in recent years. The report maintained that Panama should increase its efforts to
detect, prevent, and combat money laundering and terrorist financing and pointed to the need for
better training and pay for law enforcement personnel and customs officials. It also called on the
government to devote more resources in order to combat bulk cash smuggling and trade-based
money laundering in the CFZ. As in the past, the report expressed concern about the issuance of
bearer shares, and maintained that the government should take steps to eliminate or immobilize
these financial instruments. Panama subsequently acted on the issue of bearer shares when on
February 1, 2011, President Martinelli signed into law bearer shares or “know your client”
legislation.41
Panama has received small amounts of regular U.S. bilateral counternarcotics assistance in recent
years. For example, Panama received almost $1 million in International Narcotics Control and
Law Enforcement (INCLE) assistance in FY2008 and $2.2 million in FY2009. In addition,
however, as noted above, Panama is receiving an estimated $11 million in FY2008/FY2009
assistance under the Mérida Initiative, and beginning in FY2010, Panama has been receiving
funding under the successor CARSI.
As noted above, the Martinelli government has moved to establish 11 air and naval anti-drug
bases in the country, six on the Pacific side of the country and five on the Caribbean side. The
first air-naval base was established in late November 2009 on Chapera Island off Panama’s
Pacific coast, and several more have been have been opened so far in 2010, including one in the
Darién region. U.S. officials maintain that the United States has no plans to establish U.S. bases
in Panama, while Panamanian officials maintain that U.S. support for Panama’s effort will consist
of providing some training and equipment.42
Tax Haven Status43
While there is no single accepted definition for a tax haven, the Organization for Economic Co-
Operation and Development (OECD) has stated four criteria can be used to identify tax haven
jurisdictions.44 The criteria are no or nominal taxes and three criteria related to transparency and
the exchange of information.

41 Information provided to CRS by the Department of State, February 15, 2011.
42 “Panamanian Minister Says Foreign Anti-Drugs Aid ‘Nothing Substantial,’” BBC Monitoring Americas, September
30, 2009; and “Panama’s Naval Air Stations Not Covert U.S. Military Bases – Minister,” BBC Monitoring Americas,
December 6, 2009.
43 Prepared by Donald J. Marples, Specialist in Public Finance, ext. 7-3739
44 A full discussion of the criteria can be viewed at
http://www.oecd.org/document/23/0,3343,en_2649_33745_30575447_1_1_1_1,00.html and a broader discussion of tax
(continued...)
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Whereas the OECD recognized that the determination of appropriate tax policy is a national
concern, the organization has stated that the areas of transparency and information exchange
require a multilateral solution. Following this belief, the OECD has an ongoing project, the
Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information for Tax Purposes (the Global
Forum), working to increase transparency and information exchange.45 In April 2002, Panama
committed itself to meet the OECD principles on transparency and information exchange, thus
averting a designation as a non-cooperative tax haven.
As of February 2011, Panama remained on the OECD’s so-called “gray list” as one of just six
remaining jurisdictions worldwide that have committed to the internationally agreed tax standard
to help prevent tax evasion, but that have not yet substantially implemented the standard.46 To
date, however, Panama has made significant progress in moving toward implementing that tax
standard. Since late 2009, it has negotiated agreements with 10 countries for the exchange of tax
information. These include double taxation agreements with nine countries,47 and most
significantly, a tax information exchange agreement (TIEA) with the United States signed in
November 2010. Jurisdictions that have signed at least 12 such agreements for the exchange of
tax information are considered by the OECD to have substantially implemented the tax standard
and are removed from the “gray list.” Panama has three additional double taxation agreements in
the works and their conclusion could lead to the country being removed from the “gray list.” It
should be noted, however, that even if Panama is removed from the OECD’s “gray list,” the
country would still be subject to Global Forum peer reviews of its legal and regulatory system for
the exchange of information for tax purposes.48
As noted below (see “Remaining FTA Issues”), Panama’s National Assembly approved “know
your client” legislation in early February 2011 requiring the identification of the owners of bearer
shares, an action set forth in the joint declaration to the U.S.-Panama TIEA, and is expected to
approve the TIEA itself by the end of April 2011. In the meantime, Panama does have a Mutual
Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT) with the United States, which covers the exchange of tax
information if the income is effectively tied to an illegal activity, such as unreported income from
drug trafficking.
It is not clear the extent to which Panama is used as a corporate tax haven. According to the most
recent IRS data, 159 U.S. corporations have subsidiaries in Panama. This accounts for less than
2% of all U.S. corporations. Focusing on larger corporations, 18 of the 100 largest publicly traded

(...continued)
havens can be found in CRS Report R40623, Tax Havens: International Tax Avoidance and Evasion, by Jane G.
Gravelle.
45 For background, see as CRS Report R40114, The OECD Initiative on Tax Havens, by James K. Jackson.
46 Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, “A Progress Report on the Jurisdictions Surveyed by the
OECD Global Forum in Implementing the Internationally Agreed Tax Standard,” February 18, 2011, up-to date list
available at: http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/50/0/43606256.pdf.
47 The nine countries are Mexico, Barbados, Portugal, Qatar, Luxemburg, Netherlands, Singapore, South Korea, and
Italy. Three additional double taxation agreements with France, Belgium, and Ireland are reportedly in the works.
Information provided to CRS by the Embassy of Panama, February 7, 2011.
48 In September 2010, the OECD published a phase 1 peer review report that highlighted significant problems with
Panama’s legal and regulatory framework for transparency and exchange of information for tax purposes as of May
2010. See: Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information for Tax Purposes, “Peer Review Report, Phase
1, Legal and Regulatory Framework: Panama,” September 2010.
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companies and 14 of the 100 largest federal contractors had subsidiaries in Panama.49 The
revenue cost of these subsidiaries to the United States is unknown.
Panama’s corporate tax is more similar to the United States’ than other possible tax havens. The
Panamanian corporate tax rate of 27.5% is at nearly the level of the top U.S. corporate tax rate of
35%.50 In comparison, other commonly cited tax havens, such as the Cayman Islands, do not levy
a tax on corporate income. As a result, the corporate tax rate is unlikely the motivating factor for
the location of U.S. subsidiaries in Panama.
Non-tax factors could provide motivation for U.S. corporations to have subsidiaries in Panama. In
the case of Panama, it, along with Liberia, is commonly used as a flag of convenience. Traditional
reasons for choosing a flag of convenience include protection from income taxes, wage scales,
and regulations. A specific example of the type of advantage flying a flag of convenience offers is
bypassing the 50% duty the United States government charges on repairs performed on
American-flagged ships in foreign ports. Other non-tax factors could also motivate U.S.
corporations to have subsidiaries in Panama.
Over the years, Panama’s lack of tax transparency and information exchange agreements could
have been factors in making the country a destination for tax evasion. In 2007 testimony before
the Senate Committee on Finance, several speakers commented that a lack of transparency and
strong bank secrecy laws were commonly found in tax evasion destinations.51 Other
commentators specifically identified Panama as being an ideal location for tax evasion
activities.52 However, Panama’s recent negotiation of tax sharing agreements with a number of
countries, including a TIEA with the United States in November 2010, and its recent passage of
“know your client” legislation could be factors that deter the country from being used as a
destination for tax evasion.
U.S. Trade Relations
Panama has largely a service-based economy, which historically has run a merchandise trade
deficit with the United States. In 2010, the United States ran a $5.7 billion trade surplus with
Panama, exporting almost $6.1 billion in goods and importing $379 million. Panama was the 36th-
largest U.S. export market in 2010. Panama’s major exports to the United States include fish and
seafood, gold, sugar, and fresh fruits. Major imports include oil, machinery and other capital
goods, consumer goods, and foodstuffs.53 The stock of U.S. foreign investment in Panama was
estimated at $7.8 billion in 2009, with over 60% concentrated in depository institutions and

49 U.S. Government Accountability Office, International Taxation: Large U.S. Corporations and Federal Contractors
with Subsidiaries in Jurisdictions Listed as Tax Haven or Financial Privacy Jurisdictions
, GAO-09-157, December 18,
2008.
50 In 2012 the Panamanian corporate income tax rates is scheduled to fall to 25%. In addition, companies in the energy,
telecommunication, financial, insurance, banking, and mining industries are currently taxes at a rate of 30%, falling to
27.5% in 2012, and 25% in 2014.
51 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Finance, Offshore Tax Evasion: Stashing Cash Overseas, 110th Cong., 1st
sess., May 3, 2007.
52 Martin A. Sullivan, "Ah, Panama," Tax Notes, June 25, 2007, p. 1246.
53 Department of Commerce statistics, as presented by Global Trade Atlas.
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holding companies. This almost equaled the combined U.S. foreign investment in the five other
Central American nations.54
With the exception of two years (1988-1989), when the United States was applying economic
sanctions on Panama under General Noriega’s rule, Panama has been a beneficiary of the U.S.
preferential import program known as the Caribbean Basin Initiative (CBI), begun in 1984. The
program was amended several times and made permanent in 1990. CBI benefits were expanded
in 2000 with the enactment of the Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act (CBTPA) (Title II, P.L.
106-200), which provided NAFTA-equivalent trade benefits, including tariff preferences for
textile and apparel goods, to certain CBI countries, including Panama. In May 2010, Congress
approved an extension of CBTPA benefits through September 2020 (P.L. 111-171). The program
continues in effect until then, or the date on which a free trade agreement enters into force
between the United States and a CBTPA beneficiary country.
Potential Free Trade Agreement
Panama and the United States began negotiations for a free trade agreement in April 2004. There
had been expectations that the negotiations would be completed in early 2005, but continued
contention over several issues and a lengthy hiatus prolonged the negotiations until December
2006. Issues included market access for agricultural products, considered sensitive by Panama;
procurement provisions for the Panama Canal Authority regarding expansion activities; and
sanitary control systems governing the entry of U.S. products and animals to the Panamanian
market. Negotiations were suspended for some time in 2006 until after Panama held its Canal
expansion referendum in October, but a 10th round led to the conclusion of negotiations on
December 19, 2006.
Under the proposed agreement, over 88% of U.S. exports of consumer and industrial goods
would become duty-free immediately, while remaining tariffs would be phased out over 10 years.
Over 50% of U.S. agricultural exports to Panama would become duty-free immediately, while
tariffs on most remaining farm products would be phased out within 15 years. In December 2006,
Panama and the United States also signed a bilateral agreement on sanitary and phytosanitary
measures in which Panama will recognize the equivalence of the U.S. food safety inspection to
those of Panama and will no longer require individual plant inspections. Under the FTA, U.S.
companies would be guaranteed a fair and transparent process to sell goods and services to
Panamanian government entities, including the Panama Canal Authority.55
When the negotiations were concluded, then-U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwab stated that
the agreement would be subject to additional discussions on labor, and that the Administration
would work with both sides of the aisle in Congress to ensure strong bipartisan support before
submitting it to Congress.56 On May 10, 2007, congressional leaders and the Bush Administration
announced a bipartisan trade deal whereby pending free trade agreements would include
enforceable key labor and environmental standards. This included an obligation to adopt and

54 U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, “U.S. Direct Investment Abroad Tables,” Survey of
Current Business
, September 2010, p. 71.
55 Office of the United States Trade Representative, “Free Trade with Panama, Brief Summary of the Agreement,”
December 19, 2006.
56 Rosella Brevetti, “Panama, United States Conclude Negotiations on Free Trade Pact,” but Labor Issues Remain,”
International Trade Daily, December 20, 2006.
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maintain in practice five basic internationally recognized labor principles: freedom of association;
recognition of the right to collective bargaining; elimination of forced or compulsory labor;
abolition of child labor; and elimination of discrimination in respect of employment and
occupation.
The United States and Panama ultimately signed the proposed FTA on June 28, 2007, with the
enforceable labor and environmental standards outlined in the bipartisan trade deal. Panama’s
National Assembly ratified the agreement on July 11, 2007, by a vote of 58 to 3, with one
abstention.
The U.S. Congress had been likely to consider implementing legislation for the agreement in the
fall of 2007, but the September 1, 2007, election of Pedro Miguel González of the ruling PRD to
head Panama’s legislature for one year delayed consideration of the FTA. González is wanted in
the United States for his alleged role in the murder of U.S. Army Sergeant Zak Hernández and the
attempted murder of U.S. Army Sergeant Ronald Marshall in June 1992. The State Department
issued a statement expressing deep disappointment about the election of González because of his
October 1992 indictment in the United States for the murder of Sergeant Hernández. Although
González was acquitted in Panama in 1997 for the Hernández murder, observers maintain that the
trial was marred by jury rigging and witness intimidation. González denies his involvement, and
his lawyer asserts that ballistic tests in the murder were inconclusive. While polls in Panama in
2007 showed that Panamanians believed that González should have stepped down, the case also
energized the populist anti-American wing of the ruling PRD.57 González did not seek a second
term as president of the National Assembly when his term expired on September 1, 2008, and
another PRD official, Raúl Rodríguez, was elected Assembly president. This essentially removed
the issue as an impediment to U.S. congressional consideration of the FTA.
Remaining FTA Issues
The Obama Administration has focused on working out final issues with Panama related to labor
rights and tax transparency.58
The United States has raised labor issues related to collective bargaining rights in Panama’s
export processing zones (EPZs) and the right to strike in companies less than two years old. In
January 2011, legislation was introduced in Panama’s National Assembly addressing both of these
issues.59 Another labor issue reportedly raised by the United States, according to some press
reports, relates to labor rights in a special economic zone in Panama’s Baru region in the western
province of Chiriquí; the law that had established the special zone made collective bargaining
discretionary for six years.60
In addition, as noted above (see “Human Rights Issues”), certain provisions of Panama’s labor
laws that restrict unions have been criticized by the ILO. These include a requirement that a
minimum of 40 people are needed to form a union. The Martinelli government has not agreed to
make changes to Panama’s labor code to reduce the number of members needed to start a union

57 Marc Lacey, “Fugitive from U.S. Justice Leads Panama’s Assembly,” New York Times, November 28, 2007.
58 “U.S. Presses on Panama, Colombia Deals,” Reuters News, May 5, 2009.
59 Information provided to CRS by the Department of State, February 15, 2011.
60 “U.S. Focused on Labor Laws for New Panama Economic Zone,” Inside U.S. Trade, February 17, 2011.
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from 40 to 20, reportedly because there is no support for such a change, even from Panama’s
labor sector.61
With regard to tax transparency issues, some Members of Congress had wanted to delay
consideration of the Panama FTA until the United States and Panama signed a tax information
exchange agreement (TIEA). This ultimately occurred on November 30, 2010, and led some
Members of Congress to maintain that the TIEA could pave the way for action on the FTA.
According to the Treasury Department, the agreement will provide the United States with access
to information it needs to enforce U.S. tax laws, including information related to bank accounts in
Panama. It will permit both countries to seek information from each other on all types of national
taxes in both civil and criminal matters for tax years beginning on or after November 30, 2007.62
In a joint declaration at the signing of the TIEA, both countries agreed that the agreement would
take effect as soon as practicable after Panama approves implementing legislation under its
domestic laws, expected before the end of 2011, to comply fully with the terms of the agreement.
As noted in the declaration, Panama maintained that it would enact legislation requiring the
identification of the owners of bearer shares, an issue that U.S. officials have raised with Panama
for a number of years.63 Such legislation on bearer shares, also referred to as “know your client”
legislation, was signed into law by President Martinelli on February 1, 2011.64 Panamanian Vice
President and Foreign Minister Juan Carlos Varela maintained during a mid-February 2011 visit
to Washington, DC, that he expected Panama’s National Assembly to approve the TIEA before
the end of April 2011.
In the 112th Congress, several measures have been introduced in support of the FTA with Panama.
S.Res. 20 (Johanns), introduced January 25, 2011, would express the sense of the Senate that the
United States should immediately approve FTAs with Panama, Colombia, and South Korea. S. 98
(Portman), introduced January 25, 2011, would, among other provisions, express the sense of
Congress that the President should submit the Panama, South Korea, and Colombia FTAs to
Congress and that Congress should approve those agreements. H.Res. 86 (Frelinghuysen),
introduced February 11, 2011, would express the sense of the House that the Panama, Colombia,
and South Korea FTAs should be implemented immediately.
On January 25, 2011, the House Ways and Means Committee held a hearing on the pending FTAs
with Colombia, Panama, and South Korea.65 On February 8, 2011, a Senate Foreign Relations
Committee minority staff report urged the Administration to invest the political capital needed to
secure approval of the Panama and Colombia FTAs.66

61 Information provided to CRS by the Department of State, February 15, 2011.
62 U.S. Department of the Treasury, Press Release, “U.S., Panama Sign New Tax Information Exchange Agreement,”
December 1, 2010. See the full text of the TIEA, available at: http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/tax-
policy/treaties/Documents/PanamaTIEA10.pdf
63 U.S.-Panama Tax Information Exchange Agreement, Joint Declaration, November 30, 2010, available at:
http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/tax-policy/treaties/Documents/PanamaTIEAnote.pdf
64 Information provided to CRS by the Department of State, February 15, 2011.
65 See the witness testimony from the hearing, available at:
http://waysandmeans.house.gov/Calendar/EventSingle.aspx?EventID=220430
66 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Losing Jobs and Alienating Friends: The Consequences of
Falling Behind on Free Trade with Colombia and Panama
, committee print, 112th Cong., 1st sess., February 8, 2011,
S. Prt. 112-?? (Washington: GPO, 2011), available at: http://lugar.senate.gov/issues/foreign/lac/FTA.pdf
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For details on the bilateral FTA, see CRS Report RL32540, The Proposed U.S.-Panama Free
Trade Agreement
, by J. F. Hornbeck.
Operation and Security of the Panama Canal
Historical Background and the Panama Canal Treaties
When Panama proclaimed its independence from Colombia in 1903, it concluded a treaty with
the United States for U.S. rights to build, administer, and defend a canal cutting across the
country and linking the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. (See Figure 1, Map of Panama, at the end of
this report.) The treaty gave the United States rights in the so-called Canal Zone (about 10 miles
wide and 50 miles long) “as if it were sovereign” and “in perpetuity.” Construction of the Canal
was completed in 1914. In the 1960s, growing resentment in Panama over the extent of U.S.
rights in the country led to pressure to negotiate a new treaty arrangement for the operation of the
Canal. Draft treaties were completed in 1967 but ultimately rejected by Panama in 1970.
New negotiations ultimately led to the September 1977 signing of the two Panama Canal Treaties
by President Jimmy Carter and Panamanian head of government General Omar Torrijos. Under
the Panama Canal Treaty, the United States was given primary responsibility for operating and
defending the Canal until December 31, 1999. (Subsequent U.S. implementing legislation
established the Panama Canal Commission to operate the Canal until the end of 1999.) Under the
Treaty on the Permanent Neutrality and Operation of the Panama Canal, or simply the Neutrality
Treaty, the two countries agreed to maintain a regime of neutrality, whereby the Canal would be
open to ships of all nations. The U.S. Senate gave its advice and consent to the Neutrality Treaty
on March 16, 1978, and to the Panama Canal Treaty on April 18, 1978, both by a vote of 68-32,
with various amendments, conditions, understandings, and reservations. Panama and the United
States exchanged instruments of ratification for the two treaties on June 16, 1978, and the two
treaties entered into force on October 1, 1979.
Some treaty critics have argued that Panama did not accept the amendments, conditions,
reservations, and understandings of the U.S. Senate, including the DeConcini condition to the
Neutrality Treaty. That condition states: “if the Canal is closed, or its operations are interfered
with, the United States of America and the Republic of Panama shall each independently have the
right to take such steps as each deems necessary, in accordance with its constitutional processes,
including the use of military force in the Republic of Panama, to reopen the Canal or restore the
operations of the Canal, as the case may be.” However, others argued that Panama, in fact, had
accepted all U.S. Senate amendments. The State Department asserted that Panama expressly
accepted all amendments, conditions, and understandings to the two treaties, including the
DeConcini condition. The United States and Panama signed the instruments of ratification for
both treaties, which incorporated all the Senate provisions. The two countries cooperated
throughout the years on matters related to the Canal and established five binational bodies to
handle these issues. Two of the bodies were set up to address defense affairs and conducted at
least 16 joint military exercises between 1979 and 1985 involving Panamanian and U.S. forces.
Canal Transition and Current Status
Over the years, U.S. officials consistently affirmed a commitment to follow through with the
Panama Canal Treaty and turn the Canal over to Panama at the end of 1999. That transition
occurred smoothly on December 31, 1999. The Panama Canal Treaty terminated on that date, and
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the Panama Canal Commission (PCC), the U.S. agency operating the Canal, was succeeded by
the Panama Canal Authority (ACP), a Panamanian government agency established in 1997.
Under the terms of the Neutrality Treaty, which has no termination date, Panama has had
responsibility for operating and defending the Canal since the end of 1999. As noted above, both
Panama and the United States, however, in exercising their responsibilities to maintain the regime
of neutrality (keeping the Canal secure and open to all nations on equal terms) independently
have the right to use military force to reopen the Canal or restore its operations. This is delineated
in the first condition of the Neutrality Treaty.
The secure operation of the Panama Canal remains a U.S. interest since the Canal is important for
U.S. ocean-borne trade. The Canal’s largest trade route in FY2010 for ocean-borne cargo was
between the east coast of the United States and Asia, which comprised almost 41% of total
Panama Canal long tons cargo traffic. The Canal’s second-largest trade route in FY2010 was
between the east coast of the United States and the west coast of South America, which
comprised almost 12% of total Panama Canal long tons cargo traffic. The United States provides
assistance to Panama to improve its ability to provide security for the Canal and to enhance port
and maritime security. U.S. officials have consistently expressed satisfaction that Panama is
running the Canal efficiently, and since 2003, the U.S. military has conducted exercises with
Panama and other countries to protect the Canal in case of attack.
Headed by Alberto Alemán Zubieta, the Panama Canal Authority has run the Canal for more than
10 years and has been lauded for increasing Canal safety and efficiency. In January 2006, the
Martín Torrijos government established a social investment fund backed by Panama Canal
revenues that invests in schools, hospitals, bridges, roads, and other social projects. The initiative,
according to the government, was designed to show Panamanians that the Canal is contributing to
economic development and improving the quality of life for Panamanians.67
Canal Expansion Project
In April 2006, the Panama Canal Authority presented to President Torrijos its recommendation to
build a third channel and new set of locks (one on the Atlantic and one on the Pacific) that would
double the capacity of the Canal and allow it to accommodate giant container cargo ships known
as post-Panamax ships. The project would also widen and deepen existing channels and elevate
Gatun Lake’s maximum operating level. The estimated cost of the seven-year project is $5.25
billion, to be self-financed by the ACP through graduated toll increases and external bridge
financing of about $2.3 billion that would be paid off in about 10 years. According to the ACP,
the overall objectives of the expansion project are to (1) achieve long-term sustainability and
growth for the Canal’s financial contributions to the Panamanian national treasury; (2) maintain
the Canal’s competitiveness; (3) increase the Canal’s capacity to capture the growing world
tonnage demand; and (4) make the Canal more productive, safe, and efficient.68
President Torrijos and his Cabinet approved the expansion project in June 2006, and the
Legislative Assembly overwhelmingly approved it in July 2006, with 72 out of 78 deputies voting
for the project. Pursuant to Panama’s Constitution (Article 319), the project had to be submitted

67 Rainbow Nelson, “Canal Cash to Pay for Social Development,” Lloyd’s List, January 18, 2006.
68 Autoridad del Canal de Panama (ACP), “Proposal for the Expansion of the Panama Canal, Third Set of Locks
Project,” April 24, 2006.
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to a national referendum. The Torrijos government chose to hold the referendum on October 22,
2006, close to the anniversary of October 23, 1977, the date when Panamanians approved the two
Panama Canal treaties in a national plebiscite by a two-to-one margin. The expansion project was
approved by 78% of the vote.
There had been some vocal opposition to the Canal expansion project. The organization known as
the Peasant Coordinator Against the Dams (CCCE, Coordinadora Campesina Contra los
Embalses
), consisting of agricultural, civil, and environmental organizations, asserted that the
expansion project would lead to flooding and would drive people from their homes. An umbrella
protest group known as the National Front for the Defense of Economic and Social Rights
(Frenadeso), which was formed in 2005 during protests against social security reforms, called for
a “no” vote.69 Former Presidents Jorge Illueca and Guillermo Endara, as well as former Panama
Canal administrator Fernando Manfredo, also opposed the expansion project, maintaining that the
price was too high and too much of a gamble. Critics feared that the total price tag could rise
considerably and expressed concern that toll increases could make alternative routes more
economically attractive.70
The ACP is moving ahead with the Canal expansion project. The Panamanian government
officially launched the project on September 3, 2007, with a ceremony led by former President
Jimmy Carter, whose Administration negotiated the Panama Canal Treaties. The project is
expected to be completed by 2014. In March 2009, three multinational consortiums placed bids
for the multi-billion dollar contract to build the new set of locks.71 The ACP announced in July
2009 that the consortium Grupo Unidos por el Canal (United for the Canal) led by Spanish
construction company Sacyr Vallehermoso was the winner of the contract after posting a bid of
$3.12 billion. The consortium also includes Italian, Belgian, and Panamanian companies, as well
as two U.S. companies—Montgomery Watson Harza and Tetra Tech—involved as design
subcontractors.72 In January 2010, the ACP awarded the fourth and final dry excavation contract
to a consortium made up of Spanish, Mexican, and Costa Rican companies. The excavation work
will create an access channel linking the new Pacific locks with the Gaillard Cut, which is the
narrowest stretch of the Canal.
Background on the 1989 U.S. Military Intervention
The December 20, 1989, U.S. military intervention in Panama, known as Operation Just Cause,
was the culmination of almost two and a half years of strong U.S. pressure, including economic
sanctions, against the de facto political rule of General Noriega, Panama’s military commander.
Political unrest had erupted in mid-1987 when a high-ranking Panamanian military official
alleged that Noriega was involved in murder, electoral fraud, and corruption, which prompted the
formation of an opposition coalition that challenged his rule. The regime nullified the results of
May 1989 national elections, which international observers maintain were won by the opposition
by a 3-1 margin. It also harassed U.S. citizens in Panama, including the killing of a U.S. Marine

69 “Torrijos Appeals for Approval of Canal Expansion,” Latinnews Daily, September 1, 2006.
70 “Panama: Torrijos Reveals Plans to Expand Canal,” Latinnews Daily, April 25, 2006; Chris Kraul and Ronald
D.White, “Panama is Preparing to Beef up the Canal,” Los Angeles Times, April 24, 2006; John Lyons, “Panama Takes
Step Toward Expanding the Canal,” Wall Street Journal, April 24, 2006.
71 "Panama: Groups Bid on Canal Expansion," Economist Intelligence Unit, Business Latin America, March 9, 2009.
72 “Unidos por El Canal Virtual winner of ACP contract,” Business News Americas, July 8, 2009; and “Panama Canal
Announces ‘Best Value’ Proposal for New Set of Locks Expansion Contract,” States News Service, July 9, 2009.
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lieutenant. President George H. W. Bush ultimately ordered U.S. forces into combat to safeguard
the lives of Americans in Panama, to defend democracy, to combat drug trafficking, and to protect
the operation of the Panama Canal.
In early January 1990, with the restoration of democracy and Noriega’s arrest to face trial in the
United States on drug charges, President Bush announced that the objectives of the U.S.
intervention had been achieved. In terms of casualties, 23 U.S. soldiers and three U.S. civilians
were killed, while on the Panamanian side, some 200 civilians and 300 Panamanian military were
killed. While Congress was not in session during the intervention, in general, Members were
strongly supportive of the action. In February 1990, the House overwhelmingly approved a
resolution, H.Con.Res. 262, stating the President acted appropriately to intervene in Panama after
substantial efforts to resolve the crisis by political, economic, and diplomatic means.
Status of Manuel Noriega
In the aftermath of the 1989 U.S. military intervention, General Manuel Noriega was arrested in
January 1990 and brought to the United States to stand trial on drug charges. After a seven-month
trial, Noriega was convicted on 8 out of 10 drug trafficking charges in U.S. federal court in
Miami in 1992, and sentenced to 40 years in prison. That sentence was subsequently reduced to
30 years, and then to 20 years. With time off for “good behavior,” Noriega was scheduled to be
released from jail on September 9, 2007, but remained in U.S. custody pending appeals of his
extradition to France. Noriega’s defense filed a final appeal with the Supreme Court in July 2009
on the grounds that Noriega was granted “prisoner of war” status under the Geneva Convention in
a 1992 U.S. court ruling and therefore was entitled to return to Panama. Noriega lost that appeal,
and was extradited to France on April 26, 2010. In France, Noriega faced a 10-year prison
sentence for his conviction in absentia in 1999 on money laundering charges. He was eligible for
a new trial upon his extradition to France and in July 2010 was again convicted of drug money
laundering and sentenced to seven years in prison.
When he was released from the United States, Noriega wanted to return to Panama in order to
appeal his convictions in absentia, including for two murders: the brutal killing of vocal critic
Hugo Spadafora in 1985; and the killing of Major Moisés Giroldi, the leader of a failed 1989
coup attempt. Panamanian courts sentenced Noriega to at least 60 years in prison, but the law
only allows him to serve a maximum sentence of 20 years, and according to some reports, 18
years of Noriega’s imprisonment in the United States could be subtracted from his sentence in
Panama.73 Nevertheless, there are additional outstanding cases against Noriega, including alleged
responsibility for the deaths of several members of the Panamanian Defense Forces involved in
the failed 1989 coup.74
Noriega’s attorneys argued that since Noriega had been recognized as a prisoner of war in the
U.S. courts, the United States should have repatriated him to his native Panama, insisting that this
complies with the Geneva Conventions. U.S. officials argued that France’s extradition should be

73 Kathia Martinez, “A Homecoming for Noriega after Miami Release? Many Hope Not,” Associated Press Newswires,
August 12, 2007.
74 “Torrijos on Edge over Noriega Release,” Latin American Regional Report, Caribbean and Central America, August
2007.
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honored because Panama by law does not extradite its nationals.75 Panama had filed an
extradition request for Noriega in 1991.
While Panamanian officials called for Noriega’s extradition to Panama, they did not oppose the
possibility of Noriega being extradited to France and stated that the government would respect the
decision of the U.S. courts on this matter. Some observers maintained that Panamanian officials
were reluctant to have Noriega return because of changes to Panama’s penal code that could
allow Noriega to serve little, if any, of his sentence.76 In response to Noriega’s extradition to
France, Panama’s Foreign Minister Juan Carlos Varela maintained that the Panamanian
government respected the United States’ sovereign decision, but that it would pursue legal and
diplomatic means to return Noriega to Panama to serve sentences handed down by Panamanian
courts.77
On January 12, 2011, Panama requested Noriega’s extradition from France for the 1989 killing of
Major Moisés Giroldi, the leader of a failed coup. According to Panama’s Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, Panama previously had requested Noriega’s extradition from France for the 1985 killing
of vocal critic Hugo Spadafora and is awaiting a response.78



75 Carmen Gentile, “Noriega Court Bid Called a Charade; Aims to Avoid Extradition,” Washington Times, August 14,
2007.
76 Marc Lacey, “An Ambivalent Panama Weights Noriega’s Debt and Threat,” New York Times, July 29, 2007.
77 “Panama’s Noriega Extradited to France,” LatinNews Daily, April 27, 2010.
78 República de Panamá, Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Comunicado de Prensa, “Extradición de Manuel Antonio
Noriega por el caso Giroldi,” January 12, 2011.
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Figure 1. Map of Panama

Source: Map Resources. Adapted by CRS.


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Appendix A. Links to U.S. Government Reports
Background Note, Panama
Date: September 16, 2010
Full Text: http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2030.htm
Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations FY2011, Annex: Regional
Perspectives (p. 745-749 of pdf)

Date: March 2010
Full Text: http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/137937.pdf
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices 2009, Panama
Date: March 11, 2010
Full Text: http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2009/wha/136121.htm
Country Reports on Terrorism 2009 (Western Hemisphere Overview)
Date: August 5, 2010
Full Text: http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2009/140888.htm
International Religious Freedom Report 2010, Panama
Date: November 17, 2010
Full Text: http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2010/148770.htm
International Narcotics Control Strategy Report 2010, Vol. I (Panama , pp. 506-509 of pdf)
Date: March 2010
Full Text: http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/138548.pdf
International Narcotics Control Strategy Report 2010, Vol. II (Panama, pp. 184-187 of pdf)
Date: March 2010
Full Text: http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/138451.pdf
Trafficking in Persons Report 2010 (Panama, pp. 265-266 of pdf link)
Date: June 14, 2010
Full Text: http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/142979.pdf

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Author Contact Information

Mark P. Sullivan

Specialist in Latin American Affairs
msullivan@crs.loc.gov, 7-7689


Acknowledgments
Donald J. Marples, Specialist in Public Finance (ext. 7-3739), authored the section on Panama’s “Tax
Haven Status.”

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