| THE NEW YORK TIMESNo Accord on Island Bombing
      as Administration and Puerto Rico Point Fingersby Elizabeth BeckerDecember 11, 1999Copyright © 1999 THE NEW YORK TIMES CO. All Rights Reserved.
 WASHINGTON, Dec. 10 -- Hopes for settling the dispute over
      bombing exercises on the island of Vieques appeared to dwindle
      today, as senior administration officials and the governor of
      Puerto Rico differed over whether they had actually agreed on
      the future of a bombing range there and, if so, what exactly
      they had agreed to. White House and Pentagon officials complained that the governor
      had reneged on a promise to endorse President Clinton's proposals,
      while the governor said the president had announced a plan that
      did not reflect the actual negotiations with Puerto Rican officials. Mr. Clinton's compromise plan, recommended by Defense Secretary
      William S. Cohen, rejected an earlier Navy recommendation to
      continue live-fire exercises on Vieques and accepted a Puerto
      Rican demand to halt the use of explosives. The plan also delayed several major decisions on the Navy's
      future role in Vieques while the Navy and the Puerto Rican governor
      discussed whether the military could resume exercises in March
      with ordnance containing no explosives. As part of the package, the Navy offered the island $40 million
      in economic revival money to show that it understands it must
      ''repair relations'' with the people of Vieques. But just hours after the deal was announced last week by senior
      military and civilian Navy Department officials, Gov. Pedro J.
      Rossello publicly rejected the offer. Stunned, the Pentagon has now postponed several aspects of
      the proposal and is discussing moves that could have a serious
      economic impact on Puerto Rico. ''The White House was surprised by the rejection,'' a senior
      administration official said. ''We had been led to believe that
      the governor would endorse this.'' Mr. Cohen said he had crafted the compromise with the Navy
      and Marines in recent weeks and was working under the assumption
      that the White House had negotiated an agreement with Governor
      Rossello. ''The White House told us they believed the governor would
      accept this,'' Mr. Cohen said in an interview. ''So, yes, I was
      surprised when the governor did not support the agreement.'' Through a spokesman, Governor Rossello said that Mr. Cohen
      misunderstood what had happened. ''It was the other way around,'' said Alfonso Aguilar, the
      governor's spokesman. ''The president's plan did not reflect
      what the governor had agreed to. We were surprised and disappointed.'' Only President Clinton and several of his senior aides spoke
      directly to Governor Rossello. Mr. Clinton stepped into the negotiations
      on Veteran's Day and spoke to the governor at least three times
      before the proposal was announced last week. Governor Rossello believed that the president had agreed that
      the plan would include legally binding commitments that the bombing
      on the island would end and the Navy would leave, his spokesman
      said. Several defense officials said today that they believed the
      confusion was the fault of politics. The Vieques issue has brought a rare unity among the people
      of Puerto Rico, who in turn have put it on the national political
      agenda. Hillary Rodham Clinton, who is running for senator from
      New York State, which has a large Puerto Rican population, has
      sided with Puerto Rico against the Navy. So has Vice President
      Al Gore, whose presidential campaign co-chairman in Puerto Rico
      is Governor Rossello. But the White House said it, too, was chagrined. ''None of us was thrilled about where we ended up on Friday,''
      the senior administration official said. Governor Rossello will negotiate only with the president and
      his senior aides in discussions on Vieques, and not with the
      Navy, his spokesman said today, adding that the governor expected
      the president to reconsider the plan. ''We are only dealing with the policy makers,'' Mr. Aguilar
      said. ''The Navy should understand its role in these things.
      The commander in chief is the policy maker, and the Navy takes
      orders from President Clinton.'' The Navy has postponed sending Rear Adm. Kevin Green to San
      Juan as the special representative for Vieques, even though the
      admiral's wife had already arrived there. And the senior administration official said today that without
      a ''very good sense of whether these talks will go forward in
      the next several weeks,'' the military would reconsider its entire
      relationship with Puerto Rico. The territory is also home to Roosevelt Roads, one of the
      Navy's largest bases and one of Puerto Rico's largest employers. At the same time, Pentagon officials, the White House and
      the governor said they wanted to continue looking for some way
      to bring the sides together to resume discussions. The negotiations are complicated by the presence of hundreds
      of demonstrators camping on the Vieques firing range who refuse
      to leave for fear that the Navy will return. The range has been
      closed since a civilian Puerto Rican guard was killed after Marine
      jets dropped bombs that unintentionally hit an observation tower
      last spring. That death galvanized Puerto Rican complaints against the
      Navy's use of the 900-acre range on Vieques. The small island
      has high unemployment; its residents have suffered health problems,
      including a high incidence of cancer, and the island's coral
      reef and wildlife have been threatened by the bombing. For his part, Mr. Cohen said last week's proposal was the
      best the Pentagon could offer. The loss of Vieques would mean
      the end of all coordinated live-fire exercises on the east coast
      for the Navy.
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