Pubdate: Sun, 29 Apr 2001
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Tim Weiner
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?172 (Peruvian Aircraft Shooting)

FRIENDLY FIRE

In Latin America, Foes Aren't the Only Danger

WHEN the fighter pilot's fire ripped through a plane carrying an 
American missionary family over Peru last week, the bullet holes 
opened up ironic points of light into American foreign policy in 
Latin America.

"Know your enemy and know yourself; in 100 battles you will never be 
in peril," Sun Tzu wrote in "The Art of War." In Latin America, 
though, it is its friends and allies that the United States does not 
seem to want to know too well. Today, particularly where the drug war 
rages, it finds itself, as it has so often in the past, in the 
awkward position of an arm's-length embrace.

The American drug warriors working hand-in-hand with the Peruvian Air 
Force pilot were there as part of a pact struck with Peru's disgraced 
and exiled former president, Alberto K. Fujimori. "It was a compact 
with Fujimori rather than with Peruvian society," said Robert E. 
White, a former United States ambassador in El Salvador and Paraguay. 
And Mr. White, who is now president of the Center for International 
Policy in Washington, said that such deals may be seen as something 
less than a bargain by the general populations south of the border: 
"We don't understand in this country how much Latin Americans look on 
drugs as our problem and not their problem."

The killing of a missionary and her baby in a plane that 
C.I.A.-employed spotters had first noticed on radar raised questions 
that go far beyond the drug war: What is America doing down there, 
and with whom? Who are its friends, and what happens when it 
befriends them?

Last year, the United States sent more than $1 billion in weapons, 
equipment and training to Latin American security forces, largely in 
the name of fighting drugs. It was more than all the economic and 
development assistance it provided to the region. A decade after the 
end of the cold war, Washington is working with every army in Latin 
America save Cuba's, and military officers, spies and their political 
cohorts are often its primary points of contact.

The Pentagon says democracy can grow out of this association: that 
working side-by-side will teach Latin American armies American 
values. "The sometimes overeager and trigger-happy officers of our 
partners in the drug wars" will learn discipline that way, as Michael 
Ledeen of the American Enterprise Institute wrote last week in The 
Wall Street Journal.

But the picture is larger than that. The Latin American military 
still serves and represents a ruling class far smaller and 
proportionately more powerful than the United States has seen since 
the days of the robber barons. The armies no longer run Latin 
America's governments directly, and they have rewritten their 
doctrines since the end of the cold war - no longer scorching the 
earth as they did in the days of dictatorships. But they have kept 
their mandate to preserve the power of elites who still wield immense 
influence even under the region's new civilian governments. And the 
United States values its own ties to those powerful people - 
businessmen, bankers, dynastic families and generals - as it pursues 
the varied aspects of its policy, particularly the drug war and 
free-trade pacts.

What the United States gets out of these alliances, in part, is a 
variety of stability, which is useful for oil companies seeking to 
pump Venezuela's crude, for clothing chains seeking cheap Central 
American labor and for Pentagon officers trying to enforce American 
drug policy. The argument for such stability is that it could allow 
prosperity to flourish, and prosperity could transform the region's 
politics. The problem, though, is when stability becomes stasis and 
it merely preserves the old economic and political order, in which 
prosperity has proved to be the most difficult thing to share.

Look back 40 years, to President John F. Kennedy's Alliance for 
Progress, the cold-war carrot that went with the stick of coups and 
counterinsurgency. The program helped build factories in El Salvador. 
They were run by the same people who ran the rural haciendas. They 
dealt with their workers as peons - same as ever - and the factories 
did little to lift the lives of the poor. This fed a cycle of 
rebellion and repression that burst out in the late 1970's and 
continued until 1992.

Twenty years ago, as that violence began, a New York Times reporter 
asked Jose Napoleon Duarte, the centrist leader of El Salvador's new 
ruling junta, why the guerrillas were in the hills. The answer was 
pithy: "Fifty years of lies, 50 years of injustice, 50 years of 
frustration. This is a history of people starving to death, living in 
misery. For 50 years the same people had all the power, all the 
money, all the jobs, all the education, all the opportunities." By 
and large, they still do.

The American left has had its own set of prisms, often idealizing 
guerrillas who were no more than bitter men with automatic weapons. 
Lori Berenson, the American activist imprisoned for life as a Marxist 
revolutionary in Peru by a hooded military judge in 1996, might 
possibly be a case in point: Miguel Rincon, a member of the Tupac 
Amaru Revolutionary Movement, testified at her retrial last week that 
she had no idea with whom she had become mixed up.

But over the years, military and political leaders in places like 
Guatemala, El Salvador, Panama and Peru developed a clearer sense of 
the rules. They learned that it paid well to appear to be a partner 
of the United States and a part of American foreign policy. Even 
better if, like General Manuel Noriega, Panama's dictator in the 
1980's, or Vladimiro Montesinos, Peru's spymaster in the 1990's, you 
were a close friend of the Central Intelligence Agency, providing 
inside information while nibbling the American embassy's canapes. And 
better still if you told the gringos what they wanted to hear, 
reinforcing their preconceptions, creating a closed loop of political 
analysis.

Such allies received "resources, prestige, legitimacy, and this 
appeal to the higher authority of the United States - higher than the 
fragmented and fractured politics of their own nations and existing 
institutions," said Marc Chernick, a professor of government and 
Latin American studies at Georgetown University. The payoff often 
included access to arms and gentle treatment when issues like 
corruption, torture and inequality arose.

Peru is a particularly pointed case. It strongly suggests that "we 
are working with untrustworthy rogue allies," said Coletta Youngers, 
a senior associate at the Washington Office on Latin America, which 
monitors human-rights issues in the region. "We are trying to impose 
a military and intelligence solution to a problem that in Latin 
America is fundamentally economic."

Mr. Fujimori, Peru's president from 1990 until he fled the country in 
November, had assumed a dictator's mantle. But as he brought 
inflation under control, attracted new foreign investment, crushed 
the Marxists and appeared to fight the cocaine trade, he won a 
measure of approval from Washington. Even after he appeared to steal 
a third election, the American ambassador in Lima, John Hamilton, 
attended his inauguration last July. His presence, a senior official 
of the Clinton administration told The Times, signaled "the reality" 
that Mr. Fujimori "is going to head the government of Peru at least 
for the foreseeable future, and we acknowledge that we have mutual, 
bilateral business to conduct."

Reality has shifted since then. Mr. Fujimori's government lasted less 
than four more months. It now appears clear that it was a mafia. Mr. 
Montesinos, the C.I.A.'s old interlocutor, fled into hiding after 
videotapes showed him as a corrupter of the highest rank. The 
commander of Peru's armed forces from 1992 to 2000, Gen. Nicolas 
Hermoza, now stands accused of working with drug smugglers and 
depositing $14.5 million in Swiss bank accounts. Other senior 
Peruvian officers stand accused of selling intelligence to drug 
traffickers to protect them from the shoot-first, ask-later air war - 
a key part of the bilateral business between Washington and Lima.

The C.I.A. contractors who man the spotter planes over the Andes were 
officially out of the chain of command that gave the order to fire on 
the plane carrying the American missionary, Roni Bowers, 35, and her 
seven-month-old daughter, Charity, who died. But the plane that fired 
was made and paid for in America. The pilot was American-trained. And 
even though some American officials argue that the pilot shouldn't 
have pulled the trigger without further checks on the airplane's 
identity, the intelligence that first put the missionaries in the 
crosshairs was American intelligence, gathered by American personnel, 
in furtherance of American foreign policy - which is an attempt to 
solve the problem of Americans' desire to smoke, snort and shoot 
cocaine.

Two more deaths will matter little to thousands of peasants growing 
coca leaves in the Andes because growing corn and beans does not pay 
them enough to survive. And in the end, they may matter little in a 
multibillion-dollar American policy, executed by American military 
and intelligence officers who rely on friends in Latin America for 
whom past American support has meant much - a little more immunity, a 
little more impunity and a lot more power.
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MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe