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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-23-08 10:42 PM
Original message
US troops to do humanitarian work in Peru where Shining Path rebels active
Edited on Fri May-23-08 10:52 PM by Judi Lynn
Source: Associated Press

US troops to do humanitarian work in Peru where Shining Path rebels active
VICTORIA BEKIEMPIS, Associated Press Writer



May 23, 2008 5:05 PM

LIMA, Peru (AP) - Three hundred U.S. troops will launch a humanitarian mission in a mountainous Peruvian region that is home to drug traffickers and resurgent violence by Shining Path rebels, the U.S. Embassy said Friday.

The soldiers will be building schools and medical outposts and digging wells from June 1 to the end of August in the Ayacucho region of southeastern Peru, Embassy spokesman Dan Martinez told The Associated Press.

Peru's opposition Nationalist Party protested the mission, dubbed New Horizons, calling it ''foreign interference.''

But Martinez said the mission aims to show ''the human face of the armed forces,'' and the troops also will conduct ''medical readiness'' exercises intended to prepare Peruvian military personnel for natural disasters.

The highland region where the soldiers will be operating is a hotbed of the drug trade, crisscrossed by paths that traffickers use to haul cocaine out of the Apurimac River Valley in backpacks and on mules. Peru is the world's second-largest cocaine producer after Colombia.



Read more: http://www.newspress.com/Top/Article/article.jsp?Section=WORLD&ID=565302912868548613









Ayacucho is west of Cuzco, about 300 km (??) from Bolivia, at the closest point.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-23-08 10:44 PM
Response to Original message
1. Looks as if Bush has decided to go after a base in Peru, doesn't it?
Edited on Fri May-23-08 10:48 PM by Judi Lynn
Peru was discussed after he learned Ecuador COMPLETELY doesn't want his people at Manta any more.

Maybe he'll decide to use the lines on the Plain of Nazca for landing strips. That surely would be within his range.
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lurky Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-23-08 11:53 PM
Response to Original message
2. Heavily armed "humanitarians".
I guess we can't call them "advisers" since they ruined that word in Vietnam.
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L. Coyote Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 12:30 AM
Response to Original message
3. I guess Peace Corps volunteers cannot do this? Why military?
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Divernan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 09:25 AM
Response to Reply #3
8. You know those military recruiting ads they show at the local cineplex?
The ones with the stirring patriotic music and where the politically/racially correct mix of young men and women are portrayed, each one of them in excellent physical shape (despite the lowered physical fitness standard), and performing complex, technical jobs - well now there can be a segment showing that if you join the Army, you'll be building schools and hospitals for poor Latin Americans. Great way for the Army to target recruiting the large pool of poor Hispanic kids.

I want to throw up when I see those bogus, fake film promotions, and compare the images to the realities experienced by US soldiers in Iraq/Afghanistan, and then later at the underfunded, understaffed, overcrowded VA hospitals.

I see US soldiers in domestic airports - they look to be about 12 years old - teenage men and women not even five ft. two inches tall! Some of them were also really, really overweight - not to diss overweight people, of whom I am one - but to tell you that these poor physical specimens would be hard put to move out of harm's way in the event of being attacked, let alone aggressively pursue any "enemies".
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killbotfactory Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 12:54 AM
Response to Original message
4. That doesn't sound suspicious at all.
I hope people don't start disappearing.
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liberaltrucker Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 01:12 AM
Response to Original message
5. Sendero Luminoso, Seimpre!
May the Shining Path prevail. The pigs got Senor Gutsman(sp), but
the struggle continues. My prayers for our children caught up in this.
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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 02:05 AM
Response to Reply #5
6. Concerning the Senderistas:
Edited on Sat May-24-08 02:06 AM by struggle4progress
... Shining Path singled out the poor, indigenous populations, whose interests it disingenuously claimed to have at heart. It forced farmers to slash production to subsistence levels and to destroy whatever modern farm equipment the campesinos possessed. In addition, Shining Path imposed puritanical regulations that outlawed fiestas and prohibited drinking as part of a strategy of strong-arming local populations into submission and self-abnegation. Any person believed to be sympathetic to the government or to even slightly disagree with Shining Path’s fundamental beliefs, was a candidate to be tortured and killed. Outlandishly, Shining Path then abandoned its professedly leftist ideology and began to identify leftists as candidates to be kidnapped, tortured and/or murdered.

Not surprisingly, Shining Path failed to capture the hearts and minds of the natives due to this extremely bizarre metamorphosis. With leftist and trade union officials being specifically targeted, more and more Peruvians learned to lean more heavily in favor of government efforts to bear down on Shining Path’s revolutionary operations. In the DESCO study, leftist assassinations carried out by Shining Path began to rise a few years after the revolution was triggered—peaking in 1988 and then slowly declining. In 1992, now under Fujimori, assassinations increased drastically, and then dropped after Guzman’s capture. During the Garcia era, leftist assassinations were targeted against two main groups when ideological factors gave way to more bare-boned battles between Shining Path and the government: Garcia’s American Popular Revolutionary Alliance (APRA) and the more radical United Left (IU). Shining Path’s tactic to force individuals into submission was a strategy calculated to eliminate the competition. Considering its goals of ousting foreign influence and rival organizations, it was Shining Path’s sudden and unpredictable strategy to turn against its own people as well as like-minded potential allies which foredoomed its end. In the ensuing struggle, large numbers of deaths occurred, helping to transform its revolution into a stark case of conflicting interests. The question of principle was increasingly not in play.

In 1992, the Alberto Fujimori administration staged a coup against itself which led to the dissolving of Congress and the dismantling of the country’s legal system. This cynical ploy enabled his administration and the military police to carry out large numbers of murders and kidnappings of those though to be enemies of the state without having an opposition party or legal capacity capable of challenging various illegal acts.

The various degrees of power under the administrations Belaúnde, Garcia and Fujimori worked to subvert law and order more than to uphold it. Under these governments, Lima’s security forces exponentially increased the murders of ordinary Peruvians, who were suspected of being part of the Shining Path. In addition to the unrestricted power of the government, the Fujimori administration did little to solve the country’s stressful economic situation. Research reports at the time found that 4.5 million people in Peru were living in extreme poverty (lack of sanitation, water, electricity, and gas). Fujimori then sought to enlarge the death squads that carried out orders to kidnap, torture and murder those suspected of being part of the Shining Path or known to harbor anti-Fujimori sentiments. For example, in 1997, the gruesome discovery of anti-Fujimori activist Mariella Barreto Fiofano’s body was found with her hands cut off and spine broken in half. This demonstrated how far the regime was prepared to go in order to suppress and silence those it saw as its foes ...

http://octavioislas.wordpress.com/2008/05/07/989-coha-report-the-rise-and-fall-of-shining-path-sendero-luminoso-peru/


Maybe you should consider reading the Truth & Reconciliation Commission's report:

... The .. internal armed conflict experienced by Peru between 1980 and 2000 constituted the most intense, extensive and prolonged episode of violence in the entire history of the Republic .... The TRC <(Truth & Reconciliation Commission)> estimates that the most probable figure for victims who died in the violence is 69,280 individuals. These figures are greater than the number of human losses suffered by Peru in all of the foreign and civil wars that have occurred in its 182 years of independence ... More than 40 percent of the deaths and disappearances reported to the TRC are concentrated in the Andean department of Ayacucho ... Of the total victims reported, 79 percent lived in rural areas and 56 percent were engaged in farming or livestock activities ... While the national census of 1993 indicates that only 40 percent of the national population had failed to attain secondary school education, the TRC has found that 68 percent of the victims were below this level ...

In the TRC’s view, based on the number of persons killed and disappeared, the PCP-SL <(Sendero Luminoso)> was the principal perpetrator of crimes and violations of human rights. It was responsible for 54 percent of victim deaths reported to the TRC. This high degree of responsibility on the part of the PCP-SL is an exceptional case among subversive groups in Latin America, and one of the most notable unique features of the process that the TRC has had to analyze ... Additionally, the PCP-SL engaged in massive assassinations of social leaders (both men and women), community leaders, traditional mayors, and leaders of peasant, union, neighborhood, educators’ and women’s organizations ...

In 1984, the Movimiento Revolucionario Túpac Amaru (MRTA) initiated its own armed struggle against the State. MRTA is responsible for 1.5 percent of the victim deaths that were reported to the TRC. Unlike Shining Path, and like other armed Latin American organizations with which it maintained ties, the MRTA claimed responsibility for its actions, its members used uniforms or other identifiers to differentiate themselves from the civilian population, it abstained from attacking the unarmed population and at some points showed signs of being open to peace negotiations. Nevertheless, MRTA also engaged in criminal acts; it resorted to assassinations, such as in the case of General Enrique López Albújar, the taking of hostages and the systematic practice of kidnapping, all crimes that violate not only personal liberty but the international humanitarian law that the MRTA claimed to respect ...

The TRC has confirmed that with the entrance of the armed forces into Ayacucho and the later introduction of the political-military commands (CPM) in areas with a declared state of emergency, the police were subordinated to the armed forces, subject to orders given by military commanders, over and above their own commands and civilian authorities. In this context, and as the military offensive advanced, agents from all three police institutions acting in the emergency areas took part in grave human rights violations ... The TRC affirms that at some places and moments in the conflict, the behavior of members of the armed forces not only involved some individual excesses by officers or soldiers, but also entailed generalized and/or systematic practices of human rights violations that constitute crimes against humanity as well as transgressions of the norms of International Humanitarian Law ...

http://www.cverdad.org.pe/ingles/ifinal/conclusiones.php
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BreweryYardRat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 03:34 PM
Response to Reply #6
22. Beat me to it.
And you were a lot politer to that fuckhead than I would have been.
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Spouting Horn Donating Member (310 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 09:35 AM
Response to Reply #5
9. Yeah, the "Shining path"
is such a liberal group!!

:eyes:
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atreides1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 10:21 AM
Response to Reply #9
10. About as Liberal
As the US Military!!!
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BreweryYardRat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 03:36 PM
Response to Reply #5
23. If someone hadn't already corrected you, I would have.
Do some research next time.

You are now gracing my ignore list for condoning and supporting a group of murderous bastards. Bye.
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bluerum Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 08:03 AM
Response to Original message
7. Send the military on humanitarian mssions. Ok. I'll buy that.
Edited on Sat May-24-08 08:03 AM by bluerum
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Pavulon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 10:34 AM
Response to Original message
11. Are we invited by Lima
if so why should anyone have a problem with engineers building stuff. LA is getting interesting these days.

I would love to be a fly on the wall in CIA.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 10:36 AM
Response to Reply #11
12. Would that be a step up? n/t
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 10:40 AM
Response to Original message
13. Suddenly the number of troops appears to be 1,000!
22 May, 2008 < 13:15 >
Arrival of over 1,000 U.S. marines to Peru sparks debate in congress

Living in Peru
Israel J. Ruiz

Peru's government has authorized for a group of U.S. marines to carry out a humanitarian aid project in Ayacucho, a region located in the south-central Andes of the country.

According to opposition parties, the Andean country's government has authorized for "at least 1,000 armed U.S. marines" to be on Peruvian soil from Friday May 23 to September 10.

"These personnel will be entering the country to carry out the Humanitarian and Civic Assistance Program called "New Horizons 2008" in Ayacucho," said Peruvian congressional representatives after approving the government's request.

With nationalist leaders stating that the United States was looking to set up a military base in Peru, it was reported that the approval of the U.S. mission was not easy.

More:
http://www.livinginperu.com/news-6513-peru-arrival-over-1-000-u-s-marines-peru-sparks-debate-congress
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Pavulon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 10:51 AM
Response to Reply #13
14. Any identification of the deployed units?
that would be very interesting.

1000 is a large number for CI work.

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 10:57 AM
Response to Reply #14
15. These are the only stories I can find at the moment. I'll post anything I find on it.
You're right. 1,000 is far larger than the original claim of 300.
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Pavulon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 11:04 AM
Response to Reply #15
16. As much as you post I assume you have access to Janes wire
I find they have incredible access to information. They are also very strict about reposting. While expensive depending on your occupation you can write it off.

You can also access some of it from most university systems.

They have information about current US (public) deployments and locations of units and their disclosed functions.

Determining if this is an NG unit or AD would be interesting.

They provide a massive amount of information that can be used to look at all this mess in context.

I find they are generally non political reporters of information.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 11:37 AM
Response to Original message
17. This small article is worded to make one think this could be Bush's bright idea:
Peruvian Congress Approves Measure to Allow US Soldiers into Coca Growing Region

The Peruvian Congress has approved a measure to allow US troops into a southern region of Peru where Shining Path rebels are still active, but stopped short of allowing the US to construct a military base there. Pamela Cueva has more from Lima.

The measure passed in the Peruvian Congress yesterday allows US soldiers to enter the coca-growing Ayacucho region as early as today. Their stated purpose is to carry out a joint humanitarian action called "New Horizons 2008". The plan is to bring in around a thousand US troops to assist the Peruvian military with the construction of hospitals, water wells, and to provide health services to the poor. The program will involve soldiers from the US and Peru and will last through September. Congress members who voted against the measure say there is no need to bring in military personnel to provide health services in the region. The Front in Defense of the People of Ayacucho - a civil society movement with a 40 year history - strongly opposes the so-called "New Horizons" program, saying the presence of foreign troops in the region could have a de-stabilizing effect, particularly among coca leaf growers already targeted by US-sponsored drug eradication programs.

http://www.fsrn.org/content/headlines-package-may-23,-2008/2216

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 11:40 AM
Response to Original message
18. Human Rights Watch takes a squint at history in Ayacucho:
Peru Confronts a Violent Past:
The Truth Commission Hearings in Ayacucho

From April 8 to 12, Peru's Truth and Reconciliation Commission held its first public hearings in the cities of Huamanga and Huanta, in the rural department of Ayacucho. Sebastian Brett of the Americas division of Human Rights Watch attended some of the hearings as an international observer. This is his report.

The Right to be Happy

Liz Rojas Valdez was barely a teenager when her mother Marcela, a school teacher and single parent, went out one afternoon to buy a sack of potatoes and never returned. Shining Path guerrillas had organized a strike in Huamanga that day and the town was without electricity, adding to the girl's anxiety when dusk fell and Marcela did not reappear. With her baby brother Paul in tow, Liz set off in the dark to search for her mother. A family friend told Liz that her mother had been arrested and taken to the headquarters of the investigations police, but the police denied holding her. Liz was unable to sleep that night.

After days of pleading for information, Liz was finally able to get an officer to speak to her secretly. He told her that Marcela had been taken to an army base for torture, and that she might have been raped, killed, and her body incinerated. Up to now, Liz has been unable to find out what really happened to her mother and to see those responsible for her mother's "disappearance" brought to justice. But she told the audience at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's April 8 hearing that she knew exactly who they were.

Liz last saw her mother on May 17, 1991, but the emotional impact of her account, the depth and precision of its detail, made the events seem much more immediate.

"I need to see my mother's bones so that I can bury her."

"It's been like a shadow over my life. There is not a single moment in which I can feel happy. I had my first child when I was fifteen. I was on my own and there was no one to help me. I need to see my mother's bones so that I can bury her. Everyone has somewhere to go to say farewell to their dead. I have a right to be happy, too," sobbed 23-year-old Liz, as long suppressed rage about her stolen childhood burst to the surface.

Several of the commissioners listening to Liz's story seemed to be concentrating hard to hold back the tears. It was a scene that was to repeat itself over and over during the next few days.

A Healing Process

Ayacucho was the birthplace of the Shining Path, a Maoist guerrilla force that brought terror to Peru's cities and countryside in the early 1980s. By the mid-1990s the worst of the war was over, but the human cost was enormous: at least 30,000 had perished at the hands of the insurgents and the government's security forces. Police and army units are believed responsible for more than 6,000 "disappearances," for notorious massacres of civilians, and for the systematic torture of thousands picked up as guerrilla suspects, often on the basis of rumor and hearsay. In 1995 President Alberto Fujimori passed an amnesty law intended to ensure permanent impunity for the military and police officials responsible for these abuses.

More:
http://www.hrw.org/americas/peru/
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High Plains Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 11:52 AM
Response to Original message
19. I was in this area a year ago. There are 40,000 coca farmers
...on the banks of the Rio Apurimac. Only 10,000 are registered with ENACO, the national coca monopoloy. That means 3/4 of the coca crop there is destined for the drug trade. Of course, none of the farmers knows anything about that.

I recall being in the town of San Francisco, right on the river. They have statues of coca leaves in their park.

The coca growers are well organized and win local elections. Their party symbol is the coca leaf.

They also kill cops who fuck with them. There were four cops killed just outside of San Francisco last year just before I got there. Lima tried to blame it on the Shining Path, but the local guys said those cops got killed because they had a habit of stealing stuff from the farmers.

The road from Ayacucho over the top of the Andes and down to the Apurimac is gravel. Very scary, very difficult. Makes it tough to grow crops like fruits, etc. Take a truckload of fruit over that road, and by the time you get to Ayacucho, you have a truckload of fruit jelly.

I saw the graves of dead Senderistas high up in the mountains, and the remnants of burned villages.

They played Peruvian movies on the bus to San Francisco. All about the Shining Path era. Very grim.

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 12:10 PM
Response to Reply #19
20. Had to go look for photos of the Apurimac River after reading your remarks.
My god. That's an impossible landscape!





It's so easy to see that even with an expensive investment, building a good, safe road could turn everything around. Think of how much money the government would save in cutting back drug law enforment if it became possible for the campesinos to be able to grow other crops and get them down the mountainside.
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conspirator Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-24-08 03:06 PM
Response to Original message
21. ANOTHER OCCUPATION!! This time it must be for biofuels n/t
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ohio2007 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun May-25-08 07:05 AM
Response to Original message
24. Peru excavates mass grave of villagers



Ayacucho was the epicenter of violence by Maoist Shining Path guerrillas as well as a brutal, state-sponsored counterinsurgency campaign in the 1980s and 1990s.

In 1984, according to a government-appointed truth commission, the military offered Putis as a safe haven for people fleeing Shining Path rebels in the region. Soldiers then tricked villagers into digging their own grave and killed them on suspicion of ties to the guerrillas.

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=102x3324622
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