Pubdate: Wed, 25 Apr 2001 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2001, The Tribune Co. Contact: http://www.tampatrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/446 Section: Nation/World, page 1 Author: Sebastian Rotella of the Los Angeles Times SHOOTDOWNS IN PERU EXPECTED TO RESUME BUENOS AIRES, Argentina - Even Though A Missionary And Her Baby Died, The Drug-War Policy Apparently Is Too Effective To Give Up Antidrug warriors involved in a U.S.- Peruvian airborne interdiction effort that has slashed the South American nation's cocaine production had a warning for smugglers: "You fly, you die." That warlike motto governed the zone of low-intensity conflict into which a Cessna seaplane carrying American Baptist missionaries flew last week with disastrous results: A Peruvian air force jet assisted by a CIA surveillance plane shot down the Cessna, killing a mother and her infant daughter. In the aftermath, the shoot-down policy will be scrutinized by a team of investigators involving the CIA, National Transportation Safety Board, Drug Enforcement Administration and other U.S. agencies expected in the coming days in Lima, Peru's capital. The United States has suspended its aerial interdiction operations in Peru. "Smuggling flights are going to get through now, but that's the price you pay," said a former official with the U.S. Embassy in Lima. "It's critical they get the answer to why this happened and make sure it's never repeated. But I don't think they'll kill the shoot-down policy: It's a national-security question." Friday's shoot-down was the first time innocent victims were harmed in the 8-year-old program, according to U.S. officials. And former Embassy officials say the safeguards they built in contributed to a success story in the war on drugs in the Andes region. The numbers are impressive. Peru has reduced cultivation of the coca plant by about 70 percent since 1996. The drop resulted from eradication efforts on the ground combined with the aerial offensive- against smugglers who fly coca paste into Colombia, where it is refined into cocaine and smuggled to the United States. The joint effort'm Peru disrupted coca production, drove up coca prices and served as a general deterrent as exemplified by this underworld market indicator: In the early 1990s, smuggling pilots charged $30,000 per flight into the nation. After the air force interceptions began, the pilots' fee jumped to $180,000 - in advance. Success had its costs in Peru. President Alberto Fujimori drifted into authoritarianism in the 1990s, he retained U.S. support largely because of his antidrug performance. That weakened Peruvian institutions, leading inevitably to the crisis that toppled him, critics say. And the priorities of the drug war turned the U.S. national-security apparatus into a shadow that hovers over most important events in Peru, including Friday's shoot-down. The CIA has made a strong, specific case that its contract employees aboard the surveillance plane urge Peruvian officers to refrain from firing on the missionaries' plane, which U.S. radar operators had detected and identified as a suspicious aircraft. Still, the CIA's role reminds Peruvians of the agency's longtime influence here, according to critics. "A great deal of what happened in Peru in these years was resolved in negotiations with the U.S. Embassy and especially with the CIA" said Carlos Tapia, a Peruvian political analyst. The drug-interdiction proposal during the Fujimori administration, similar to a program adopted in Colombia, called for the United States to use its intelligence-gathering might, including aerial tracking radar and radio and telephone interception technology, to help Peru shoot down airborne smugglers. The take-no-prisoners approach appealed to Fujimori. The idea provoked internal debate in the U.S. government, however. Lawyers for the State and justice departments warned that "mistakes are likely to occur under any policy that contemplates the use of weapons against civil aircraft in flight," and "a shoot-down leading to the death of innocent persons would likely be a serious diplomatic embarrassment," according to declassified documents obtained by the National Security Archive, a private group in Washington. In total, Peru's air force has shot down, forced down or strafed more than 30 suspected smuggling planes and seized more than a dozen aircraft on the ground, according to U.S. Embassy officials. It is hard to confirm the assertion that all of those who died were involved in drug smuggling. Former U.S. Ambassador Dennis Jett and two other former U.S. Embassy officials interviewed by the Los Angeles Times said they did not know of any mistaken shoot-downs. In all the incidents of which one former embassy official was aware, authorities found evidence of trafficking - such as residue of coca paste or cash - in the wreckage. Meanwhile, skeptics question whether the interdiction program has been an unqualified success. Tapia said the failure to provide alternative sources of income has worsened the hardships of about 200,000 families who had depended on coca. "This policy will continue because the importance of the drug war for the United States is too powerful," he said. "But this has not brought well-being to the Peruvian people." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom