Pubdate: Sun, 29 Apr 2001 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2001 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Anthony Faiola and Scott Wilson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?172 (Peruvian Aircraft Shooting) U.S. TOOK RISKS IN AIDING PERU'S ANTI-DRUG PATROLS Control, Standards Conceded LIMA, Peru, - Crisscrossing Peru's eastern jungle, U.S.-Peruvian air patrols for the last six years have attacked low-flying planes trying to smuggle coca paste to the cocaine production and distribution networks of Colombia's drug lords to the north. The cooperative missions have been hailed as the most successful tactic so far in America's war on drugs. But the mistaken downing of a small plane carrying American missionaries on April 20, which killed a woman and her infant daughter, has suddenly thrust into the limelight the flaws, pitfalls and risks that go along with such missions. In the life-or-death decisions being made here using information from U.S. radar and intelligence planes -- often transmitted across a language gap -- the United States has given up a significant amount of control over tactics and accountability. At the same time, it has forged an alliance with a military and government leadership long rife with corruption, sacrificing safeguards and legal standards it would be held to at home. The agreement that established U.S. cooperation with the Peruvian government was negotiated directly with Vladimiro Montesinos, former president Alberto Fujimori's intelligence chief who is now on the run from corruption and drug charges. U.S. officials repeatedly have uncovered evidence of Peruvian pilots and military officers conspiring with drug traffickers, forcing the United States to continually take steps to protect the operation's integrity. These problems, outlined in interviews with U.S. and Peruvian officials here and in Washington, were never seen as a reason to call off the joint patrols. Rather, they were taken as compromises that had to be made if the U.S. government was going to get something done in a region where other governments are in charge and adversaries play by the dangerous rules of Latin American drug smuggling. The Central Intelligence Agency, for instance, operates the Citation surveillance jets that flag suspicious planes for Peru's fighter jets. But U.S. officials have had virtually no involvement in on-site investigations of nearly 20 deaths resulting from the 38 incidents in which planes have been shot down or forced to land under Peru's policy of shooting drug planes out of the sky unless they surrender. What the United States knows about those killed on the basis of U.S.-supplied intelligence, it knows from the Peruvian government and military. The shooting down of the U.S. missionaries, which provoked outrage and concern in the United States, was widely and swiftly reported mainly because there were survivors backed by an active missionary organization in the United States to spread the word. But Peruvian officials say the United States has not been the weak partner it has sought to portray itself as since a U.S.-made Peruvian A-37B warplane killed the 35-year-old missionary, Veronica "Roni" Bowers, and her daughter, Charity, over the hamlet of Huanta along the Amazon River. U.S. officials here provide critical counsel to Peruvian military authorities right up to the moment when a senior Peruvian air force officer gives the order to fire, they say. "We have shared responsibility in the success and we should share responsibility in the problems," said Maj. Gen. Pedro Olazabal Arbulu, Peru's air force spokesman. "The U.S. has chosen to be our close partner in this operation, and they play an inseparable role. We are in this together." Tape-recorded conversations between the pilot of the Peruvian jet and the CIA surveillance plane, described by U.S. officials, suggest that CIA contractors aboard the surveillance plane tried unsuccessfully to call off the attack moments before firing began. Such last-minute guidance from U.S. officials has not been unusual during the countless patrols and about 50 specific interception missions flown since 1995, Peruvian military sources here say. Closing the 'Air Bridge' Since their inception as a way to discourage cultivation of coca paste in Peru and its export into Colombia, Peruvian patrols over what became known as the "air bridge" linking Peru and Colombia have fundamentally changed the U.S. drug war in the Andes. Confronted with the "you fly, you die" policy over Peru, Colombian traffickers began growing coca themselves. Cultivation here sank by 70 percent and ballooned in Colombia. The air-bridge patrols were the cornerstone of a U.S.-Peruvian anti-drug partnership. The cooperation dated back to the early 1980s but took on new urgency under Fujimori, who came into office in 1990. Within two years of taking over, he launched Latin America's most aggressive anti-drug campaign, defined largely by the threat to shoot down drug planes. At that time, smugglers' single-engine planes were coming in low, fast and often, swarming like hornets over the jade-colored Amazon jungle of northern Peru. Fujimori, encouraged by the United States, unleashed his military to attack clandestine airstrips, patrol transit routes and, most important, shoot down suspected traffickers. Applauding Fujimori, Washington began providing aerial intelligence and expanding the range of U.S.-funded ground radar stations in the Amazon. Those radar stations, built in 1991, were jointly staffed by Peruvian and U.S. military personnel. Between 1991 and 1994, intelligence was shared with the Peruvians, but only four joint Peruvian-U.S. missions were carried out -- none resulting in planes being shot down, U.S. officials say. Coordination problems, many of which resemble the series of mistakes that led to the April 20 accident, began almost immediately. In April 1992, the Peruvians scrambled jets to intercept an unidentified plane. The jets fired on what turned out to be a U.S. military transport that had strayed from its flight plan, killing one crew member and injuring two others. "We are not always informed about everything the U.S. was doing here," said one Peruvian military source who asked not to be named, "and their decision to maintain a level of secrecy has sometimes caused problems." In May 1994, cooperation was temporarily suspended after the State Department raised concerns about who would be held responsible if a civilian aircraft were downed with intelligence provided by the United States. Congress passed a law three months later authorizing the president to identify countries under extraordinary threat from drug trafficking. Those countries, including Peru and Colombia, as well as U.S. officials operating there, were indemnified from liability for air interdictions as long as they provided detailed and safe rules of engagement. With new rules of engagement in place -- including the addition of a Peruvian liaison on every U.S. surveillance flight -- the United States reached a new agreement with the Peruvians in 1995 that brought the two countries even closer in their war on drugs. Under the agreement, a U.S. Citation aircraft owned by the Defense Department and operated by CIA contractors would be used in joint missions with the Peruvian air force. The agreement, signed by then-Ambassador Alvin Adams and Foreign Minister Francisco Tudela, required both parties to cooperate in "the detection, eventual detention and interdiction of crafts, aircrafts and modes of transport" suspected of smuggling drugs, chemicals and other materials associated with the drug trade. The United States raised concerns in 1997 about the Peruvians' apparent eagerness to shoot down a private aircraft without following established safety procedures. Although the aircraft proved to be a drug plane, the CIA quickly launched an "intensive dialogue" with Peruvian officials out of fear that providing U.S. radar data could end in tragedy, according to a former State Department official who was posted in Peru at the time. "It raised a red flag, one that said we had to be really careful, even more careful than we were being," the source said. After that, U.S. officials required the Peruvians to read and sign statements that they had reviewed all procedures for interdiction operations, an intelligence official said. Training sessions were conducted twice a month for Peruvian pilots. In 1998, it was the Peruvians' turn to complain when a U.S. Citation flying alongside a Peruvian A-37B warplane during an interdiction mission accidentally veered toward the fighter and grazed it. "The U.S. pilot almost cost the lives of two Peruvian pilots," said an official with the Peruvian air force. "It caused us to redraft the rules. We began flying under, rather than beside, the U.S. jets." Contract pilots hired by the CIA to operate the intelligence flights here say their training is limited to simulations in which they are chasing bad guys, meaning they do not receive training for situations in which the target turns out not to be a drug plane. Additionally, language repeatedly emerged as a problem. A U.S. official who has listened to the tapes of the April 20 incident said: "The CIA guys' Spanish is not great. The [Peruvian liaison] speaks some English, a little better, but still not great. They didn't have trouble understanding each other early on. But the indication is that when the adrenaline started flowing, they stopped being able to clearly communicate." A Large U.S. Presence The United States was maintaining as many as 100 staff members on the ground as part of the joint mission by the middle of the decade, from the Central Intelligence Agency, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Pentagon and the Customs Service. Besides working in the camouflaged Amazon radar stations, they were posted at Peruvian military bases and the U.S. Office of Regional Affairs, a CIA-run umbrella headquartered inside the fortress-like U.S. Embassy in Lima and with officers posted behind high fences in the eastern town of Pucallpa, 300 miles northeast of the capital. The U.S. presence is immediately apparent at Pucallpa's new commercial airport. More than a dozen UH-1H Huey helicopters sit a few hundred yards from the terminal, part of the aid package given to the Peruvian National Police to assist them in uprooting Peruvian coca cultivations. An $8 million complex houses the offices of State Department, Pentagon and DEA employees, as well as a half dozen contract workers with Reston, Va.-based DynCorp Co., according to a U.S. official posted there. A new barracks for national police pilots being trained by U.S. officials and DynCorp employees is half built, an investment meant to bring scattered agencies and resources under one roof. Within the past two months, one of the CIA's two Citation surveillance planes kept here was called away to Colombia, which was receiving the bulk of U.S. aid and attention until the downing of the missionary aircraft. Colombia, which will receive more than 50 helicopters through the anti-drug Plan Colombia aid package, has a similar interception policy that last year resulted in the downing of one suspected drug aircraft and the forced landing of 23 others. In all, about 110 U.S. and Peruvian National Police officials work in Pucallpa at any given time, the U.S. official said. Among them are six of the 22 DynCorp employees in Peru, hired by the State Department to handle everything from aircraft maintenance to pilot training. DynCorp is the lead contractor for anti-drug work in Peru, Bolivia and Colombia, where in February several of its employees came under fire from leftist guerrillas during a rescue mission in the southern province of Caqueta. Pucallpa was chosen more than a decade ago for this "forward deployment" because of its central location. The 14 helicopters kept here have quick access to the Apurimac and Huallaga river valleys, where national police patrols trained by U.S. advisers are carrying out coca eradication efforts. The CIA surveillance planes, staffed separately from DynCorp by contractors from Seattle-based Aviation Development Corp., also have a short flight to their patrol zone along the Peruvian border with Brazil. Drug traffickers, according to U.S. advisers in Pucallpa, seek to keep their flying time over Peruvian territory to a minimum. Once called in from one of three nearby bases along the border with Brazil, it usually takes a Peruvian jet about 10 minutes to intercept the slow-moving drug planes. The buildup did not come without a price. According to U.S. and Peruvian sources, Montesinos used the agreement as a political weapon. He occasionally threatened to suspend the partnership when it appeared the U.S. government was putting too much pressure on Fujimori's authoritarian government. Since Montesinos went underground last year, authorities have seized millions of dollars in secret bank accounts. Prosecutors in Peru have charged that some of the cash was derived from protecting the drug trade. Peru's most notorious drug lord, Demetrio "El Vaticano" Chavez, testified at his 1996 trial that he paid Montesinos $50,000 a month to ensure that his shipments reached Colombia. Soon afterward, he retracted the statement. Six months ago, not long after Montesinos left the government, Chavez's brother was shot down in a suspected drug flight over eastern Peru. U.S. sources insist that if Montesinos worked with traffickers, he did so without their knowledge. Nevertheless, corruption plagued the program. The United States repeatedly discovered senior officers in league with drug traffickers and became suspicious of pilots who refused to fly missions on certain days. This led the United States to ask Peruvian officials to begin rotating the pilots flying interdiction missions. While such steps prevented pilots from gaining familiarity with procedures, they were viewed as necessary to root out corruption, U.S. sources said. "On a particular day, for instance, [a Peruvian] pilot would suddenly decide he didn't want to fly a mission," said the former State Department official with long experience in Peru. "It happens when you have that much money out there. We rotated the pilots with frequency. I don't know to what extent that contributed to their ability to follow the plans. But on the other hand, it was something that had to be done to deal with the corruption." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek