Pubdate: Sat, 26 May 2001 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Copyright: 2001 Detroit Free Press Contact: http://www.freep.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/125 Author: Frank Davies Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?172 (Peruvian Aircraft Shooting) CONGRESSMAN: FIRING AT MISSIONARY PLANE WAS UNPROFESSIONAL Hoekstra Reviews Tapes Of Peru's Deadly Attack WASHINGTON -- A congressman who reviewed video and audiotapes of the Peruvian downing of a missionary's plane with one of the survivors said Friday he was "very disturbed" by the chaos and lack of professionalism that marked the incident. "This wasn't even a close call. There was no reason to shoot down that plane," said Rep. Peter Hoekstra, R-Mich., who listened to the tapes this week with Jim Bowers, a Baptist missionary whose wife, Veronica (Roni) Bowers and infant daughter, Charity, were killed in the April 20 attack over Peru. Bowers is from Hoekstra's Michigan district. Hoekstra, like other conservatives in Congress, said he could not support the resumption of the U.S.-Peru program that was suspended after the shoot-down unless the final option -- firing on a plane suspected of being a drug flight -- is eliminated. "You're talking about machine-gun bullets going through a clearly marked civilian plane that was doing nothing out of the ordinary," Hoekstra said. "You'd expect they would go through a careful procedure, but that did not happen." U.S. and Peruvian officials have been investigating the accident, and their report will probably go to President George W. Bush and intelligence committees on Capitol Hill after next week's congressional recess. Whatever the findings, support for the so-called air bridge interdiction program, designed to deter, force down or even shoot down drug planes, has all but disappeared on Capitol Hill. Hoekstra and Bowers recently watched a 45-minute videotape taken from the U.S. plane, with a crew of CIA contract employees, that tipped off the Peruvians about a slow-moving Cessna pontoon plane might be a drug flight. He listened to the often overlapping conversations as a Peruvian jet gave chase and caught up with the Cessna, which carried Bowers and his family. The planes were not on the same frequency; Bowers said he never felt threatened; pilot Kevin Donaldson said he never saw or heard the Peruvian jet ordering him to land. Bowers, Hoekstra said, remembered "holding up his son to the window to show him the jet when it came alongside -- they felt no threat at all." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe