Pubdate: Sat, 23 Mar 2002 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2002 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Karen DeYoung and Anthony Faiola, Washington Post Staff Writers Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?172 (Peruvian Aircraft Shooting) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism) BUSH, PERUVIAN TO FIGHT TERROR IN ANDES President Bush and President Alejandro Toledo of Peru pledged today to join together in what Toledo called "a war without quarter" against terrorism and drug trafficking in the Andean region. "We are partners not just through conviction," Toledo said at a news conference with Bush. "But we ourselves have experienced the effects of terrorism here for 20 years," including the explosion Wednesday of a 100-pound car bomb across from the U.S. Embassy that killed nine people and wounded 30. "We share a common perspective on terror," Bush said. "We must stop it." The two leaders met in Toledo's Colonial-style presidential palace on Lima's central square amid a massive security operation throughout the Peruvian capital. More than 7,000 police officers were deployed on city streets, many in full riot gear. No one has claimed responsibility for the bombing, although Peruvian officials have said they suspect a resurgent Shining Path guerrilla movement, thought to have largely disbanded after their leader was arrested in 1992. Already jittery U.S. and Peruvian security officials were put on even higher alert this morning after six small homemade explosives were tossed from a car and detonated on the roadside in a poor, eastern district of Lima far from anywhere Bush was scheduled to visit. Police also cracked down on a small anti-American demonstration in a central city square, using tear gas and arresting 18 people. Bush's one-day visit, the first to Peru by a sitting U.S. president, was designed to demonstrate the administration's strong interest in Latin America, particularly the Andean countries where the United States is funding major military and development aid programs to try to stop the production and export of cocaine and heroin to U.S. markets. The presidents of Colombia and Bolivia, and the vice president of Ecuador, also flew here to meet with Bush tonight following his bilateral talks with Toledo. There were high hopes in the region that Bush would arrive with a major trade deal, and would announce the renewal of a joint anti-narcotics aerial surveillance program suspended last year. But he had little to offer beyond a pat on the back for their democratic governments and a promise to keep working on those issues. Bush blamed the Senate for failing to vote on the Andean Trade Preferences Act, a 10-year agreement that expired in December. Although the House extended and expanded the trade pact several months ago, a handful of senators have objected to eliminating import duties on textile goods and other regional products. Regional governments have complained privately that the administration, distracted throughout the fall by the war against global terrorism, failed to push the agreement. The aerial surveillance program, jointly operated with the United States in Peru and Colombia, was shut down in April when the Peruvian air force shot down an aircraft carrying U.S. missionaries, killing a woman and her infant daughter. A CIA-piloted plane patrolling over northern Peru mistakenly targeted the plane as a drug flight. Investigations by the State Department and the Senate criticized the program as sloppily organized and supervised. Although an administration review was completed last summer, and the White House has repeatedly indicated it intended to reactivate the flights, it has not yet done so. Sources in Washington have said the administration was still trying to figure out how to respond to Senate demands that the CIA end its involvement in the program and that the program be taken over by the U.S. military or Customs Service. Administration officials have said there were no signs that clandestine drug flights have increased, and that reinstatement of the program was important to Toledo and Colombian President Andres Pastrana as an indication of U.S. support and trust. Toledo, who holds a master's degree and doctorate from Stanford University and is an internationally known economist, is Peru's first indigenous president. He was elected last year, replacing an interim government put in place after longtime President Alberto Fujimoro left the country in disgrace following revelations of corruption and allegations of human rights abuse. Fujimori's former security chief, Vladimiro Montesinos, was a close ally of the CIA. Montesinos is now jailed on corruption and human rights-related charges, and the Peruvian government has complained of U.S. unwillingness to declassify documents to help in his prosecution. Although Toledo planned to raise the issue with Bush today, neither mentioned it at their news conference. Toledo greeted Bush at a Peruvian air force base next to the international airport this afternoon with a full military honor guard, troop review and 21-gun salute. Bush sped through the streets of the Lima accompanied by scores of motorcycle policemen to a meeting with U.S. Embassy staff before heading to the presidential palace. He and Toledo, who have met twice before, walked into the building with their arms around each other. But while they announced several U.S. initiatives coming out of their talks - - the resumption of a U.S. Peace Corps program in Peru, the establishment of a teacher training program and a U.S. fellowship for Peruvian business leaders - it was little compared to the languishing trade pact that Toledo hopes will help diminish his country's double-digit unemployment rate. Terrorism, and the drug trafficking that the Bush administration has increasingly described as its close relative, were clearly the central topics of discussion. The importance of the issue was underlined both by the Wednesday bombing and an administration request to Congress last week to expand U.S. military aid and training in Colombia - now limited to anti-drug efforts - to that government's decades-long war against leftist guerrillas. Both the U.S. and Colombian governments have labeled the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, as terrorists. U.S. anti-drug assistance to Colombia over the last two years has totaled nearly $2 billion. A much smaller program in Peru, about $150 million in the current budget, is also limited to fighting drugs. But U.S. officials here said this week there was "no question" that Washington would offer immediate anti-terrorism assistance if it was determined that the Shining Path was responsible for the car bombing. Although no Americans were killed in the attack, agents from the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms are here helping with the investigation. Although some U.S. officials have suggested the FARC may have expanded its efforts beyond Colombia's borders and was involved in the bombing, Toledo said there was no evidence of FARC activity in Peru. But, he said, a number of Peruvian military units were deployed along the Colombian border last week. The status of the drug war throughout the region has been a major source of administration concern. Peru, a country of 24 million people, was long one of the top sources for the coca leaves used to make cocaine, largely harvested for shipment to Colombia for refining. Peruvian coca cultivation was slashed from 285,000 acres in 1995 to 84,000 acres in 2000 with large-scale U.S. assistance. At the same time, wide areas of coca growth were eliminated in Peru and Bolivia, although cultivation vastly increased in Colombia, where the FARC, along with a right-wing paramilitary army, has become deeply involved in its processing and export. Now, Peruvian officials have expressed concern that coca growing may be entering a new upswing. The Andean governments have argued, and the administration has agreed, that one of the best ways to stop cultivation of coca and opium poppies, the raw material of heroin, is to provide more jobs. At the same time, Bush said today, "the best thing America needs to do" to reduce drug exports from the Andean region is to "to reduce demand" for them at home and "persuade people to quit using them." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager