US Policy in Peru

The Opinion page article "The Wrong War in Peru," May 29, is an attempt at scare tactics by implying that the "Andean strategy" could be another Vietnam. For example, there was never a "skirmish" between Peruvian Air Force planes and a US C-130. The US aircraft was unarmed and merely sought to depart Peruvian territory when confronted by the Peruvians.

By law, the US Green Berets' military assistance training has been restricted to the Peruvian police. The deaths of four Americans during this training, while regrettable, represent a small number compared with the total killed in US cities every day by criminals. Should we give up on crime, too?

The sad truth is that the authors are right but for the wrong reasons and the wrong goals. The US should be helping Peru's military to enable it to defend Peru's governmental integrity against the Maoist Shining Path insurgency. For decades we ignored Peru because of its ties to the USSR. Now, with the USSR gone, the US has no excuse for not helping a democracy survive.

President Alberto Fujimori represents the best hope for Peru to rise up from the chaotic disaster of his predecessor, Alan Garcia. We have it in our power to guarantee democracy's success or failure in Peru by helping - not hindering - Mr. Fujimori. Blas Urquidez Jr., Springfield, Va. Fossil fuels not the only cause

I have read and reread the Opinion page article "Paying Off the Environmental Deficit," May 22.

The author's choice of words is, in some cases, somewhat misleading and his solutions not necessarily viable. Government regulations do not always yield the intended results. More often than not, the regulators simply do not understand the effects of their legislative efforts outside their narrow focus.

Surely the author has some solutions that will not lay our environmental problems solely at the door of fossil fuels. Casper W. Zublin, Bakersfield, Calif.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to US Policy in Peru
Read this article in
https://www.csmonitor.com/1992/0608/08202.html
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
https://www.csmonitor.com/subscribe