WAR Why is the US Military sending personnel to Peru?

Melodi

Disaster Cat
As a Latin-American history major, this article makes my hair stand on end! Mainly because I haven't seen it reported anywhere but on Zero Hedge, which means the Pentagon is keeping the story under wraps (or it sure looks like that). It seems that Rare Earth Metals may be about to become The New Petroleum, and the US has suddenly realized that China is about to corner the market. Not only in Asia but in the US "backyard." So the US (Administration Handlers) have decided to send several hundred US troops to Peru to help "police" the country for an unpopular central government with a population that has been on the verge of civil war for over a year. So, in a nutshell, the US is sending troops to help prop up a failing government that they believe will give US and Western corporations favorable deals on mining the "oil" that runs the 21st century (Rare Earth Metals) and keep China or Russia from moving in.

I thought, "If the US is planning Vietnam in the Andes, they better get out of Ukraine because they can't afford both." And presto! Some articles, even in places like Politico today, suggested that the US may seek a plan to withdraw or back off their favorite money-laundry mat. Or at least have a situation like North and South Korea where nothing is solved, but Russia keeps what it has taken over, and West Ukraine settles for the rest (for now).


I am posting this here instead of the Latin America Thread because it may take some time to play out. The fact that the Pentagon is trying to hide this and keep it out of the press is a very bad sign in the future. -Melodi

Why Are US Military Personnel Heading To Peru?

SATURDAY, MAY 27, 2023 - 04:20 AM
Authored by Nick Corbishley via NakedCapitalism.com,

The ostensible goal of the operation is to provide “support and assistance to the Special Operations of the Joint Command of the Armed Forces and National Police of Peru,” including in regions recently engulfed in violence.



Unbeknown, it seems, to most people in Peru and the US (considering the paucity of media coverage in both countries), US military personnel will soon be landing in Peru. The plenary session of Peru’s Congress last Thursday (May 18) authorised the entry of US troops onto Peruvian soil with the ostensible purpose of carrying out “cooperation activities” with Peru’s armed forces and national police. Passed with 70 votes in favour, 33 against and four abstentions, resolution 4766 stipulates that the troops are welcome to stay any time between June 1 and December 31, 2023.

The number of US soldiers involved has not been officially disclosed, at least as far as I can tell, though a recent statement by Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel Lopéz Obrador, who is currently person non grata in Peru, suggests it could be around 700. The cooperation and training activities will take place across a wide swathe of territory including Lima, Callao, Loreto, San Martín, Huánuco, Ucayali, Pasco, Junín, Huancavelica, Iquitos, Pucusana, Apurímac, Cusco and Ayacucho.

The last three regions, in the south of Peru, together with Arequipa and Puno, were the epicentre of huge political protests, strikes and road blocks from December to February after Peru’s elected President Pedro Castillo was toppled, imprisoned and replaced by his vice-president Dina Boluarte. The protesters’ demands included:

The release of Castillo

New elections

A national referendum on forming a Constitutional Assembly to replace Peru’s current constitution, which was imposed by former dictator Alberto Fujimori following his self-imposed coup of 1992

Brutal Crackdown on Protests
Needless to say, none of these demands have been met. Instead, Peru’s security forces, including 140,000 mobilised soldiers, unleashed a brutal crackdown that culminated in the deaths of approximately 70 people. A report released by international human rights organization Amnesty International in February drew the following assessment:

“Since the beginning of the massive protests in different areas of the country in December 2022, the Army and National Police of Peru (PNP) have unlawfully fired lethal weapons and used other less lethal weapons indiscriminately against the population, especially against Indigenous people and campesinos (rural farmworkers) during the repression of protests, constituting widespread attacks.”

As soon as possibly next week, an indeterminate number of US military personnel could be joining the fracas. According to the news website La Lupa, the purported goal of their visit is to provide “support and assistance to the Special Operations of the Joint Command of the Armed Forces and National Police of Peru” during two periods spanning a total of seven months: from June 1 to September 30, and from October 1 to December 30, 2023.

The secretary of the Commission for National Defence, Internal Order, Alternative Development and the Fight Against Drugs, Alfredo Azurín, was at pains to stress that there are no plans for the US to set up a military base in Peru and that the entry of US forces “will not affect national sovereignty.
” Some opposition congressmen and women begged to differ, arguing that the entry of foreign forces does indeed pose a threat to national sovereignty. They also lambasted the government for passing the resolution without prior debate or consultation with the indigenous communities.

The de facto Boluarte government and Congress are treating the arrival of US troops as a perfectly routine event. And it is true that the US military has long held a presence in Peru. For example, in 2017, U.S. personnel took part in military exercises held jointly with Colombia, Peru and Brazil in the “triple borderland” of the Amazon region. Also, the US Navy operates a biosafety-level 3 biomedical research laboratory close to Lima as well as two other (biosafety-level 2) laboratories in Puerto Maldonado.

But the timing of the operation raising serious questions. After all, Peru is currently under the control of an unelected government that is heavily supported by Washington but overwhelmingly rejected by the Peruvian people. The crackdown on protests in the south of the Peru by the country’s security forces — the same security forces that US military personnel will soon be joining — has led to dozens of deaths. Peru’s Congress is refusing to call new elections in total defiance of public opinion. Just a few days ago, the country’s Supreme Court issued a ruling that some legal scholars have interpreted as essentially criminalising political protest.

As Peru’s civilian institutions fight among themselves, Peru’s armed forces — the last remaining “backbone” in the country, according to Mexican geopolitical analyst Alfredo Jalife — has taken firm control. And lest we forget, Peru is home to some of the very same minerals that the US military has identified as strategically important to US national security interests, including lithium. Also, as I noted in my June 22, 2021 piece, Is Another Military Coup Brewing in Peru, After Historic Electoral Victory for Leftist Candidate?, while Peru’s largest trading partner is China, its political institutions — like those of Colombia and Chile — remain tethered to US policy interests:

Together with Chile, it’s the only country in South America that was invited to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which was later renamed the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership after Donald Trump withdrew US participation.

Given as much, the rumours of another coup in Peru should hardly come as a surprise. Nor should the Biden administration’s recent appointment of a CIA veteran as US ambassador to Peru, as recently reported by Vijay Prashad and José Carlos Llerena Robles:

Her name is Lisa Kenna, a former adviser to former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, a nine-year veteran at the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), and a US secretary of state official in Iraq. Just before the election, Ambassador Kenna released a video, in which she spoke of the close ties between the United States and Peru and of the need for a peaceful transition from one president to another.

It seems more than likely that Kenna played a direct role in the not-so-peaceful transition from President Castillo to de facto President Boluarte, having met with Peru’s then-Defence Minister Gustavo Bobbio Rosas on December 6, the day before Pedro Castillo was ousted, to tackle “issues of bilateral interest”.

On a Knife’s Edge
After decades of stumbling from crisis to crisis and government to government, Peru rests on a knife’s edge. When Castillo, a virtual nobody from an Andean backwater who had played an important role in the teachers’ strikes of 2017, rode to power on a crest of popular anger at Peru’s hyper-corrupt establishment parties in June 2021, Peru’s legions of poor and marginalised hoped that positive changes would follow. But it was not to be.

Castillo was always an outsider in Lima and was out of his depth from day one. He had zero control over Congress and failed miserably to overcome rabid right-wing opposition to his government. Even in his first year in office he faced two impeachment attempts. As Manolo De Los Santos wrote in People’s Dispatch, Peru’s largely Lima-based political and business elite could never accept that a former schoolteacher and farmer from the high Andean plains could become president.

On December 7, they finally got what they wanted: Castillo’s impeachment. Just hours before a third impeachment hearing, he declared on national television that he was dissolving Congress and launching an “exceptional emergency government” and the convening of a Constituent Assembly. It was a preemptive act of total desperation from a man who held no sway with the military or judiciary, had zero control over Congress, and had even lost the support of his own party. Hours later, he was impeached, arrested by his own security detail and taken to jail, where he remains to this day.

Castillo may be out of the picture but political instability continues to reign in Peru. The de facto Boluarte government and Congress are broadly despised by the Peruvian people.
According to the latest poll by the Institute of Peruvian Studies (IEP), 78% of Peruvians disapprove of Boluarte’s presidency while only 15% approve. Congress is even less popular, with a public disapproval rate of 91%. Forty-one percent believe that the protests will increase while 26% believe they will remain the same. In the meantime, Peru’s Congress continues to block general elections.

Peru’s “Strategic” Resources
As regular readers know, EU and US interest in Latin America is rising rapidly as the race for lithium, copper, cobalt and other elements essential for the so-called “clean” energy transition heats up. It is a race that China has been winning pretty handily up until now.

Peru is not only one of China’s biggest trade partners in Latin America; it is home to the only port in Latin America that is managed entirely by Chinese capital
. And while Peru may not form part of the Lithium Triangle (Bolivia, Argentina and Chile), it does boast significant deposits of the white metal. By one estimate, it is home to the sixth largest deposits of hard-rock lithium in the world. It is also the world’s second largest producer of copper, zinc and silver, three metals that are also expected to play a major role in supporting renewable energy technologies.

In other words, there is a huge amount at stake in how Peru evolves politically as well as the economic and geopolitical alliances it forms. Also, its direct neighbour to the north, Ecuador, is undergoing a major political crisis that is likely to spell the end of the US-aligned Guillermo Lasso government and a handover of power to Rafael Correa’s party and its allies.

And the US government and military have made no secret of their interest in the mineral deposits that countries like Peru hold in their subsoil. In an address to the Washington-based Atlantic Council on Jan 19, Gen. Laura Richardson, head of the U.S. Southern Command, spoke gushingly of Latin America’s rich deposits of “rare earth elements,” “the lithium triangle — Argentina, Bolivia, Chile,” the “largest oil reserves [and] light, sweet crude discovered off Guyana,” Venezuela’s “oil, copper, gold” and the fact that Latin America is home to “31% of the world’s fresh water in this region.”

She also detailed how Washington, together with US Southern Command, is actively negotiating the sale of lithium in the lithium triangle to US companies through its web of embassies, with the goal of “box[ing] out” US adversaries (i.e. China and Russia), concluding with the ominous words: “This region matters. It has a lot to do with national security. And we need to step up our game.”

Which begs the question: is this the first step of the US government and military’s stepping-up-the-game process?

The former president of Bolivia Evo Morales, who knows a thing or two about US interventions in the region, having been on the sharp end of a US-backed right-wing coup in 2019, certainly seems to think so. A few days ago, he tweeted the following message:

The Peruvian Congress’ authorisation for the entry and stationing of US troops for 7 months confirms that Peru is governed from Washington, under the tutelage of the Southern Command.

The Peruvian people are subject to powerful foreign interests mediated by illegitimate powers lacking popular representation.

The greatest challenge for working people and indigenous peoples is to recover their self-determination, their sovereignty and their natural resources.

With this authorization from the Peruvian right, we warn that the criminalization of protest and the occupation of US military forces will consolidate a repressive state that will affect sovereignty and regional peace in Latin America.

Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel Lopéz Obrador, who refuses to acknowledge Boluarte (whom he calls the “great usurper”) as Peru’s president and has recently faced threats of direct US military intervention in Mexico’s drug wars from US Republican lawmakers, had a message for the US government this week: “[Sending soldiers to Peru] merely maintains an interventionist policy that does not help at all in building fraternal bonds among the peoples of the American continent.”

Unfortunately, the US government does not seem interested, if indeed it ever has been, in building fraternal bonds with the peoples of the American continent. Instead, it is set on upgrading the Monroe Doctrine for the 21st century. Its strategic rivals this time around are not Western European nations, which are now little more than US vassals (as a recent paper by the European Council of Foreign Relations, titled “The Art of Vassalisation”, all but admitted), but rather China and Russia.

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Sacajawea

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Yeah, I saw this one. I was wondering just how thin our military can spread - Pacific, Ukraine, Middle East, Africa...

and the blurb about a US Navy Bio-Lab got my attention. Just how many of these are there? and where?
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I haven't been to Peru, but I have been to the Andes. The terrain is rugged and hostile. In Peru and Ecuador, there are areas in the Andes where the only way in and out is on ancient Incan foot trails with bridges built the same way they were 500 years ago during the Incan Empire. They use the same self-organized village collaborations and traditional vines and ropes building materials.

They know the area like the back of their hand and can scramble up and down mountain gorges and farm steep hillsides. Anti-government guerrilla fighters have lasted for decades in these areas without getting caught if the local people are protecting them (if they don't like the, well, the mountainside is steep, and so sad how often outsiders fall).

If the US decided to fight another Vietnam/Cambodia-style war in Peru, with the Chinese aiding Ecuador (as they did in North Viet Nam) I'd better hope they have a lot more high-attitude trained troops than I suspect they have already. It takes up to three GENERATIONS for the human body to adapt to the Andean altitudes well enough to live there. Something the Spanish Viceroys found to their regret, as they buried their wives in childbirth and were forced to put their administrative centers back in the lowlands.

And the jungles of both Peru and Ecuador are, well, jungles. Hot, difficult places with giant deadly spiders, vicious snakes, and unhappy locals, some of who are still reported to take the occasional head or two.

I hope the US backs down on this, I don't think they will, but the potential to get ugly is there.

Good as their potatoes are and their coca leaves, I think this is about Lithuem and the other metals the US can no longer source from China. But China has been making inroads into Latin America in a big way recently. And now, instead of trying to form an equal partnership with Peru. The US may be trying its old tactics of "Do what we say and let us take all the money and resources out of your country or we will invade you."

That won't end well, not this time.
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Interesting. JUST yesterday I was telling my boss how I got a new phone battery.

Which led to a brief conversation about his thoughts on needing a better way to manufacture batteries than with Lithium. In his opinion..

But maybe we ARE sending troops to Peru to source the Lithium?
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
4PDLXAS6RZSON66XNUWEHC2SGU.jpg


They're after the Nazi White Gold :lol:

Peruvian police seize 58kg of cocaine bearing pictures of Nazi flag​

 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Meh. The OP is a wordy nothing-burger. Without disclosing the number of troops involved it is all hyper speculation. When I was in, we had Special Forces in over 100 countries simultaneously.
Mongo, if it were not for the US history in Latin America, I would agree with you. But I'm afraid the US track record there is horrific. Much remains largely unknown to most US public because it is barely reported or quickly buried after things "calm down."

I am concerned that some of the neo-cons in Washington (both parties) will think this is still the 1920s or even the 1980s and think they can stomp into Peru, "pacify" the situation, install or shore up their puppet government and let the signing of corporate contracts and mining projects begin! They may even think grateful peasants will flock to their mines and factories for better pay and some people will. But many people won't be happy about it, even some of the workers.

The difference between now and the 1940s is a combination of seething rage below the surface on the part of many people in Latin America (and not all of them are "leftists" and the internet.

Sure, they can block signals, but the idea of Andean villages wedged into those mountains for thousands of years with drones and cell phones is rather terrifying. If things got hostile enough, think of US troops in the "Tutanburg" forest, only this time forests that are thousands of feet up in the air and need oxygen to breathe.

When I visited that original battlefield in Germany, I could also hear the voices of the Roman soldiers saying: "This can't be happening to us. We're ROMANS!" All it takes is one local Arminius, especially in those mountains. It is probably the same way in the Amazon though I have only been on the edges of it.
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
Melodi, I kind of have to agree with Mongo.

During the past 15 years or so, anyone hanging on the edges of the Merc establishment, or the SOF establishment, has known we have had both open as well as sheep-dipped Operators working South of the Border (SOTB). Granted, most of the work was against the Shining Path and other close groups, but they have been there for YEARS.

An incredible number of folks, basically the heart and soul of the Lightfighter BBS and the "successor" GetOffTheEX (GOTX) BBS. MANY of them were surprisingly open about their time SOTB.
(<G-D-R-> from the purists who will react negatively at the suggestion that James Yeager's (RIP) GOTX board was the "successor board".)
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Melodi, I kind of have to agree with Mongo.

During the past 15 years or so, anyone hanging on the edges of the Merc establishment, or the SOF establishment, has known we have had both open as well as sheep-dipped Operators working South of the Border (SOTB). Granted, most of the work was against the Shining Path and other close groups, but they have been there for YEARS.

An incredible number of folks, basically the heart and soul of the Lightfighter BBS and the "successor" GetOffTheEX (GOTX) BBS. MANY of them were surprisingly open about their time SOTB.
(<G-D-R-> from the purists who will react negatively at the suggestion that James Yeager's (RIP) GOTX board was the "successor board".)
I hope that you and Mongo are right. I will be delighted to be wrong on this one.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
I haven't been to Peru, but I have been to the Andes. The terrain is rugged and hostile. In Peru and Ecuador, there are areas in the Andes where the only way in and out is on ancient Incan foot trails with bridges built the same way they were 500 years ago during the Incan Empire. They use the same self-organized village collaborations and traditional vines and ropes building materials.

They know the area like the back of their hand and can scramble up and down mountain gorges and farm steep hillsides. Anti-government guerrilla fighters have lasted for decades in these areas without getting caught if the local people are protecting them (if they don't like the, well, the mountainside is steep, and so sad how often outsiders fall).

If the US decided to fight another Vietnam/Cambodia-style war in Peru, with the Chinese aiding Ecuador (as they did in North Viet Nam) I'd better hope they have a lot more high-attitude trained troops than I suspect they have already. It takes up to three GENERATIONS for the human body to adapt to the Andean altitudes well enough to live there. Something the Spanish Viceroys found to their regret, as they buried their wives in childbirth and were forced to put their administrative centers back in the lowlands.

And the jungles of both Peru and Ecuador are, well, jungles. Hot, difficult places with giant deadly spiders, vicious snakes, and unhappy locals, some of who are still reported to take the occasional head or two.

I hope the US backs down on this, I don't think they will, but the potential to get ugly is there.

Good as their potatoes are and their coca leaves, I think this is about Lithuem and the other metals the US can no longer source from China. But China has been making inroads into Latin America in a big way recently. And now, instead of trying to form an equal partnership with Peru. The US may be trying its old tactics of "Do what we say and let us take all the money and resources out of your country or we will invade you."

That won't end well, not this time.

and what if someone from within the Peruvian gov't asked us to step in, to keep the chinese out!!! Not every latin country likes china.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
and what if someone from within the Peruvian gov't asked us to step in, to keep the chinese out!!! Not every latin country likes china.
The problem is (at least partly) that 95 percent of the Peruvian People do not approve of their government, and nearly that many want a new election.

I am concerned that if the US intervenes, the current almost civil war will become hot. I will not write another long post on the problems in Peru, Ecuador, Uruguay, and other Andean countries where about 80 percent of the population are traditional Native Americans (or poor Mixticos - mixes) and 10 to 20 percent of the elites are mainly from the old Spanish families along with the occasional rock star, soccer player or real estate tycoon.

I've done that several times, especially in Ecuador; Peru is similar, only bigger. And has three main areas the Mountains, which are mostly Native American, and the Coast, where most of the elites live. And bits of the Southern Amazon jungle.
 

ron341

Contributing Member
Meh. The OP is a wordy nothing-burger. Without disclosing the number of troops involved it is all hyper speculation. When I was in, we had Special Forces in over 100 countries simultaneously.

Melodi, I kind of have to agree with Mongo.

During the past 15 years or so, anyone hanging on the edges of the Merc establishment, or the SOF establishment, has known we have had both open as well as sheep-dipped Operators working South of the Border (SOTB). Granted, most of the work was against the Shining Path and other close groups, but they have been there for YEARS.

An incredible number of folks, basically the heart and soul of the Lightfighter BBS and the "successor" GetOffTheEX (GOTX) BBS. MANY of them were surprisingly open about their time SOTB.
(<G-D-R-> from the purists who will react negatively at the suggestion that James Yeager's (RIP) GOTX board was the "successor board".)
In the late 90’s I spent 29 months at a remote location on the Ecuador/ Peru border area as a “ contractor “.
( M.O.M.E.P. ). The U.S. has done joint military exercises with Latin countries for decades. In my time there I saw other countries advise / observe military operations. Twice we had observers from the Chinese military. Funny thing was that they had Geologists as part of their teams . Go figure . As a final note: read Mongo’s post. He speaks from experience.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Oh, I totally respect Mongo's opinion, and as I said, I hope he's right. But I also know (and I can't say why) this is being taken very seriously in some quarters.

If it is just another joint exercise (and yeah, there are many of those in Latin America), then it is no biggie. It is the "helping out in a police action" bit that is worrying. That isn't the same thing as war-gaming an invasion of Peru by Brazil or something.
 

Sooth

Veteran Member
United Fruit, Smedley Butler. We have learned nothing.
Those in charge know that war is profitable. For them.
Lithium may be the excuse of the moment but there is always a 'good reason' for the USA to get involved. As long as those in charge don't have to get their hands dirty.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Summer is training season. Used to be we did MEDCAPs (medical civic action programs) down south. I was involved with SOMTC (special operations medical training center) and my best friend over there would scrounge up a planeload of expired drugs and medical supplies, round up whatever medics and students, beg and borrow a tail number or two, get it all hauled down and prepositioned and run free clinics for the local people and their livestock till it was time to go home. Our folks got hands on experience in the field and the locals got welcome help.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I was chatting with someone, not on the forum, and they said the issue MAY be that while rare Earth metals exist in both the US and Norway, extracting them is exceedingly toxic and complicated. It isn't likely that any Western nation will want these mines or processing factories in their backyards or that Western workers (US, Norway, etc.) would be willing to work this extremely hazardous job for anything less than an excellent salary. Not to mention that most North American and European safety standards would be hard (and costly) to meet for things that are that toxic.
This is probably why this was all being done in China in the first place.

Now sure, the US or multinational corporations might try to use illegal migrant workers or prisoners. But even those have issues that might make production problematic. The person wasn't sure this might be the reason, but it could be. It is also up in the air if this is just a routine joint exercise or something more serious.
 

Cacheman

Ultra MAGA!
Only other article I could find...


Now American Troops Are Going Into Peru. What in the hell?​


Michael

6–7 minutes





Why are we going into Peru now? The Corporations demand it… Why isn’t US media covering the coup in Peru? Biden installed a CIA veteran as ambassador and is now sending US troops to the nation. Coup, CIA, US troops?!? This is a huge story and yet nada in the MSM​

The money that is not invested in healthcare, water, and social services for the people is being used to send 700 American troops to Peru to guard the lithium deposits on behalf of the corporations that fight against your right to unionize.

The primary objective of this operation is to lend support and assistance to the Joint Command of the Armed Forces and National Police of Peru’s Special Operations, especially in regions recently plagued by violence.

Despite the relative lack of media coverage in both Peru and the United States, it has been confirmed that US military personnel will shortly be arriving in Peru. The Plenary Session of Peru’s Congress on May 18 authorized the entry of US troops onto Peruvian territory with the expressed intention of engaging in cooperation activities with Peru’s armed forces and national police. Resolution 4766, which was passed with 70 votes for, 33 votes against, and four abstentions, allows the troops to remain in the country any time between June 1 and December 31, 2023.

View: https://twitter.com/BenjaminNorton/status/1662512832192172032


The exact number of US soldiers involved in this operation remains undisclosed. However, a recent statement by Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel Lopéz Obrador, who is currently persona non grata in Peru, hints at a potential total of approximately 700 troops. The cooperation and training activities will span across various territories including Lima, Callao, Loreto, and numerous others. Notably, three regions in the south of Peru—Cusco, Ayacucho, and Apurímac—along with Arequipa and Puno, were the focal points of major political protests, strikes, and road blocks from December to February, following the removal, imprisonment, and replacement of Peru’s elected President Pedro Castillo by his Vice-President Dina Boluarte.

The protesters’ demands have yet to be met. They include the release of Castillo, new elections, and a national referendum on creating a Constitutional Assembly to replace Peru’s current constitution, which was instituted by former dictator Alberto Fujimori after his self-imposed coup of 1992. Instead, Peru’s security forces, including 140,000 mobilised soldiers, launched a forceful crackdown that resulted in an estimated 70 casualties. Amnesty International reported widespread unlawful use of lethal and less lethal weapons against the populace, particularly against indigenous people and rural farmworkers, during the repression of protests.

In the near future, an unspecified number of US military personnel could become involved. According to news outlet La Lupa, the stated aim of their deployment is to offer support and assistance to the Special Operations of the Joint Command of the Armed Forces and National Police of Peru during two periods totaling seven months: from June 1 to September 30, and from October 1 to December 30, 2023.

Alfredo Azurín, the secretary of the Commission for National Defence, Internal Order, Alternative Development and the Fight Against Drugs, has emphatically clarified that there are no plans for the US to establish a military base in Peru and that the entry of US forces will not undermine national sovereignty. Some opposition parliamentarians disagree, voicing concerns that the presence of foreign forces does indeed present a threat to national sovereignty. They also criticized the government for passing the resolution without prior debate or consultation with indigenous communities.

While the Boluarte administration and Congress treat the arrival of US troops as a standard occurrence, the timing of the operation raises significant questions. Peru is currently under the control of an unelected government that enjoys considerable support from Washington but is overwhelmingly rejected by the Peruvian people. The harsh response to protests in the south of Peru by the country’s security forces—forces that US military personnel will soon be working alongside—has led to numerous deaths. Peru’s Congress is defying public opinion by refusing to call new elections. Furthermore, the country’s Supreme Court recently issued a ruling that some legal scholars interpret as essentially criminalizing political protest.

As Peru’s civilian institutions engage in internal conflict, Peru’s armed forces, viewed as the country’s last remaining “backbone” by Mexican geopolitical analyst Alfredo Jalife, have taken firm control. It’s worth noting that Peru houses several minerals deemed strategically important to US national security interests, including lithium. Moreover, as highlighted in my June 22, 2021 article, while Peru’s largest trading partner is China, its political institutions remain closely aligned with US policy interests.

Given these circumstances, rumors of another coup in Peru should not be surprising. The recent appointment of CIA veteran Lisa Kenna as US ambassador to Peru adds another layer to the unfolding situation. There are suggestions that Kenna may have played a direct role in the transition from President Castillo to President Boluarte, due to her meeting with Peru’s then-Defence Minister Gustavo Bobbio Rosas on December 6, the day before Pedro Castillo was ousted, to discuss “issues of bilateral interest.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
From the CIA World Factbook:

Posted for fair use.......

Military - note

the Peruvian security forces continue to conduct operations against remnants of the Shining Path terrorist group (aka Sendero Luminoso; see Appendix T), particularly in the Apurimac, Ene, and Mantaro River Valleys (VRAEM) of eastern Peru; the military has several thousand troops in the VRAEM under a combined Special Command comprised of air, ground, naval, police, and special forces units (2023)

Maritime threats

the International Maritime Bureau reports the territorial waters of Peru are a risk for armed robbery against ships; in 2022, 12 attacks against commercial vessels were reported, a slight decrease over the 18 attacks in 2021; all of these occurred in the main port of Callao while ships were berthed or at anchor

Terrorism​

Terrorist group(s)

Shining Path (Sendero Luminoso)

note: details about the history, aims, leadership, organization, areas of operation, tactics, targets, weapons, size, and sources of support of the group(s) appear(s) in Appendix-T

Transnational Issues​

Disputes - international


Peru-Bolivia: Peru rejects Bolivia's claim to restore maritime access through a sovereign corridor through Chile along the Peruvian border
Peru-Brazil: none identified
Peru-Chile: Bolivia continues to press for a sovereign corridor to the Pacific Ocean; any concession Chile makes to Bolivia to grant them a sovereign corridor requires approval by Peru under the terms of their treaty; in January 2018, the International Court of Justice ruled that Chile is not legally obligated to negotiate a sovereign corridor to the Pacific Ocean with Bolivia
Peru-Chile-Ecuador: Chile and Ecuador rejected Peru's November 2005 unilateral legislation to shift the axis of their joint treaty-defined maritime boundaries along the parallels of latitude to equidistance lines out to 200 nautical miles, which would give Peru 37,900 square kilometers of water
Peru-Colombia: organized illegal narcotics operations in Colombia have penetrated Peru's shared border; problems also include cross border illegal migration, human trafficking, and contraband smuggling
Peru-Ecuador: in 1999, Tiwinza memorial park was created on lands that remains sovereign Peruvian territory, but Ecuador has the right to maintain and administer it in perpetuity

Refugees and internally displaced persons

refugees (country of origin): 1,286,434 (Venezuela) (economic and political crisis; includes Venezuelans who have claimed asylum, are recognized as refugees, or have received alternative legal stay) (2021)

IDPs: 60,000 (civil war from 1980-2000; most IDPs are indigenous peasants in Andean and Amazonian regions; as of 2011, no new information on the situation of these IDPs) (2021)

Illicit drugs

world’s second-largest producer of cocaine, with an estimated 88,200 hectares under coca cultivation in 2020; cocaine is trafficked throughout South America for shipment to Europe, East Asia, Mexico, and the United States; major importer of precursor chemicals for cocaine production
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
Peru is not only one of China’s biggest trade partners in Latin America; it is home to the only port in Latin America that is managed entirely by Chinese capital.
The US is now a "fiefdom" of China. Totally owned by the CCP and does the CCP's bidding.

Need arms? The US has got arms - and Joe Biden gets 10 percent.

Dobbin
 

Yogizorch

Has No Life - Lives on TB
George Bush also owns about 100,000 acres in Paraguay with a huge amount of clean fresh water in an aquifer. It also happens to be right next to an American airbase in case it needs protection. Nice investment. He bought it back in 2005-6.
We also have military stationed in almost every country in the world. People would really be surprised if they knew.
 

jed turtle

a brother in the Lord
The US is now a "fiefdom" of China. Totally owned by the CCP and does the CCP's bidding.

Need arms? The US has got arms - and Joe Biden gets 10 percent.

Dobbin
So then why is China having it’s DNC/CIA puppets embroil NATO in a war with Russia? And then appear to support Russia’s side of that war?

the only thing I can think of is to cripple both NATO and Russia simultaneously While it stands aside and continues to build its own forces and hegemony In the third world.
 

inskanoot

Veteran Member
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They're after the Nazi White Gold :lol:

Peruvian police seize 58kg of cocaine bearing pictures of Nazi flag​


WHAT’S UP DOWN IN PERU (PART ONE)? WELL, TRY NAZI ...​

Joseph P. Farrell
I suppose there is some sort of deep dramatic irony that today is Memorial day in the USA, and that I should be writing a blog about a very strange story coming out of Peru last week. Memorial day, for those outside the USSA, is the day traditionally set aside for people to honor the military and especially those who lost their lives defending the country. The irony for me is that while I have no doubt that my father, an uncle, and my two grandfathers did their time in the service in the two World Wars, and did so in good faith that they were indeed "defending freedom," the irony now is I rather suspect they would all be looking at the state of the country today, and wondering why they did.

One of the most distressing things to me, having written so many books that touch upon the end of World War Two, is that this country in particular stands guilty of having preserved elements of one of the most monstrous evils in human history, making dirty, off-the-books deals with post-war Nazis. That's not to say that the post-war victorious Allied powers didn't cut such deals. They all did, the United Kingdom, France, Canada, the Soviet Union, they all did. But no one did it with such industrial scale efficiency as did this country.

In my view, this deal meant that Nazism was allowed to survive, not just in enclaves in jungles, but as an international criminal and conspiratorial force and element deeply embedded and penetrating the postwar economies and politics of several countries. I have called that group the "Nazi International" or the "Fascist International." It is a kind of extra-territorial state, with its own very large (and very criminal) economy.

Every now and then it surfaces or reminds us that it's there. There are the obvious warnings and reminders, like the Davos set and their "leaders," the Hochklaus von Blohschwab Freiherr von Bomburst-und-Bloviation, Baal Gates, John "Let's-confiscate-the-farms" Ketchup Kerry, George "My Face is melting and I feel no remorse" Soros, Darth Hillary, and of course the current representative of the Dementiacracy in the Swamp, Bai Den Jo and his whole regime.

But sometimes the reminders are of an even more blatant nature, as the following article that many of you shared makes very clear:

50 bricks of cocaine bearing Nazi symbols seized in Peru

On the surface, there's not much to this story, and we can quote its entire length:

Fifty bricks of South American cocaine wrapped in Nazi symbols destined for Belgium were intercepted by law enforcement in Peru, authorities said.
Anti-narcotics officers discovered 58 kilograms of the packaged drugs with the Nazi swastika affixed to them, authorities said, according to AFT. Some of the packages had the word Hitler inscribed on the packed-in white powder.
A Liberian-flagged boat was allegedly transporting the drugs, authorities said.
The boat originally set sail from an Ecuadorian port city before it was searched in a Peruvian city close to the border of two countries, AFP reported.
One might be tempted to dismiss this as some South American drug cartel's idea of a very bad joke, and to think there is nothing more to the story, but I beg to differ, and herewith offer my high octane speculation of the day. As I've mentioned throughout many books on the topic of my hypothesized "Nazi International" (including a book by that title), this international group had deep roots in during and after the war in South America, and not just I but also drug traffic and drug cartel researcher Henrik Kruger (The Great Heroin Coup) have noted the deep symbiosis between the Latin American drug cartels and this post-war Nazi International, the latter often acting as "security" for the cartels, and even training their forces and conducting "wet operations" for them, and doubtless using their international corporate connections to move "cargo" of all types, and to launder money. To make my point clearer, I have long suspected that this relationship runs so deep that it is often very difficult to distinguish where one group leaves off and the other begins.

With that in mind, consider carefully what the article is saying: (1) Fifty bricks of cocaine, or about 58 kilograms of the stuff - a major shipment by any estimation and therefore worth much money - was (2) on its way to Belgium (3) on a ship flagged to Liberia (4) from an Ecuadorian port when (5) it was intercepted and seized in Peru by Peruvian police. So at a minimum we have a four-country participation: Ecuador, Belgium, Liberia, and Peru. And with Liberia and its historic connections to the post-Civil War USA, one may reasonably assume there is some sort of American connection.

But note two things we are not seeing here, two essential things completely missing from the article, and one may assume that they are missing because the New York Post was unable to ascertain these things, because the Peruvian authorities are not talking:

(1) what was the money chain involved? Who paid for all this cocaine? In what form was payment made? (Was it in a "gold"-backed crypto-currency, and need I remind people of the observation I made in my book Covert Wars and Breakaway Civilizations that "gold" can be a code for drugs?) And if payment was made in the form of cash or negotiable securities, through what accounts, banks, and brokerage houses did it flow (Panama Papers and Mossack Fonseca, anyone)? Was this money flow the basis of the interception of the drug shipment itself? All these questions are related to the second issue:

(2) Why and how were the drugs intercepted in Peru? What intelligence source was involved in the interception? Was it by tracking flows of money and/or securities through various flagged accounts, a capability that would imply some major power involvement? Or was it a tip from a human mole involved in creating, or moving, the shipment? The question is important, because in both cases it suggests there are some very heavy hitting "players" behind the scenes in this story, able to track such accounts and money flows, or capable of running deep penetrations and operatives in cartel organizations.

However, there's another high octane speculation and possibility, but unfortunately, we'll have to wait for part two of this Peruvian story on Wednesday. Until then, stay well, God bless, and...

...See you on the flip side...
 
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inskanoot

Veteran Member

Part 2

WHAT’S UP DOWN IN PERU (PART TWO)? WELL, TRY RARE EARTH ...​

Joseph P. Farrell
Lat Monday (Memorial Day) you'll recall I blogged about that strange shipment of cocaine from Peru that was seized by Peruvian police. The shipment, a whopping fifty bricks of the stuff and weighing about 58 kilos, was boldly emblazoned with Nazi swastikas. I suggested in Monday's blog that finding the post-war Nazi International involved in the post-war Latin American drug cartels is not surprising. Rather, for both groups, it's just business as usual, and to such a degree that it is difficult to distinguish where one group actually leaves off, and the other actually begins. I suggested, too, that there was a deeper story implied by the article, dealing with the intelligence source(s) and its, or their, nature leading to the interception of the drugs. Was it due simply to tracking flows of money and/or other financial payments for the drugs? Or was it from some human source inside of those criminal networks? Either way, the story implied very hidden and unmentioned major players.

However, I ended that blog with the suggestion that there was another possibility, and that that possibility would have to wait until today's blog to be mentioned, so herewith is question number (3): was the whole operation simply a false flag designed to project American military power into Peru on a permanent or semi-permanent basis?

The answer, according to the following article shared by M, would appear to be a tentative yes:

Why Are US Military Personnel Heading To Peru?

As the article notes, the Peruvian national assembly recently authorized the entry into that country of American military personnel for the purposes of "cooperation," and I am indeed suggesting that, at the intelligence level, that cooperation may already be in play, and that the interception of the Nazi cocaine shipment in that country may be an example of it:

Unbeknown, it seems, to most people in Peru and the US (considering the paucity of media coverage in both countries), US military personnel will soon be landing in Peru. The plenary session of Peru’s Congress last Thursday (May 18) authorised the entry of US troops onto Peruvian soil with the ostensible purpose of carrying out “cooperation activities” with Peru’s armed forces and national police. Passed with 70 votes in favour, 33 against and four abstentions, resolution 4766 stipulates that the troops are welcome to stay any time between June 1 and December 31, 2023.
The number of US soldiers involved has not been officially disclosed, at least as far as I can tell, though a recent statement by Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel Lopéz Obrador, who is currently person non grata in Peru, suggests it could be around 700. The cooperation and training activities will take place across a wide swathe of territory including Lima, Callao, Loreto, San Martín, Huánuco, Ucayali, Pasco, Junín, Huancavelica, Iquitos, Pucusana, Apurímac, Cusco and Ayacucho.
The last three regions, in the south of Peru, together with Arequipa and Puno, were the epicentre of huge political protests, strikes and road blocks from December to February after Peru’s elected President Pedro Castillo was toppled, imprisoned and replaced by his vice-president Dina Boluarte. The protesters’ demands included:
  • The release of Castillo
  • New elections
  • A national referendum on forming a Constitutional Assembly to replace Peru’s current constitution, which was imposed by former dictator Alberto Fujimori following his self-imposed coup of 1992
Notice that the political unrest might be a cover story for something deeper ("We need American troops to help quash the political turmoil"... where have we heard this before?). What's at stake in Peru is something else entirely:

As regular readers know, EU and US interest in Latin America is rising rapidly as the race for lithium, copper, cobalt and other elements essential for the so-called “clean” energy transition heats up. It is a race that China has been winning pretty handily up until now.
Peru is not only one of China’s biggest trade partners in Latin America; it is home to the only port in Latin America that is managed entirely by Chinese capital. And while Peru may not form part of the Lithium Triangle (Bolivia, Argentina and Chile), it does boast significant deposits of the white metal. By one estimate, it is home to the sixth largest deposits of hard-rock lithium in the world. It is also the world’s second largest producer of copper, zinc and silver, three metals that are also expected to play a major role in supporting renewable energy technologies.
In other words, there is a huge amount at stake in how Peru evolves politically as well as the economic and geopolitical alliances it forms. Also, its direct neighbour to the north, Ecuador, is undergoing a major political crisis that is likely to spell the end of the US-aligned Guillermo Lasso government and a handover of power to Rafael Correa’s party and its allies.
And the US government and military have made no secret of their interest in the mineral deposits that countries like Peru hold in their subsoil. In an address to the Washington-based Atlantic Council on Jan 19, Gen. Laura Richardson, head of the U.S. Southern Command, spoke gushingly of Latin America’s rich deposits of “rare earth elements,” “the lithium triangle — Argentina, Bolivia, Chile,” the “largest oil reserves [and] light, sweet crude discovered off Guyana,” Venezuela’s “oil, copper, gold” and the fact that Latin America is home to “31% of the world’s fresh water in this region.”
She also detailed how Washington, together with US Southern Command, is actively negotiating the sale of lithium in the lithium triangle to US companies through its web of embassies, with the goal of “box[ing] out” US adversaries (i.e. China and Russia), concluding with the ominous words: “This region matters. It has a lot to do with national security. And we need to step up our game.”
Which begs the question: is this the first step of the US government and military’s stepping-up-the-game process?
It's that "Stepping up the game" that brings me back to that high octane speculation that the Nazi cocaine interception may be part of some sort of elaborate false flag scenario designed to project American power into that country. As noted in the article, the Castillo government of Peru was not popular with the very right wing elements of that country. Given the influence of Chinese money in running a major Peruvian port, and given the nature of Peruvian politics, the drug cartels, and so on, one has to wonder if we are in fact looking at a ploy, the injection of American power into a country as a means of policing and controlling the international drug trade, when in fact, the drugs (and the Nazi flags) were provided as a means to project power to stabilize the country, seize their rare earth resources, and keep that post-war Nazi international and its drug trade running smoothly. If that's the case, a mere fifty bricks of cocaine was worth the investment.

The article itself strongly suggests that "drug wars" is merely the pretext for that projection of power:

The former president of Bolivia Evo Morales, who knows a thing or two about US interventions in the region, having been on the sharp end of a US-backed right-wing coup in 2019, certainly seems to think so. A few days ago, he tweeted the following message:
The Peruvian Congress’ authorisation for the entry and stationing of US troops for 7 months confirms that Peru is governed from Washington, under the tutelage of the Southern Command.
The Peruvian people are subject to powerful foreign interests mediated by illegitimate powers lacking popular representation.
The greatest challenge for working people and indigenous peoples is to recover their self-determination, their sovereignty and their natural resources.
With this authorization from the Peruvian right, we warn that the criminalization of protest and the occupation of US military forces will consolidate a repressive state that will affect sovereignty and regional peace in Latin America.
Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel Lopéz Obrador, who refuses to acknowledge Boluarte (whom he calls the “great usurper”) as Peru’s president and has recently faced threats of direct US military intervention in Mexico’s drug wars from US Republican lawmakers, had a message for the US government this week: “[Sending soldiers to Peru] merely maintains an interventionist policy that does not help at all in building fraternal bonds among the peoples of the American continent.” (emphasis added)
That drug trade is more threatened by Chinese and/or Russian involvement in Latin America, than by American military presence. The American military presence, as Vietnam showed, was more to guarantee the continued flow of drugs, not its interruption. And if that trade can be continued, and additionally, rare earth resources secured, then the false flag scenario is looking more and more likely.

See you on the flip side...
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I admit to being the mysterious "M" who sent Joseph the article. I love what he did with it, he had ideas I hadn't even thought of. But that's one reason I'm a member of his forum too.
 
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