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- WORLD, Page 49World NotesEL SALVADORStrong Words, Deadly Deeds
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- Unprecedented as they were, the talks between El Salvador's
- rebels and its political parties, including the ultra-right
- ARENA, ended near Mexico City last week without a breakthrough.
- Yet in offering to lay down their arms and join "the political
- life of the country" in exchange for military reforms and a
- six-month delay in the presidential elections scheduled for
- March 19, the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN)
- clearly scored a coup. By advancing a negotiable proposal, the
- rebels managed to put the U.S.-backed Salvadoran government --
- and especially the army -- on the defensive.
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- The military and ARENA have both rejected the rebel offer,
- effectively eliminating it as a plausible alternative. But the
- FMLN initiative has fueled public expectations for peace.
- Washington responded with reserved praise for the meeting,
- which ended with an agreement that the government and the
- insurgents should begin peace talks immediately.
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- But the FMLN has not yet traded in its guns for campaign
- posters. The guerrillas attacked two major military bases and
- knocked out several main power lines last week, leaving 60% of
- the country without electricity. The message was pointed:
- Postpone the elections or prepare for an escalation of the war.
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