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- <text id=89TT0762>
- <title>
- Mar. 20, 1989: El Salvador:Revolt Under The Palms
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 20, 1989 Solving The Mysteries Of Heredity
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 38
- EL SALVADOR
- Revolt Under the Coconut Palms
- </hdr><body>
- <p>F.M.L.N. rebels prepare for their boldest assault since 1981
- </p>
- <p>By Ricardo Chavira
- </p>
- <p> El Salvador's Santa Ana volcano juts majestically over a
- verdant carpet of coffee bushes, coconut palms and banana
- trees, and the occasional clump of peasant shacks. Nine years
- of civil war have racked vast portions of the country, but Santa
- Ana and the rest of western El Salvador have hardly been
- touched.
- </p>
- <p> Now all that is changing.
- </p>
- <p> Hidden beneath the foliage, several hundred guerrillas of
- the People's Revolutionary Army (E.R.P.), the strongest of five
- factions that make up the 10,000-member Farabundo Marti
- National Liberation Front, have begun battling government forces
- for control of the economically vital region. "Cirilo," the
- western regional commander of the E.R.P., explains, "Our
- interest is to lead the people toward insurrection. They are
- already clandestinely organized, and now we are moving to arm
- them."
- </p>
- <p> Cirilo is with a group of some 30 heavily armed fighters
- camped on a coffee plantation just seven miles from Santa Ana's
- provincial capital, the site of a major army base. In recent
- months E.R.P. regulars and dozens of new peasant militias have
- attacked military outposts, ambushed patrols, and even briefly
- taken a town near the Guatemalan border.
- </p>
- <p> The guerrillas' bold entry into the region, together with
- a sudden surge in F.M.L.N. urban violence, is a graphic
- demonstration of what even the Bush Administration privately
- acknowledges is the F.M.L.N.'s improved military prowess.
- Despite the infusion of $3.4 billion in American aid over the
- past eight years, the Salvadoran government is not even close
- to winning the civil war. Troops killed most of the guerrilla
- leaders in the west eight years ago, forcing the F.M.L.N. out
- of the area. The rebels' return underscores their new strength
- and the army's inability to vanquish them permanently.
- </p>
- <p> The F.M.L.N.'s military aggressiveness contrasts sharply
- with the peaceful image the rebels have projected in recent
- weeks. F.M.L.N. leaders surprised American and Salvadoran
- officials in January with a dramatic offer to lay down their
- weapons and participate in national elections. In exchange, the
- rebels wanted the March presidential vote postponed for six
- months. That offer set off a flurry of counterproposals and
- talks between the F.M.L.N. and political-party representatives.
- State Department officials, who quietly met with a rebel
- spokesman to discuss the initiative, were so intrigued that they
- encouraged the Salvadoran government to negotiate with the
- guerrillas. For a time it seemed as though the rebel plan could
- provide a way out of the war.
- </p>
- <p> But like past attempts to bargain, the F.M.L.N. proposal
- fell victim to intransigence and political shortsightedness, as
- Salvador's civilian and military leaders squabbled over
- whether, how and when to include the guerrillas in the electoral
- process. There is little doubt now that the election will be
- held as scheduled -- March 19 -- without rebel participation.
- </p>
- <p> Stung by their diplomatic setback, the guerrillas are
- prepared to unleash what even Bush Administration officials
- believe will be their boldest military assault since the failed
- 1981 "final offensive." U.S. intelligence officials say the
- F.M.L.N., in preparation for the push, has recruited several
- hundred new fighters from among refugees in Honduran camps. The
- officials expect the offensive within weeks.
- </p>
- <p> The guerrillas sound determined to fight unless a newly
- elected government proves unexpectedly willing to reopen
- negotiations. Warns Cirilo: "We have a genuine desire for peace.
- But that should not be mistaken for weakness." Schafik Jorge
- Handal, head of the Salvadoran Communist Party and one of the
- F.M.L.N.'s top five comandantes, agrees. "If the military says
- no to our plan, then that indicates their intention of defeating
- us militarily," he says. "That would oblige us to respond, and
- the product would be a deepening of the war." Roberto, a veteran
- E.R.P. combatant is more direct: "If the elections are held
- March 19, our plan is to block them. This is a war to the finish
- between us and the oligarchs."
- </p>
- <p> Far to the east of Santa Ana, in Usulutan province, the
- E.R.P. has consolidated its hold on another mountainous
- corridor, populated by nearly 200,000 peasants. Three years ago,
- the insurgents there were under frequent military attack.
- Civilian support was minimal. Today government troops dare only
- sporadic attacks, and they are frequently beaten back by peasant
- militias fighting alongside regular combatants. "We have
- established political control over the area," says "Raul," the
- rebel commander, "and now we are moving toward military control
- as well." He and other guerrilla leaders have lately obtained
- AK-47 assault rifles. They say the guns were bought from the
- Nicaraguan contras; U.S. and Salvadoran authorities insist that
- the Sandinistas supplied them. "The fact that we have these
- weapons is an indication of our development," says Raul.
- </p>
- <p> Peasant support is crucial to the kind of rural-based war
- the F.M.L.N. is fighting. The impoverished farmers of Usulutan,
- for example, supply the rebels with food, information and labor.
- Says a civilian supporter in Santa Ana: "The moment a soldier
- asks you the whereabouts of the guerrillas, and you lie and say
- you don't know, from that moment you are collaborating with the
- guerrillas. And there are thousands of us like that."
- </p>
- <p> The coming guerrilla offensive seems likely to prove a
- pivotal test of the government's military strength. U.S.
- officials doubt that the F.M.L.N. can inflict a major defeat.
- But a senior State Department official adds, "However real or
- illusory the chances for peace, they are now gone. Now the only
- alternative for El Salvador is more war." That is the last thing
- battle-weary Salvadorans want.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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