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- <text id=92TT2150>
- <title>
- Sep. 28, 1992: His Turn to Lose
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Sep. 28, 1992 The Economy
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PERU, Page 47
- His Turn to Lose
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The capture of Abimael Guzman has decapitated the Shining Path
- revolution, but the world's most brutal guerrilla group vows
- to continue its bloody campaign
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--With reporting by Laura Lopez and Sharon
- Stevenson/Lima and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Abimael Guzman was a successful revolutionary because he
- never flinched: he was willing to destroy Peru and as many
- innocent Peruvians as necessary to gain power. His Sendero Lumi
- noso, or Shining Path, movement, perhaps the most radical
- leftist insurgency still in operation anywhere in the world,
- sowed terror throughout the country during a 12-year campaign
- that took 25,000 lives, damaged $22 billion worth of property
- and left some Peruvians fearing that his "forces of history"
- might achieve victory. That is, until last week--when Guzman
- was captured by government forces in a bloodless raid on a
- modest house in one of Lima's middle-class neighborhoods.
- </p>
- <p> Even with Guzman behind bars, the war for control of the
- country is not over. But Peruvians savored the sudden feeling
- of relief--none more so than the autocratic Alberto Fujimori,
- who has turned his presidency into a virtual dictatorship,
- partly to quell the revolution. "Our fear was broken from one
- day to another," was how Isabel Coral, who works with victims
- of Shining Path violence, greeted the arrest. In their recent
- year long assault on Lima, the guerrillas had come close to
- terrorizing the populace into capitulation. Guzman's arrest not
- only halted that momentum but, more important, it gave the
- government's anti-guerrilla campaign a welcome boost. "In a
- struggle like this one, morale and will decide who wins," said
- U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs
- Bernard Aronson. "Perhaps this capture provides what Peru needs
- most: hope and confidence that it can prevail."
- </p>
- <p> Although the immediate credit goes to the painstaking work
- of DINCOTE, Peru's anti-terrorism squad, Fujimori will reap the
- biggest reward. He had promised to pacify the country by the
- time his term ends in 1995. But he lost international support in
- April, when he unilaterally dissolved Peru's Congress, shut down
- the courts and suspended the constitution--largely in the name
- of thwarting Shining Path. Frustrated Peruvians approved, but
- the U.S. was so angry that it suspended aid. Now, in the
- congressional elections that Fujimori has called for Nov. 22,
- candidates who back him are expected to win big, and they could
- help him enshrine strong presidential powers in a new
- constitution. The capture may also ensure his re-election. Warns
- Gustavo Gorriti, a Peruvian journalist and expert on Sendero who
- lives in the U.S. but was briefly detained in Peru after the
- Fujimori coup: "The fall of Guzman, the main enemy of democracy,
- is paradoxically going to do a lot of harm to democracy in the
- short term by strengthening Fujimori."
- </p>
- <p> A happy outcome for the President, however, depends in
- large measure on how much permanent damage has been inflicted
- on Shining Path. The loss of Guzman, worshiped with cultlike
- ardor by his followers, has certainly dealt the movement a
- psychological blow. "This has to hurt an organization that
- exists on the myth of its leader," said Enrique Obando, a
- specialist in security issues at the Peruvian Center for
- International Studies in Lima. There is a strong chance that
- Shining Path will try to spring its leader from jail to restore
- his and the insurgency's tarnished aura of invincibility. "They
- are going to move heaven and earth to get him out," predicts
- David Scott Palmer, director of the Latin American Studies
- program at Boston University, who has written extensively about
- Shining Path, "whether it's by trickery, massive force or
- intimidation--like killing the entire family of the key guard
- who oversees daily routine."
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, the government will have to take care
- not to kill Guzman by accident or intent. In the past, security
- forces have used tactics nearly as rough as Sendero's--torture, indiscriminate arrests, shootings and disappearances--in their efforts to sto
- months, Fujimori has suspended civil liberties, loosened
- restraints on the police and revamped the judicial system so
- that convictions are easier. To make a martyr out of Guzman
- would cost the government its new psychological edge. In the
- long run, says Aronson, "the government must fight Sendero with
- democratic legitimacy."
- </p>
- <p> Shining Path also lost considerable logistical strength
- when officials arrested five top lieutenants who were with
- Guzman. "It is a uniquely top-down authoritarian organization
- in its decision making and structure," says Aronson. "When you
- capture its senior leadership, that has to make a difference."
- Some experts expect a brutal battle within the movement to name
- a successor: there is no obvious candidate. The movement may
- also have been weakened by the defection of a faction that felt
- Guzman had abandoned true Maoism and put too much emphasis on
- terror rather than political action designed to win hearts and
- minds.
- </p>
- <p> To say Sendero has been broken, however, would be
- premature. Radical revolutionary movements in the Philippines,
- India, Iran and Colombia have collapsed after losing their
- leaders, but Shining Path seems too well entrenched for that,
- and its fighters are highly disciplined, dogged and patient. "I
- disagree with the conventional wisdom that if you lop off the
- head, the body will die," says Gordon McCormick, a national
- security analyst at the Rand Corp. who has written on Shining
- Path. "Sendero has been highly institutionalized and has the
- capacity for self-renewal."
- </p>
- <p> Support systems that operate legally--such as lawyers'
- and citizens-aid groups and regional committees with their
- well-disciplined cadres--are still intact. "I don't see them
- disappearing," says Gorriti. "They're too close to victory for
- that." Other analysts warn that the October offensive Guzman was
- plotting at the time of his capture may still take place;
- Shining Path operations are usually planned out in minute detail
- months in advance. "Don't think this is the end of the party,"
- Alfredo Crespo, Guzman's lawyer and a leader of the Democratic
- Lawyers Association, allegedly a Sendero front group, told TIME.
- "The revolution will continue--and probably get stronger."
- </p>
- <p> But whether Shining Path withers or grows strong again
- depends on how well the government performs. The conditions that
- gave rise to the insurgency back in the 1970s--poverty,
- injustice, deep resentment over racial and class distinctions--still prevail. Until Fujimori finds a more stable, equitable,
- democratic course, there will be impoverished Peruvians willing
- to subscribe to an alternative vision, no matter how ruthless
- or violent.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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