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Peru’s Complex Security Challenges and the Government Response

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From September 13 through 21, 2025, the author traveled to Lima, Peru for an event bring them together faculty from the US Army War College and it’s alumni from Peru and across the region. There, he spoke to a wide range of Peruvian security experts about the country’s challenges and the response of its government and security forces.  This work relays the insights from those conversations.

Peru is currently beset by a troubling array of mutually reinforcing and deepening problems involving insecurity, criminality, and corruption, threatening the long-term prosperity, stability and democratic governance of the country. Peru is plagued by destructive interactions between expanding illicit economies involving drugs, mining, illegal logging, other contraband, as well as extortion and kidnapping. 

These dynamics involve a fragmented array of criminal family clans, responding to external demands, and sometimes facilitated by external criminal groups from Mexico, Brazil, Europe, China, and elsewhere.  These activities leverage the weakness of Peruvian institutions, high rates of corruption and informality, and in the process contribute to that dysfunctionality.  That informality and institutional weakness also make combating the money flows of criminal groups almost impossible.

R. Evan Ellis

R. Evan Ellis

Dr. Evan Ellis is a research professor of Latin American studies at the U.S. Army War College Strategic Studies Institute, with a focus on the region’s relationships with China and other non-Western Hemisphere actors as well as transnational organized crime and populism in the region. Dr. Ellis previously served as on the secretary of state’s policy planning staff with responsibility for Latin America and the Caribbean as well as international narcotics and law enforcement issues. In his academic capacity, Dr. Ellis presented his work in a broad range of business and government forums in 27 countries on four continents. He has given testimony on Latin American security issues to the U.S. Congress on various occasions, has discussed his work regarding China and other external actors in Latin America on a broad range of radio and television programs, and is cited regularly in the print media in both the United States and Latin America for his work in this area. Dr. Ellis has also been awarded the Order of Military Merit José María Córdova by the Colombian government for his scholarship on security issues in the region.

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