Peruvian MRE purchases
Posted: Tue Jul 08, 2008 9:36 am
I found this interesting.
The head of the Peruvian army apparently chose US MREs instead of a cheaper, more easily available Peruvian alternative. Stating that his men "should eat the best rations available in the world," Army commander Edwin Donayre opted for MRE specially imported from International Meal Supply of Florida, even though the Peruvian army is required by law to hold a public tender and give priority to national products.
The problems is that the MRE is more expensive (3.27 more per meal) than its Peruvian equivalent, and the menus purchased are unfamiliar to Peruvian soldiers deployed to the Apurimac and Ene river valleys. This southeastern jungle area, known by the acronym VRAE, is where large quantities of coca and cocaine are produced and where remnants of the Maoist Sendero Luminoso (Shining Pathway) remain active. The approximately 5000 soldiers serving in the VRAE, 80 percent of whom come from Pucallpa, an area in Peru’s eastern Amazon jungle region, were initially told that they would be eating traditional Peruvian foods. Instead they receive MREs such as cheese tortellini in marinara sauce, beef stroganoff with egg noodles and chicken noodle stew with vegetables, along with snacks like raisins and mixed nuts - not typical Peruvian fare.
The Peruvian navy, who has sent Special Operations forces to fight alongside the Peruvian Army, held a public tender as required by law, and bought Peruvian field rations based on popular, widely consumed products at local market price. Both cheaper and more acceptable, this ration is based around foods familiar to Peruvians: papas (freeze-dehydrated potatoes), cancha (dried and toasted corn kernels), dried native fruits, chalona (dried strips of llama meat) and charqui (sun-dried meat, mostly mutton or horseflesh). The commander of the deployed naval troops stated that he was "completely satisfied" with the rations purchased from a local company," and that "we had to turn over part of our rations to the army, because the ones they bought abroad hadn’t arrived yet."
Sinte, the Peruvian Army agency tasked with food procurement, argued that suitable suppliers are not available in Peru and that the price of the International Meal Supply’s MREs is reasonable, because "it is a product that no one in Peru makes."
The Peruvians now purchase the Racion de Combate from Colombia rather than MRE from the US.
The head of the Peruvian army apparently chose US MREs instead of a cheaper, more easily available Peruvian alternative. Stating that his men "should eat the best rations available in the world," Army commander Edwin Donayre opted for MRE specially imported from International Meal Supply of Florida, even though the Peruvian army is required by law to hold a public tender and give priority to national products.
The problems is that the MRE is more expensive (3.27 more per meal) than its Peruvian equivalent, and the menus purchased are unfamiliar to Peruvian soldiers deployed to the Apurimac and Ene river valleys. This southeastern jungle area, known by the acronym VRAE, is where large quantities of coca and cocaine are produced and where remnants of the Maoist Sendero Luminoso (Shining Pathway) remain active. The approximately 5000 soldiers serving in the VRAE, 80 percent of whom come from Pucallpa, an area in Peru’s eastern Amazon jungle region, were initially told that they would be eating traditional Peruvian foods. Instead they receive MREs such as cheese tortellini in marinara sauce, beef stroganoff with egg noodles and chicken noodle stew with vegetables, along with snacks like raisins and mixed nuts - not typical Peruvian fare.
The Peruvian navy, who has sent Special Operations forces to fight alongside the Peruvian Army, held a public tender as required by law, and bought Peruvian field rations based on popular, widely consumed products at local market price. Both cheaper and more acceptable, this ration is based around foods familiar to Peruvians: papas (freeze-dehydrated potatoes), cancha (dried and toasted corn kernels), dried native fruits, chalona (dried strips of llama meat) and charqui (sun-dried meat, mostly mutton or horseflesh). The commander of the deployed naval troops stated that he was "completely satisfied" with the rations purchased from a local company," and that "we had to turn over part of our rations to the army, because the ones they bought abroad hadn’t arrived yet."
Sinte, the Peruvian Army agency tasked with food procurement, argued that suitable suppliers are not available in Peru and that the price of the International Meal Supply’s MREs is reasonable, because "it is a product that no one in Peru makes."
The Peruvians now purchase the Racion de Combate from Colombia rather than MRE from the US.