FLC activity explodes in the north east, overwhelming local populations. A few small skirmishes with the National Police at the Colombian border evolve into an extra-state war on your border. The conflict weakens border security, and FLC personnel flood into Peru, bringing violence with them. In some border towns they have taken complete control, essentially establishing a network of small mafia city-states. Drugs begin flowing into Peru, and the Colombian cocaine trade is now hurting Peru as well. With your hands full and the military occupied trying to quell FLC activity in the north east, Bolivia invades in the south. While the UN comes to your aid and helps stop the Bolivian offensive, it comes at a high cost. Thousands of Peruvians die both in the interstate war in the south and the extra-state war in the north east. The two campaigns are draining your state's funds and inflation spikes, alongside national debt. Even after the Bolivian attack is quashed and peace negotiations are concluded, the FLC continues to destabilize your government. To make matters worse, the deal with Bolivia seems to be more of a stopgap measure, and its fragility increases with every FLC victory. Peru has many long years of struggle and instability ahead.