Meanwhile Washington continued to undermine regional efforts to reach a political settlement, following thedoctrine formulated by the Administration moderate, George Shultz: the US must "cut [the Nicaraguancancer] out," by force. Shultz dismissed with contempt those who advocate "utopian, legalistic meanslike outside mediation, the United Nations, and the World Court, while ignoring the power element of theequation";"Negotiations are a euphemism for capitulation if the shadow of power is not cast acrossthe bargaining table," he declared. Washington continued to adhere to the Shultz doctrine when theCentral American Presidents agreed on a peace plan in 1987 over strong US objections: the Esquipulas Accords,which required that all countries of the region move towards democracy and human rights under internationalsupervision, stressing that the "indispensable element" was the termination of the US attack againstNicaragua. Washington responded by sharply expanding the attack, tripling CIA supply flights for the terroristforces. Having exempted itself from the Accords, thus effectively undermining them, Washington proceeded to dothe same for its client regimes, using the substance -- not the shadow -- of power to dismantle theInternational Verification Commission (CIVS) because its conclusions were unacceptable, and demanding,successfully, that the Accords be revised to free US client states to continue their terrorist atrocities.These far surpassed even the devastating US war against Nicaragua that left tens of thousands dead and thecountry ruined perhaps beyond recovery. Still upholding the Shultz doctrine, the US compelled the governmentof Nicaragua, under severe threat, to drop the claim for reparations established by the ICJ.[9]