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Setback for US plan to send combat troops to the Philippines
By Dante Pastrana
14 March 2003
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Washingtons plans to deploy more than 1,700 US troops
in a joint operation on the southern Philippine island of Jolo
suffered a setback earlier this month when Philippine President
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and Defence Secretary Angelo Reyes ruled
out any active combat role in the country.
Reyes flew to Washington to try to patch up a compromise, telling
a press conference that the basic problem was simply one of finding
the right definitions and semantics. Reyes met with
US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld but the two failed to come
up with any agreement. The Balikatan 03-1 exercise was put on
hold even though, according to the US media, 1,000 marines had
already boarded ships in Japan.
Clearly, more than definitions and semantics was
involved. The Arroyo administration attempted to present the aborted
operation as nothing more than a re-run of last years Balikatan
02-1 exercise on the island of Basilan. In what was billed as
a training exercise, US special forces worked closely
with Philippine troops in tracking down members of the Islamic
extremist group Abu Sayyaf, which was holding three hostages,
including two American missionaries Martin and Grace Burnham.
The exercise violated the Philippine constitution, which prohibits
foreign military bases, troops or facilities ... except
under a treaty duly concurred by the Senate and, when the Congress
so requires, ratified by a majority of the votes cast by the people
in a national referendum. No such treaty was agreed to.
In order to sidestep the constitution, US trainers
were only permitted to fire in self-defence, and the exercise
was limited to six months. But by the middle of the year, US special
forces, at the urging of the Arroyo administration, began openly
conducting foot patrols with Philippine troops in what has been
a combat zone for years.
Moreover, the training continued beyond the six
months. A group of 160 troops remained in nearby Zamboaga City
with another 900 added later last year. Some were deployed in
Cebu City in the central Philippines, ostensibly monitoring a
long term security assistance program. Since January,
another squad of 90 soldiers, including 12 Green Berets, has been
training six infantry battalions in Zamboaga city. In all, 17
military training exercises are scheduled for this year alone.
The Bush administration was not prepared to continue with the
pretence in the latest operation. In late February, a spokesman
for Arroyo declared that the exercise was going to be more
or less the same as last years. Senior Pentagon officials
reacted by telling the US media that an agreement had been reached
with the Philippine military to allow US troops to engage in combat
during an open-ended operation aimed at wiping out Abu Sayyaf
on Jolo.
The scope of the Balikatan 03-1 exercise was revealing. Some
300 to 400 US Special Forces soldiers, backed by another 400 support
personnel, were to be directly involved in the fighting. Another
1,000 marines were to be stationed on two large amphibious assault
ships as a quick reaction force. Air cover was to
be provided by Cobra attack helicopters and Harrier AV-8B warplanes.
The whole operation was to be overseen by Major General Joseph
Weber, US Marine commander for the Pacific.
News of the operation provoked a storm of opposition in the
Philippines. Vice President Teofisto Guingona told a press conference:
If US forces will be involved in combat operations and possibly
kill Filipinos, they will be violating our sovereignty.
Guingona was a former ally of Arroyo, until he was forced to resign
over his public opposition to the deployment of American troops
in Basilan last year. He is now one of the leaders of the local
antiwar movement and has condemned US plans to invade Iraq.
The Philippine Congress also weighed in. Senator Manuel Villar,
chairman of the Senate committee on foreign relations, expressed
fears that Mindanao would become a killing fields for innocent
civilians. His counterpart in the lower house, Congressman
Jun Lozada, released a press statement, warning that the planned
deployment would reopen the wounds of the war between the
Muslims and the American soldiers. In the early 20th century,
American troops killed thousands of people in largely Muslim southern
Mindanao during the US struggle to assert its colonial control
over the Philippines.
The protests cut across party lines. Senator Aquilino Pimentel,
an ally of deposed President Joseph Estrada, who is presently
jailed on corruption charges, accused Reyes of treason. He denounced
the defence secretary for conspiring with the US military to create
a deadly laboratory for testing the effectiveness of US
troops, tactics and weaponry against so-called terrorists.
House Representative Satur Ocampo, formerly of the National
Democratic Front and now a member of the leftist Bayan Muna, found
himself on the same side as Representative Imee Marcos, daughter
of late dictator and his former jailer, Ferdinand Marcos. Like
Pimentel, Marcos accused Reyes of treason. Ocampo, in turn, threatened
to conduct congressional hearings into the extent and nature of
the activities of US troops in the country. Meanwhile, leftist
non-government organisations such as Bayan and Sanlakas vowed
to stage protest demonstrations if the proposed operation went
ahead.
Role of the military
Arroyos opponents expressed concerns over the increasingly
prominent role played by the military in national affairs. Although
the military already has a large slice of the national budget,
graft and corruption and the low value of the peso have limited
its ability to upgrade. By collaborating in the US war against
terror, it is able to gain access to sophisticated weapons
and training.
As well as targetting Abu Sayyaf, the Arroyo administration
has declared the New Peoples Army, linked to the Communist Party
of the Philippines, to be a terrorist organisation.
It is also fighting the separatist Moro Islamic Liberation Force
(MILF), effectively ending attempts over the past year to negotiate
a peace deal.
In mid-February, the military suddenly launched an offensive
against the MILF in Northern Mindanao; initially claiming the
operation was directed at a kidnapping gang. A one-week battle
ended with the reported deaths of 40 MILF rebels and three government
soldiers. It created some 20,000 refugees, mostly Muslims, and
left the peace talks in shambles. Renewed fighting erupted this
week.
In the debate over the US troops, opposition senator Pimentel
accused Reyes of subverting the Constitution by militarising
the policy-making process even in relation to the maintenance
of law and order and the establishment of peace in the country.
The House minority leader, Carlos Padilla, was even more direct.
Reyes is a dangerous man. He must be fired, he said.
The protests of opposition politicians reflect broad discontent
over the US presence in the Philippines and the increasingly anti-democratic
measures being implemented in the name of fighting terrorism.
The opposition is also bound up with growing outrage over the
Bush administrations planned invasion of Iraq.
In the largest antiwar protest to date in the Philippines,
an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 people joined rallies in Manila
on February 28 organised by churches, opposition politicians and
leftist groups. The demonstrations were directed against both
the war in Iraq and the planned joint exercise. Vice President
Guingona called for the cessation of hostilities in our
land and a permanent stay of serenity in Iraq.
The groundswell of opposition left Arroyo and Reyes with little
option but to insist that any US operation in the Philippines
had to respect the countrys constitution. Arroyo is keen
for the exercise with the US military to go ahead
as part of a package of economic and other assistance promised
by Washington. The Bush administration has been pressing to strengthen
the US military presence in the Philippines as part of its broader
strategic ambitions within South East Asia and beyond.
Negotiations between Manila and Washington are continuing.
Arroyo has declared a three-month deadline for the military to
defeat Abu Sayyaf. Asked about the deadline, Reyes declared that
it would be far easier to meet if we are assisted
and supported by American forces. However, the two sides
are yet to find appropriate semantics and definitions
to give the US military the freedom of action that the Bush administration
wants, while allowing Arroyo to pretend that the countrys
constitution remains intact.
See Also:
US troops to be involved in
combat operations in the southern Philippines
[22 February 2003]
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