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Philippines
Philippine president renews her pledge of loyalty in Washington
By John Roberts
28 May 2003
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In the nineteenth century, at the height of the British Empire,
a stream of potentates, maharajas and other assorted dignitaries
made their way to London to pledge fealty to their colonial masters,
to be awed by British power and to take home a handful of trinkets
and the stamp of British approval.
A modern day version is taking place in Washingtonthe
latest visit being that of Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
last week. In return for Arroyos assurances of loyalty and
cooperation, Bush lavished praise on the head of the former American
colony and offered financial support to prop up her increasingly
unpopular administration.
The Arroyo entourage was treated to the pomp and ceremony of
a formal state visit complete with a state dinner and reception
at the White Houseonly the third occasion during the Bush
presidency that a visiting head of state has received such regal
treatment. Bush has already announced that he intends to visit
the Philippines later in the yearhis first visit to South
East Asia.
President George Bush was effusive in his praise of Arroyo
as a national leader and her early support for the US war
against terror and its attack on Iraq. He took the opportunity
to bestow the status of major non-NATO ally on the
Philippines, granting the country greater access to US military
technology and equipment. Bush also praised Arroyos fight
against terrorism inside the Philippinesthe
pretext for the dispatch of US troops to the country for the first
time in nearly a decade.
Standing next to Bush at the White House, Arroyo signalled
her complete support for Washingtons open-ended and aggressive
foreign policy, declaring: We are with you in your leadership
against terrorism, wherever it may be found. Her administration
has committed a small team of 175 military, police and civilian
officials to join the US military occupation of Iraq.
Speaking at a formal dinner of the US-ASEAN Business Council,
US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage indicated why the
Bush administration attached such importance to Arroyos
visit. His speech strongly implied that any nation that wanted
favourable economic treatment from Washington had to, like the
Philippines, fully embrace and support its militarist foreign
policy.
Armitage praised Arroyo for her courageous stand on Iraq
as one of the first leaders to back the US-led invasion and for
providing tangible military assets. He went on to
speak about a broader truth about this war on terrorism,
and that is the inseparable and intertwined nature of prosperity
and security. I suspect that those of you from the business community
have found in your own experience that you cannot have one without
the other.
In barely disguised terms, Armitage then urged his business
audience to take advantage of the new vistas being opened up by
the US war on terrorism. Just as the great threats
of our day ... have no respect for lines on a map, the great opportunities
of our time ... are unconstrained by geography as well. And so
today, as we work with our allies in the Philippines and our friends
around the world to meet the threats, we are also working to seize
the opportunities.
In South East Asia, Arroyo has been the staunchest supporter
of the Bush administrations expansionist policies. While
in Washington, Arroyo and Philippine Foreign Secretary Blas Ople
agreed to deepen US military involvement in the Philippines. In
February, the two governments were forced to drop plans for open
US military involvement in operations against the Moro Islamic
Liberation Front (MILF) and the Abu Sayyaf Islamic separatists
groups after widespread opposition erupted over its unconstitutional
character and the violation of national sovereignty.
During the latest visit, however, alternatives for sidestepping
the Philippine constitution were clearly discussed. A senior Defence
Department official told the Washington Post that arrangements
had been worked out for an evolution of last years
training mission that saw up to 1,200 troops, including
advisers and US aircraft, heavily involved in counterinsurgency
operations in the country. According to the newspaper, Bush has
committed an unspecified number of additional US troops to join
the 500 still in the Philippines.
Last November, the Arroyo administration signed a Military
Logistics and Support Agreement (MLSA) allowing the US to use
the Philippines as a supply base for military operations throughout
the region. According to Washington Post, the arrangement
was exactly what the Pentagon was after. Rather than being committed
to large permanent bases, as was previously the case at Subic
Bay and Clark Airfield, the US military wanted a more flexible
agreement and closer relations with the Philippine armed forces
chiefs.
Other economic agreements were signed during last weeks
visit. After leaving Washington, Arroyo boasted to an audience
of Filipinos in San Francisco on May 22 that her trip had been
worth $4 billion to the Philippines. She referred to $300 million
in social and economic aid promised by Bush and access to hundreds
of millions of dollars worth of US military equipment and training.
Included in the total was a payoff to Arroyo for her support
for the invasion of Iraq. Manila is to be allowed a small share
in the plunder by supplying American companies involved in rebuilding
Iraq with cheap Filipino labour. At a teleconference in
the Waldorf Astoria in New York, Arroyo adviser Marita Jimenez
declared that there were opportunities for 30,000 to 50,000 Filipino
workers.
In addition, US information technology companies plan to establish
call centres in the Philippines to take advantage of English-speaking
workers at low wages. Arroyo met the CEOs of Convergys Corporation,
Western Wats, and Vision X which expect to employ up to 13,300
workers in the Philippines. The Prudential Group also expressed
its intention of outsourcing business processing to the Philippines.
The Bush administration is also becoming more directly involved
in the internal affairs of the Philippines. Foreign Minister Ople
signed an agreement with the US Agency for International Development
to assist former fighters from the Moro National Liberation Front
(MNLF). The MNLF leadership signed an agreement with Manila to
end hostilities in 1996. Washington also committed $50 million
to restart peace talks with the other major armed separatist group,
the MILF.
Arroyos visit to Washington coincided with a major military
offensive against MILF areas in Mindanao. While the military insists
that civilians are not being targetted, MILF spokesmen claim that
the strikes have been indiscriminate. According to Philippine
Senator Aquilino Pimentel, more than 300,000 civilians have been
displaced by the governments offensives.
The US has offered to broker a peace deal with the MILF; but
there is no doubt that it has also fully backed the current military
offensive. Armitage referred obliquely to the legitimate
aspirations and some grievances of the poverty-stricken
Muslim population of southern Mindanao but left no doubt that
Washington supports Arroyo in the fight against terrorist
groups that hide in the shadows of the Philippines.
Writing in the Manila-based Sunday Times last weekend,
Toots Ople, chief of staff for the Department of Foreign Affairs,
declared that Washingtons political and military support
was more important than the economic benefits of the US alliance.
You cannot put a peso value on the initiative of the United
States government to have the New Peoples Army and National Democratic
Front included in the global list of foreign terrorist organisations,
she wrote.
The reference to Washingtons branding of the New Peoples
Army and the National Democratic Frontboth connected to
the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP)as terrorist
organisations is significant. It reflects an understanding in
ruling circles in Manila that the US support for a war on terrorism
in the Philippines is in fact an open-ended pledge to help suppress
any political opposition, no matter how limited, to the deepening
economic and social crisis in the country.
See Also:
Setback for US plan to send
combat troops to the Philippines
[14 March 2003]
Why has South East
Asia become the second front in Bushs war on terrorism?
[26 April 2002]
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