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Australia signs military pact with the Philippines
By John Roberts
3 November 2005
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The Australian government has exploited last months terrorist
bomb blasts in Bali to establish closer defence ties in South
East Asia, in the Philippines in particular. Under a new Status
of Forces Agreement (SOFA) to be signed with Manila, significant
numbers of Australian troops will be permitted on Philippines
territory for the first time, ostensibly for training purposes.
Australia will be the only nation apart from the US to be able
to do so.
Australian Defence Minister Robert Hill announced plans for
the agreement in Manila alongside Philippines Defence Secretary
Avelino Cruz on October 18. Hill told the Australian that
the talks could eventually lead to joint ground troop operations.
Until now, Australian-Philippines military cooperation has been
limited to small-scale staff and training contact. A handful of
Australian police officers have been training Filipinos in bomb
site investigation.
Hill said Australian personnel had been invited as observers
to the large scale US-Philippines Balikatan military
exercise in 2006. He hoped that by 2007 Australia would be a full
participant. According to Australian media reports, an AP3-C Orion
maritime patrol aircraft is to be deployed for surveillance in
the Sulu and Celebes seas. Two patrol boats will join it next
year. Australian special forces troops will train Filipinos in
long-range reconnaissance tactics.
Australian Strategic Policy Institute analyst Aldo Borgu told
the Australian that the SOFA represented a ramping
up of Australias involvement with the Philippines.
Operational roles for the air force and the navy would be
one thing, deploying troops on the ground even at the request
of Manila would be beyond anything weve conceived so far.
Hill justified the SOFA agreement by referring to the need
for regional anti-terrorist cooperation. Repeating unsubstantiated
claims that Muslim separatists groups in the southern Philippines
had trained the Bali bombers, he declared: [W]e have a real
and vested interest to working with the Philippines to overcome
the threat. Theres quite a lot we could do with a SOFA.
However, Canberras military ties with the Philippines
are bound up with broader Australian economic and strategic interests
in the region and above all, with the Australian alliance with
the US. Washington regards the country as a vital strategic asset,
sitting astride key Asian shipping lanes and in close proximity
to China. The US was compelled, however, to abandon its major
bases at Subic Bay and the Clark Airfield in 1992.
Since September 11 2001, the Bush administration has used the
war on terrorism to reestablish a military presence
in the Philippines and to reach new military ties. Despite the
support of President Gloria Arroyo, opposition emerged to the
stationing of US troops in the Philippines, which flouts a constitutional
ban on the presence of foreign military on Philippine soil. While
US advisers operate in the southern Philippines, Arroyo
was compelled to back away from more extensive joint operations.
There is no doubt that one aim of the SOFA agreement with Australia
is to internationalise joint military exercises and
blunt opposition to the US presence. Not surprisingly, Matthew
Lussenhop, a spokesman for the US Embassy in Manila, immediately
endorsed the new pact, declaring: More cooperation among
partners in fighting terrorism is a good thing. He added,
somewhat disingenuously, that it was a matter for the Philippines
and Australia to decide what kind of training would be provided.
Opposition figures in the Philippines certainly regard the
SOFA agreement with Australia as a dangerous ploy. Opposition
politician Teodoro Casino said it would open the door for
direct military intervention. He called for a Congressional
inquiry. Manila is also considering similar military pacts with
Malaysia and Singapore, two other close US allies in the region.
Once again, the Howard government is moving lockstep with the
Bush administration. Australia was the only country other than
Britain to provide military forces for the illegal US-led invasion
and occupation of Iraq. Prime Minister John Howard calculated
that Australian support for US militarism was the necessary downpayment
for Washingtons backing for the interests of Australian
imperialism in the Asia Pacific region.
In the immediate aftermath of the Iraq invasion, the Howard
government mounted its own military intervention in the Solomon
Islands. On the pretext of preventing a failed state
becoming a haven for international terrorism and crime, Australian
officials effectively took over the running of the small country.
Since then, Canberra has aggressively imposed its demands for
good governance in one Pacific Island nation after
another.
Under the guise of anti-terrorist training exercises, American
surveillance aircraft, special forces helicopters, engineers and
observers have been in involved in operations in Mindanao
and a command, control and intelligence centre has been set up
in the area. By joining the US military operations, Canberra is
hoping to further cement the US-Australian alliance and also reap
extra economic and political benefits in South East Asia.
The Australian military may already be involved. On October
9, the Australian cited an unnamed former Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation officer, who claimed that Australian
special forces have been involved in covert operations in Mindanao
for a year. Manila denied the reports. On October 14, however,
Australian special forces commander Major General Mike
Hindmarsh turned up in the southern city of Zamboanga to the briefed
on operations against two suspected Bali bomb makers hiding out
in the area.
As well as defence ties, the Howard government is keen to pursue
closer economic and political links with the Philippines. The
Arroyo administration has backed Canberras call for a free
trade agreement between Australia, New Zealand and the Association
of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN). It also agreed to support
Australian participation in the first East Asia Summit due to
be held in Kuala Lumpur in December.
In terms of merchandise trade, the Philippines is only Australias
27th largest partner. Bilateral trade amounted to just $A1.767
billion ($US1.312 billion) in 2003. But Australian companies see
the potential for lucrative investments in mining projects to
provide raw materials to China and are anxious to cut out their
rivals. A meeting of trade and foreign ministers from Australia
and the Philippines in Sydney in August declared that Australian
mining companies were well placed to participate in the development
of the Philippines mineral resources.
All of Howard governments ambitions are premised on maintaining
US backing and thus in supporting Washingtons plans in the
Philippines, South East Asia and beyond. None of this has anything
to do with lessening the risk of terrorist attacks by Islamic
extremists. In fact by collaborating in US military plans in the
Philippines, Canberra will only further inflame anti-Western sentiment
in South East Asia and heighten the dangers.
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