It is baffling that any American might not understand the Iraqi disdain of
a US military occupation. How would Americans like being accosted by another country's
military...being arrested by them, controlled by them, dictated to by them, tortured
by them, killed by them.... exploited by its corporate entities and losing sovereignty?
Americans should look at the Philippines' century long struggle for some answers
to that question.
Bush referred to the Philippines as a model for the US relationship
with Iraq and I would like to briefly describe that model. It was and remains
a fiasco and tragedy. After being occupied directly or indirectly by the United
States since the Philippine-American War (1899-1902), the Philippines has been
victimized in this relationship. While the Filipino elite have always benefited
from US interference in their country, the masses have suffered indignities, violence,
extreme poverty, racism and no substantive reforms.
It is particularly important
to highlight the initiation of "low intensity conflict" policies by the United
States against Filipinos in 1901 - a practice the US continued to implement throughout
the 20th century in Vietnam, Angola, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Columbia and elsewhere.
During the Spanish-American War in the late 1890's, US Commodore George Dewey
descended upon the shores of the Philippines and destroyed the Spanish fleet in
Manila Bay. Americans had a number of goals for occupying the Philippines. One
was to create a military presence to then access the markets of China. The second
was to utilize the Philippine raw materials for US industry. US President William
McKinley described the third. After praying to "Almighty God", McKinley said that
a message came to him that Americans were in the Philippines to "uplift and civilize
and christianize" Filipinos. He was obviously not aware of the fact that the Filipinos
had been "christianized" for 400 years by Spanish colonizers, against whom they
had consistently rebelled.
As Howard Zinn notes in his People's History of
the United States, the "Filipinos did not get the same message from God" and the
resistance to US military intervention began in 1899 in what has remained, up
to the present time, organized efforts by Filipinos in opposition to US interference.
Initially, Filipinos thought that the Americans were there to help them kick
out the Spanish and end 400 years of repression. After fruitless attempts to negotiate,
however, the reality of the US intention became clear. The Filipinos were forced
to acknowledge that the Americans intended to replace the Spanish as the colonial
rulers. In The Philippines Reader, Daniel Schirmer and Stephen Shalom provide
first hand accounts of this period. On February 5, 1899 Philippine President Emilio
Aguinaldo urged his people to fight in response to the "outbreak of hostilities
between the Philippine forces and the American forces of occupation, (which were)
unjustly and unexpectedly provoked by the latter.... The constant outrages and
taunts, which have caused the misery of the people...and finally the useless conferences
and contempt shown the Philippine government prove the premeditated transgression
of justice and liberty."
The American reaction was swift and the slaughter
by US forces is legendary. Philippine scholar Luziminda Francisco refers to that
brutal imperial American war that launched the 20th century as the "first Vietnam
War" in which estimates of from 600,000 to a million Filipinos died. She states
that the estimate of up to a million deaths might "err on the side of understatement"
as one US congressman, who visited the Philippines at the time, was quoted as
saying "They never rebel in Luzon (Philippines) anymore because there isn't anybody
left to rebel...our soldiers took no prisoners, they kept no records, they simply
swept the country and wherever and whenever they could get hold of a Filipino
they killed him."
In response to a massacre of 54 Americans by the Filipino
resistance in Samar, Francisco describes how US General "Howling Jake" Smith launched
a "reign of terror" on the island. "Kill and burn..." Smith said "the more you
kill and burn the more you'll please me." When asked the age limit for killing,
he said, "Everything over ten." The order from Smith was that Samar becomes a
"howling wilderness" so that "even the birds could not live there." The Americans
had begun to utilize the deadly "water torture" against Filipinos - forcing huge
amounts of water into their stomachs to then gather information - and Smith insisted
on its use in Samar.
There were four US regiments of Black soldiers in the
Philippines during the Philippine-American War. Many were outraged at the abuses
and attitude of the white soldiers toward the Filipinos. Zinn refers to a letter
from a volunteer from the state of Washington who wrote: "Our fighting blood was
up, and we all wanted to kill 'niggers'.... this shooting human beings beats rabbit
hunting all to pieces." David Fagan, one of the Black soldiers, left the US ranks
to fight along side Filipinos and "for two years wreaked havoc upon the American
forces."
The Philippine resistance fought valiantly against the well-armed
Americans. Francisco states that the "Filipinos had to adapt to their limitations
as best they could...with darts, the ubiquitous bolo, and even stones, prompting
(US) General Lawton to remark, 'they are the bravest men I have ever seen'...."
It is also noteworthy that once the Americans captured Aguinaldo in April
1901 they expected hostilities to cease and were "dismayed" that this was not
the case. As the movement against the American presence had massive support, the
fighting continued "unabated." This revelation led the leader of the US campaign,
General Arthur MacArthur, to resign.
The American policy was so brutal that
even American personnel were skeptical. Francisco quotes a US civil servant in
the Philippines at the time who said that because of the "burning, torture and
other harsh treatments" the Americans were "sowing the seeds for a perpetual revolution.
If these things need to be done, they had best be done by native troops so that
the people of the U.S. will not be credited therewith." Obviously this warning
was heeded, as in 1901 the Americans created the Philippine Constabulary, comprised
of Filipinos, who would work at the behest of and ruthlessly serve US interests
during the U.S. colonization of the Philippines.
With its creation of the
Philippine Constabulary (PC), the United States launched its "low intensity conflict"
(LIC) strategy in the Philippines - in other words "don't get the US hands dirty,
let someone else do the brutal work." So while it might be "low" intensity for
the United States, it is exceptionally "high" intensity for its victims. The PC
is still in existence today, and its reactionary and mercenary origins have remained
in tact. Throughout the 20th century it has played a key role in suppressing peasant
revolts and anti-US intervention movements.
At the end of World War II the
Americans claim to have given the Philippines its independence. The US, however,
insisted on maintaining a military presence in the country, with its major bases
being Subic Naval Base and Clark Air Force Base. In return for these bases the
US offered the Filipino elite the creation of the "Joint US Military Advisory
Group" (JUSMAG) to help reassert its authority over the peasant movements for
land reform and other issues objectionable to them.
The resistance to the
US interference has always been intense in the Philippines. Nationalist movements
and armed struggle from the early occupation period to the Hukbalahap guerrilla
movement after World War II to the New People's Army in the 1960's through to
the present, including, of course, peasant movements for land reform, factory
workers rights, on and on. In every instance the US administration and US military
have worked in tandem with their Filipino government and military counterparts
in an attempt to ruthlessly quell these movements.
After Filipinos had successfully
ousted the dictator and American puppet Ferdinand Marcos in 1986, the goal of
many was to continue on that wave of success by attempting to end US interference
altogether - particularly by ousting the US military bases. While many Filipinos
demanded countless reforms from the new government of President Corie Aquino,
they recognized that the American military presence and CIA involvement made their
reform efforts next to impossible. The Military Bases Agreement (MBA) that allowed
the US bases to stay in the Philippines was to expire in 1991 and the Philippine
Senate, to the dismay of the Americans, did vote against the extension of the
agreement, which finally closed that disastrous chapter in Philippine history.
Prior to that vote, however, violence raged in the Philippines.
To organize
against the extension of the MBA, a broad based anti-bases and nationalist movement
developed in the Philippines in the 1980's. The US intention, however, was to
maintain its bases, and to accomplish that the CIA hired retired US General John
Singlaub (head of the World Anti-Communist League) to launch a relentless and
cruel LIC campaign (1987-1989). President Aquino assisted in this effort in what
the Filipinos refer to as "Total War" against the people. The result was a rise
of death squads, vigilante violence, human rights abuses and massive numbers of
refugees from evacuated areas. Assassinations and harassments of church workers,
labor leaders, peasant leaders and others became a daily occurrence. In 1989,
US Colonel James Rowe of JUSMAG, who had been training the Philippine military
in LIC strategies, was assassinated in Manila.
While the Filipinos have had
brief respite, since 1991, of living without the presence of the huge US military
bases, JUSMAG has remained in tact and the Bush administration is attempting to
reverse some of that victory. Today, in violation of the Philippine constitution,
which does not allow foreign troops on Philippine soil, the Bush administration
successfully lobbied Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to send US troops
into the Philippine hinterlands. The goal, according to Bush, is to destroy Muslim
terrorists. Once again, in the Philippines, there is a growing movement to oust
the US military (see www.nispop.org).
The United States began the last century with an imperial war in Asia. It
now is repeating the process at the beginning of the 21rst century with an intensive
imperial reach into the Middle East and the parallels are striking. The invasion
of the Philippines by the US was a preemptive, unprovoked war against a sovereign
nation, as was the case in Iraq. As the Americans chose to occupy the Philippines
for access to its raw materials and other markets, so too are they wanting access
to Iraqi oil resources, markets and other resources of the Middle East. As Filipinos
immediately began a resistance campaign against the Americans, so too are the
Iraqis. McKinley launched an LIC policy in the Philippines, and George Bush is
about to utilize the same policy in Iraq through what he is referring to as "Iraqification".
"Iraqification" calls for the selection of former Iraqi military and/or police
to serve at the behest of the Americans. Iraqi's hired by the US will strike against
those reacting against the US military occupation and as a consequence will suffer
the blows. It will be Iraqi's against Iraqi's with the United States pulling the
strings.
Throughout the past century, the low intensity conflict policy implemented
by the United States in Asia, Africa and Latin America has wreaked havoc, death
and destruction and the Filipinos have experienced more than 100 years of these
policies. It is important to note, however, that despite of the violent attempts
by the United States to pacify the Filipinos, it has never been successful in
ending the opposition to US interference in Philippine affairs or in stopping
the Filipino struggles for the creation of a sovereign and free nation. As was
the case at the very beginning of the 20th century when the masses in the Philippines
continued their battle against the Americans after the capture of Aguinaldo, at
every juncture, the Filipinos have continued to organize against the American
presence.
It is highly unlikely that opposition to US interference in Iraq
or in the Philippines will end now or any time in the future. History is not on
the side of the occupiers. No one wants them.
For 12 years Ms. Gray has produced "Just Peace" on WRFG-Atlanta
89.3 FM covering local, regional, national and international news. In 1989 she
visited the Philippines. She lives in Atlanta and can be reached at justpeacewrfg@aol.com. Note: The opinions expressed
above do not necessarily reflect those of Radio Free Georgia Foundation, Inc.
it's staff or volunteers.
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