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Philippines
US prepares to extend its military presence in the Philippines
By Keith Morgan
2 July 2002
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When the US dispatched more than 1,000 troops to the Philippines
earlier this year, both Washington and Manila claimed that the
Balikatan (Shoulder-to-Shoulder) training exercise
would last only six months and be completed by July 31. As the
deadline approaches, the signs are growing that US soldiers will
remain in the country, under one pretext or another, well into
the future.
US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld announced last week that
at least some of the 160 US Special Forces troops, who have been
training Philippine soldiers on the southern island of Basilan,
will stay. Asked by reporters about the level of US involvement,
he commented: We very likely will continuenot continue,
but have some arrangement with respect to operating with somewhat
smaller levels.
On June 20, Rumsfeld gave the green light for the US Special
Forces to expand their role and join Philippine troops on small
group patrols against Abu Sayyaf guerrillas in southern Mindanao.
Previously, the US soldiers had been confined, officially at least,
to training and advising at the battalion level at Philippine
army bases. Under the current rules of engagement, US soldiers
are not permitted to fire their weapons unless in self-defencea
condition that will be all but meaningless if fighting erupts.
The immediate aim of the US military presence was to track
down the Abu Sayyaf group that had been holding two American missionaries
Martin and Grace Burnham and Filipino nurse Ediborah Yap hostage
since June last year. Two of the three hostages were killed in
a shootout last month between Philippine troops and Abu Sayyaf
rebels. With US assistance, the Philippine army has since stepped
up its efforts to crush the Islamic separatist group completely.
The dispatch of US troops to the Philippines was widely touted
in the international media as the opening of a second front
in Bushs global war on terrorism. However, the
September 11 terrorist attacks on the US simply provided the pretext
for Washington to press ahead with long-held plans to reestablish
a high-profile military presence in the Philippines and the South
East Asian region.
The Bush administration is still maintaining that American
troops will be withdrawn by July 31. But a proviso has now been
added to the effect that consideration will be given to requests
from Manila for US forces to stay longer. That formal request
seems almost certain to be made.
Philippine President Gloria Arroyo announced on June 22 that
she would ask Washington to allow US forces to stay beyond the
end of July. I already said through his [Bushs] other
officials that while the military training portion will end July
31, we can start the next Balikatan immediately. So by the time
July 31 comes, I hope they have the next Balikatan already worked
out, she said.
The dispatch of US troops has been dressed up as a training
exercise in an attempt to circumvent the Philippine constitution,
which prohibits foreign troops from operating in the country.
Arroyo is concerned to head off potential opposition to the continued
presence of US troops in a country that was an American colony
prior to World War II. In the early 1990s, protests forced the
US to close its two major military bases in the Philippinesthe
Subic Bay Naval Base and the Clark Air Field.
Arroyos support for an ongoing US military presence has
opened up divisions in her administration. In an embarrassing
series of events, her office announced on June 27 that Vice President
Teofisto Guingona was relinquishing his post as foreign
minister and that an opposition senator was likely to be offered
the job. Just hours later Guingona flatly denied that he had resigned.
Last weekend, under pressure, he finally announced his departure
before the Congress resumes on July 22.
Arroyo began lobbying for Guingonas removal after he
publicly opposed the original plan to station US troops on Basilan.
The president convinced him to change his stance but he was likely
to oppose any plans for a continued US military presence beyond
July 31.
Guingona may be replaced by opposition senator Blas Ople, as
part of a deal aimed at breaking the current deadlock in the countrys
upper house. At present, the government and opposition both have
12 votes in the senate, which could block legislation required
strengthening US-Philippine military ties.
A new defence agreement
The Philippine Daily Inquirer commented that Guingonas
removal could pave the way for the appointment of opposition
Senator Blas Ople as secretary of Foreign Affairs, apparently
to break the deadlock in the senate and allow administration senators
to regain control of the chamber... [and] avert a new clash between
the president and Guingona on another flashpoint foreign policy
issue, this time the proposed Mutual Logistics Support Arrangement
(MLSA)...
US Deputy Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz called on Arroyo
to sign the MLSA when he visited the Philippines in early June.
The agreement would allow the US to set up storage facilities
in the southern Philippines as well as to build roads, airfields
and port facilities to access the storage areas. In exchange,
Washington has promised a broad range of military assistance to
the Philippine armed forces. Wolfowitz said at the time: I
dont want to be presumptuous and tell the government of
the Philippines what to do (but) we think the signing of that
agreement will allow us to work more closely.
Critics have labelled the agreement a mere rehash of the Acquisition
and Cross-Servicing Agreement that was rejected by the senate
in the early 1990s, leading to the closure of the Subic Bay and
Clark bases. Bayan Muna Representative Crispin Beltram also criticised
the decision to allow US troops to accompany Philippine army patrols.
Its the actual plan all along. The President and her
military advisers must have cooked up this strategy of slowly
phasing in the US troops during her state visit to the US last
November, he said.
The US thinktank Stratfor pointed to the broader strategic
significance of the MLSA agreement, stating: If such a deal
is signedand it is likely that President Arroyo will back
itit would represent more than the creation of a supply
dump. Rather, it would be more of a contingency dump,
a pre-positioning of U.S supplies and fuel in case Washington
needs to launch counterterrorism or other military operations
in Southeast Asia.
But a reduced US presence on the ground in Basilan veils
Washingtons longer term strategic interests in the Philippines,
which sits astride the dividing line between the Pacific Ocean
and the South China Sea. The Philippines is a perfectly located
staging ground for any future Al Qaeda-hunting Washington may
wish or need to do in Southeast Asiaas well as an important
strategic location in case relations with China sour.
In other words, the dispatch of US troops to the Philippines
and the establishment of supply depots is to strengthen the US
position and defend American strategic and economic interests
in the region against its potential rivalsChina in particular.
As one Pentagon official told the Washington Post: The
administrations war on terrorism provided a timely rationale
for getting more deeply engaged in the Philippines, which is something
Blair [recently retired commander of US military forces in the
Pacific] and others wanted to do.
Planning for the next stage of US military involvement in the
Philippines is already underway. General Roy Cimatu, Chief of
Staff of the Philippine Armed Forces, met with Blairs replacement,
Admiral Thomas Fargo Commander, last week in Hawaii to discuss
the details. A joint press statement released after their meeting
on June 27 declared: Admiral Fargo and General Cimatu discussed
the transition from Balikatan 02-1 into a sustained program of
security cooperation and counter-terrorism training and assistance.
Toward that goal, the members agreed upon sustainable plans which
will be submitted to their respective governments for consideration.
See Also:
Washington seizes on Philippines
hostage deaths to extend military presence
[13 June 2002]
Why has South East Asia become
the second front in Bush's "war on terrorism"?
[26 April 2002]
US military plans for a long-term
presence in the Philippines
[16 April 2002]
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