Bush in Manila
by
Les Dell
by Les Dell
Recently,
in perhaps one of his most Pollyannaish statements to date, President
Bush,
in a speech to the Philippine Congress, said "America
is proud of its part in the great story of the Filipino people.
Together our soldiers liberated the Philippines from colonial rule,"
as if the story of American involvement in the Philippines ended
happily right there with the withdrawal of the Spanish. But Bush,
ever true to form, failed to even acknowledge the ensuing, bloody
guerilla war and decades long occupation, which is ironic because
of the similarities between the Philippine-American War and the
ongoing war in Iraq today.
When
the Spanish-American war erupted in 1898, the Filipinos found themselves
"allied" with the United States against Spain. It seemed
to them that with the help of the Americans they would soon be liberated
from Spanish rule.
Bush
has claimed repeatedly that the United States is liberating
the Iraqis from Saddam’s regime. Still holding to much of the same
post-invasion rhetoric, Bush declared in the same speech in October,
"Since the liberation of Iraq, we have discovered Saddam's
clandestine laboratories suitable for biological and chemical weapons
research, his design work on prohibited long-range missiles, his
elaborate campaign to hide his illegal weapons programs. We've shut
down terror camps, denied terrorists a sanctuary. By our actions,
our coalition removed a grave and gathering danger. We also ended
one of the cruelest regimes in our time. Saddam's rape rooms and
torture chambers and children's prisons are closed forever."
The
Filipinos, however, much like the Iraqis, soon realized that the
United States had no interest in liberating the Philippines; in
fact they intended to create a colony of it. As the inevitable violence
flared, president McKinley told reporters, "that the insurgents
had attacked Manila" to justify a U.S. war on the Filipinos. In
1899 the United States occupied the Philippines with 126,000 troops.
The Filipinos, under the command of Emilio Aguinaldo, battled the
Americans conventionally for about a year; however it was soon clear
the Filipinos were overmatched by the Americans. Aguinaldo soon
gave the order for his followers to begin employing guerilla tactics.
"From
this point on, the war became a savage, no-holds-barred guerilla
conflict made up of ambushes, massacres and retribution. Both sides
engaged in wanton violence and slaughter. Villages were destroyed,
civilians murdered, prisoners tortured and mutilated along with
a host of other atrocities."
The
recent wholesale destruction
of Fallujah and the Abu Ghraib prison scandal come immediately
to mind. The army has also imposed curfews on Iraqi civilians, much
the same as their predecessors in the Philippines.
"We
sleep all day here, as we do our duty all night, walking the streets.
We make every one get into his house by 7 P.M., and we only tell
a man once, If he refuses, we shoot him. We killed over three hundred
men the first night. They tried to set the town on fire. If they
fire a shot from a house, we burn the house down, and every house
near it, and shoot the natives; so they are pretty quiet in town
now." Corporal
in the California Regiment Philippines
The
overwhelming brutality and violence that it took to quell the insurgency
in the Philippines became nearly genocidal. The Americans practically
annihilated the inhabitants of the Philippines before the insurrection
was completely put down.
With
guerilla attacks escalating and with many in Washington calling
for increased levels of troops, the situation in Iraq is beginning
to look all too familiar.
Bush
commented further, "Democracy always has skeptics. Some say
the culture of the Middle East will not sustain the institutions
of democracy. The same doubts were once expressed about the culture
of Asia. These doubts were proven wrong nearly six decades ago,
when the Republic of the Philippines became the first democratic
nation in Asia."
And
within twenty years the Philippines segued from democracy, straight
into dictatorship. Bush conveniently leaves out the fact that the
Philippines suffered under one of the worst dictators in recent
history. Perhaps Ferdinand Marcos slipped his memory.
Marcos
was elected the 10th president of the Philippines in
1965. During his second term in office he re-wrote the constitution
so that he could continue his tenure as President. By 1972, he declared
martial law and assumed dictatorial control over the Philippines.
"The
military has virtually unlimited powers to search, arrest and detain
civilians without reason and without recourse to legal representation.
Military tribunals are set up throughout the country to try
and sentence detainees. The civilian courts are stripped
of their power and autonomy, and the Philippine police force is
placed under military control. It is estimated that more than 60,000
people are arrested between 1972 and 1977."
During
his reign, Marcos bilked the country out of billions of dollars,
ordered assassinations, seized private property, and appointed his
friends and lackeys to public offices. After a twenty-year reign
and a ruined economy the Filipino citizens had had enough and Marcos
fled the country and flew to Hawaii in 1986.
"When
Marcos arrives in Hawaii he is said to be carrying suitcases containing
jewels, 24k gold bricks and certificates for billions of dollars
of gold bullion. His Swiss bank accounts are estimated to contain
between US$3 billion and US$35 billion stolen from his country.
The Philippine's foreign debt is about US$28 billion. To this day,
the existence and whereabouts of the stolen Marcos billions remains
unconfirmed despite detailed investigations by the US Senate."
Many
readers will remember Imelda Marcos’ enormous shoe collection. While
millions of Filipinos were living in extreme poverty, Imelda travelled
the world buying shoes.
Should
we be at all surprised that President Bush seems oblivious to the
sordid legacy of American involvement in the Philippines and its
subsequent dictatorship? I think not, since over and over again
this administration has demonstrated a profound ability to deny
the obvious. The "success" of the United States in quelling
the "insurgency" in the Philippines came at a terrible
price to both sides, with the resulting "democracy" at
best questionable and at worst a total farce.
Unlike
some recent conflicts, the American forces in the Philippines resorted
to measures that seem reprehensible to modern Americans in order
to eventually pacify that insurgency. What is frightening is that
this administration also seems to have the resolve necessary
to repeat that same feat.
December
31, 2004
Les
Dell [send him mail] is
an engineer in Atlanta.
Copyright
2004 LewRockwell.com
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