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    With Us or Against Us

    Page 37
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      Johnson administration that followed merely intensified the level of

      American involvement in Vietnam even further. President Lyndon

      Johnson used the 1965 Tonkin incident (where U.S. ships were bombed

      by North Vietnamese forces) as a pretext to escalate America’s war

      against the communists in the North. He later increased the number

      of American troops in Vietnam to half a million, while authorizing a

      sustained bombing campaign of North Vietnam.

      America’s growing involvement in the Vietnam War earned it the

      scorn and condemnation of anticolonial and anti-imperial movements

      worldwide. In time, the U.S. administration was also forced to con-

      tend with growing disillusionment and criticism back home. As the

      war spiraled out of control, U.S. President Lyndon Johnson described

      the conflict as “that bitch of a war on the other side of the world.”13

      * * *

      Uncle Sam to the Rescue?

      219

      He later admitted that it was “the biggest damn mess I ever saw.”14

      But, despite the doubts that were being cast on the U.S. war effort in

      Southeast Asia, the hawks in the Pentagon and Congress were insis-

      tent on prolonging the conflict even further. General William Depuy

      insisted that “the solution to Vietnam is more bombs, more shells, more

      napalm,” while General Westmoreland argued that America should

      “just go on bleeding them, until Hanoi wakes up to the fact that they

      have bled their country to the point of national disaster for genera-

      tions.”15 This trend would prevail right up to the Nixon administra-

      tion, and Nixon himself would later say that he would “bomb the

      bastards like they had never been bombed before.”16

      Bellicose rhetoric aside, Vietnam proved to be a bigger obstacle to

      U.S. hegemonic ambitions in Asia than Indonesia. The Tet Offensive

      of 1968 caught the Americans off-guard and proved that the war could

      not be won by force of arms. On January 27, 1973 a formal treaty was

      signed between the North Vietnamese government and the forces of

      the South in Paris. By then, the American government realized that a

      communist victory was inevitable and that it would be pointless to

      prolong the conflict (and their involvement) any further.

      In 1975, the Vietnam War finally came to its messy end. On April 21,

      General Nguyen Van Thieu resigned, blaming the Americans for their

      lack of support to his tottering regime. Thieu then flew off into exile

      in Hawaii as communist forces entered the Southern capital of Saigon

      (soon to be renamed Ho Chi Minh city). By the end of the war, more

      than two million Vietnamese had been killed, along with an estimated

      58,000 American troops. But despite the fears of successive American

      administrations, the rest of Southeast Asia did not fall into the hands

      of the communist bloc, and most of the countries of ASEAN would

      remain firmly allied to America and Western interests. McMahon

      (1999) concludes that “in the most fundamental sense, America’s fail-

      ures stemmed from its gross violations of nearly all the classic rules of

      warfare.”17

      Of all of America’s military ventures in ASEAN, Vietnam stands

      out as the most glaring example of the failure of U.S. intelligence to

      understand the nature and character of ASEAN politics and the people

      of the region. The Vietnam conflict also became the rallying point for

      anti-American pro-democracy activists in the neighboring countries of

      ASEAN, as it was used as a major political issue by student move-

      ments, Islamist groups, and pro-democracy NGOs in Thailand, Malaysia,

      and Indonesia. Compared to Vietnam, America was more successful

      in its attempt to construct a string of puppet regimes under its thumb

      in another ASEAN country, the Philippines.

      * * *

      220

      F arish A. Noor

      The Philippines: A Long Line of Washington’s

      Puppets on a String

      I walked into the White House and I am not ashamed to tell you that I

      prayed to Almighty God for light and guidance. One night it came to

      me this way . . . there was nothing left for us to do but to take (the

      Philippines), and to educate the Filipinos, and uplift and civilize and

      Christianize them.

      American President McKinley speaking in 1899

      Quoted in William Blum Killing Hope: U.S. Military

      and CIA Interventions Since World War II

      (Monroe: Common Courage Press, 1995)

      The Philippines is unique in ASEAN in one vital respect: it was the

      only ASEAN country that had been a colony of the United States and

      was, therefore, the country where the American stamp was most visible

      and deeply felt.

      American involvement in the Philippines began in the late nineteenth

      century when America needed a trading post in Asia to guarantee the

      free movement of resources between Asia and the American West

      coast. After its failed attempts to gain permanent and signifi-

      cant influence in Japan, Korea, and China, America began to look

      to Southeast Asia for an alternative. The opportunity came with the

      American–Spanish War that led to the defeat of the Spanish and the

      loss of their colony, the Philippines.

      America’s involvement in the Philippines began soon after the

      Spanish were defeated and forced to leave their colony in 1898. By

      1899, American leaders like President William McKinley were openly

      declaring that the United States had the right and the obligation to

      intervene in Filipino affairs, and McKinley even went as far as justifying

      America’s imperial adventure by citing divine providence. The American

      government under McKinley openly spoke of the virtues of imperialism

      when addressing the Philippine question. The Philippines was bought

      from Spain at the cost of US$20 million, and a force of 50,000 American

      troops was dispatched to the country to “restore law and order.” They

      soon encountered fierce resistance from the Moros of the southern

      Philippines, who did not take too kindly to the idea that they had been

      “sold” by Spain and “bought” by the Americans.

      The Americans attempted the strategy of indirect rule when dealing

      with the Moros of Sulu and Mindanao in southern Philippines, and

      this was embodied in the Bates agreement signed between the Americans

      and the Sultan of Sulu in 1899. The Bates agreement was, however,

      unilaterally abrogated by the Americans in 1905 when they began to

      * * *

      Uncle Sam to the Rescue?

      221

      intervene directly in matters of government in the Moro sultanates.

      The Syrian-born Christian American agent for Moro affairs, Najeeb M.

      Saleeby, then proposed a new policy of tutelage and patronage that

      would integrate the next generation of Moro leaders. This resulted in

      the creation of a younger generation of Moro leaders who later became

      civil servants, lawyers, and merchants in the American colony.18

      The Americans revised their own policy toward the Moros and

      attempted to woo some of the Moro leaders to their cause. The polit-

      ical reforms they introduced were intended to help assimilat
    e the Moro

      communities and to give the traditional Moro leaders a place and

      status in the colonial administrative system they intended to set up.

      But attempts to introduce Western education and to disarm the Moros

      merely provoked them further, leading to even more conflicts. The

      five-day Battle of Bud Bagsak (where American troops were com-

      manded by Gen. John J. Pershing) in 1913, led to massive Moro losses.

      An estimated 500–2000 Moros were killed by the end of the battle.19

      The Moros resisted American attempts to assimilate them to the end,

      and some of the Moro leaders even sent their petition to the American

      Congress in Washington. The Americans’ treatment of the Moros

      hardly improved and when the Philippine Republic finally proclaimed

      its independence on July 4, 1946, the new post-colonial government

      invariably inherited the “Moro problem,” which the Americans (and

      Spanish before them) had helped to create.

      In 1935, the Americans created the self-governing Commonwealth

      of the Philippines, but it remained under indirect control of the United

      States and a colony of America. America propped up a number of pro-

      American cronies and puppet leaders as representatives to the Philippine

      government, and promised independence in 1945, but this was inter-

      rupted by the Japanese invasion during World War II.

      On July 4, 1946, the Philippines was finally granted its independ-

      ence, on the same date as the U.S. independence day. This, in itself,

      showed how the Philippines remained under American influence even

      after it gained its nominal independence. American political, military,

      and business interests remained in the Philippines, and Filipino inde-

      pendence remained cosmetic and fictional. The United States remained

      the de facto power behind the Philippine government and returned to

      its policy of selecting and promoting crony Filipino leaders, who

      would serve U.S. interests in the country and the region.

      The first obstacle the Americans encountered was the Philippine

      Communist Party (PCP), which had been formed in the 1940s and

      had fought against the Japanese alongside the Hukbalahap (People’s

      Army against Japan) that was formed in 1942. American opposition to

      * * *

      222

      F arish A. Noor

      the PCP and Huk forces was based on ideological grounds: both the

      PCP and Huks were left-leaning nationalists who included in their

      political agenda a land reform program that the Americans wanted to

      scuttle. In the post-war period, U.S. forces helped to reinstall tradi-

      tional Filipino leaders and the feudal elite, who were used in the cam-

      paign to undermine the Huk forces.20 The Americans were backing

      right-wing pro-American Filipino leaders to ensure that the new gov-

      ernment in Manila would always follow the American line.

      Between 1945 and 1947, the Philippine-U.S. Trade Act and

      Philippine-U.S. Military Agreement were passed. The latter provided

      the Americans with 23 military bases in the country, and the lease was

      meant to last for 99 years. The pact also ensured that the Philippines

      could not turn to any other country for military aid and training, and

      the Philippine government was not allowed to buy even a single bullet

      from any other country without permission from Washington.21 In

      1950, the United States provided the Philippines with $US500 million

      worth of military assistance. The Joint U.S. Military Advisory Group

      (JUSMAG) helped to reorganize the Philippine intelligence services,

      and put their man Ramon Magsaysay as its new head. Magsaysay

      would later be elevated to the position of president of the Philippines,

      with the help of the United States and its covert intelligence units in

      the Philippines.

      President Ramon Magsaysay was widely regarded as “America’s

      boy” in the Philippines. In the 1950s, he was made the head of the

      Philippines Intelligence Services by the Americans who regarded him

      as a loyal and trustworthy ally on whom they could depend. The man

      behind the rise of Ramon Magsaysay was Lt.-Col. Edward G. Landsdale,

      who was the head of the CIA in the Philippines and advisor to the

      JUSMAG. Landsdale formed the Philippines Civil Affairs Office (CAO)

      that engaged in psychological warfare against the Philippine Communist

      Party (PCP) and other nationalist groups.

      Through the CAO, the CIA intervened directly in Filipino affairs,

      shaping public opinion and developing the image and popularity of

      Magsaysay. In 1953, Magsaysay won the presidential elections with

      the help of the CAO and CIA, and Landsdale would later claim that it

      was he who “invented Magsaysay.”22 Under constant watch and

      supervision, Magsaysay proved to be a loyal servant to American inter-

      ests: his speeches were written and vetted by Landsdale and the CAO.

      On one occasion, it was reported that Landsdale had even beaten

      Magsaysay and knocked the new president of the Philippines uncon-

      scious for not doing as he was told.23 During Magsaysay’s term of

      office, the United States managed to deepen and strengthen its grip

      * * *

      Uncle Sam to the Rescue?

      223

      on the Philippine economy and political system even further. American

      companies behaved as if the Philippines was a U.S. colony, and exploited

      the Filipinos as a captive market and source of cheap labor and resources.

      Magsaysay would later die in a plane crash in 1957, after which he was

      replaced by another American crony, Diosdado Macapagal.24

      Diosdado Macapagal (father to the present Philippines president

      Gloria Arroyo Macapagal) began his career as a nationalist Filipino

      politician who struggled for the national liberation of his country.

      During the 1940s and 1950s, he campaigned for Philippine independ-

      ence and attempted to mobilize popular support against the Americans

      who had returned to the Philippines after World War II. During the

      presidency of Ramon Magsaysay, Macapagal was one of the most vocal

      critics of the Magsaysay government, accusing the president of being

      a hostage to American business and military interests. By then,

      the American presence in the Philippines was overpowering (the

      CIA had helped to run and organize Magsaysay’s successful 1953

      election campaign) and Filipino politics was virtually run by the

      American-created CAO headed by the CIA operative Lt.-Col. Edward G.

      Landsdale.

      After Magsaysay’s death, the Americans began courting the support

      of Macapagal, who was then working with the Americans by providing

      them with information about the communists and other dissident

      groups in the country. The Americans, in turn, responded by taking

      Macapagal under their wing and offering him political and financial

      support. Through the CAO, the CIA was able to support and sustain

      Macapagal’s election campaign in 1961. After winning the presidential

      elections in 1961 with U.S. support, Macapagal proved to be another

      loyal crony to American interests in the Philippines. The Macapagal

      administration was heavily influenced by Western and, especial
    ly,

      American interests. Macapagal signed more agreements that gave

      American companies the right to exploit Philippine resources and

      dominate the Philippine economy.

      Despite his weakness and lack of popular support, Macapagal

      wanted to promote the Philippines as a major country within

      Southeast Asia. To this end, he promoted the idea of Maphilindo—

      the merging of Malaya, the Philippines, and Indonesia. But the idea of

      Maphilindo was not widely supported, and in 1963, the Federation of

      Malaysia was created with the incorporation of the North Kalimantan

      states of Sabah and Sarawak instead. Macapagal used this as a pretext

      to declare hostilities against Malaysia. Macapagal’s leadership was

      weak and his U-turn during the Konfrontasi crisis made him look even

      weaker. In the same year that Sukarno was toppled, Macapagal was

      * * *

      224

      F arish A. Noor

      voted out of office and this led to the rise of America’s longest-serving

      crony and puppet in the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos.

      Along with the other U.S.-backed leader President Suharto of

      Indonesia, Ferdinand Marcos ranked as one of the worst dictators in

      the world, as well as one of the closest allies of the United States. It

      was during the time of Marcos (1965–1986) that U.S.-Philippine

      interests coincided most closely, and when U.S. economic, military,

      and strategic links were strengthened. Ferdinand Marcos’s period of

      rule witnessed the biggest volume of American aid and investment

      into the country ever: between 1962 and 1983, the American gov-

      ernment gave more than $US3 billion to the Philippine government

      in terms of investment aid and military support. The Philippines,

      which was also a major ally of the West during the Cold War, also

      received $US4 billion in aid from international bodies like the World

      Bank. Apart from that, the Philippine economy was also opened up

      and liberalized for foreign capital penetration, thanks to the structural

      adjustment policies imposed by international financial advisory bodies

      like the International Monetary Fund (IMF). From 1965 to 1970,

      Marcos took the country down the road of extensive social, educa-

      tional, and economic reform. Like his predecessors Magsaysay and

     


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