The U.S. Military Just
Plunged Philippine Politics into Crisis
American fingerprints are all over a
botched commando raid in the southern
Philippines that left dozens dead and
shocked the country.
By Walden Bello
March 18, 2015 "ICH"
- "FPIF"
- Early in the morning of January 25,
commandos belonging to the Special
Action Force of the Philippine National
Police crept into the southern town of
Mamasapano — a stronghold of the
separatist Moro Islamic Liberation
Front. The elite Seaborne Unit had come
for Zulkifli Abdhir, a Malaysian bomb
maker better known as “Marwan.”
By the end of the
morning, dozens lay dead.
The episode has
severely discredited the administration
of Philippine President Benigno Aquino
III, jeopardized decades of progress on
peace talks with Moro separatists, and
underlined the perils for developing
world governments that put themselves at
the beck and call of Washington.
The commandos were
able to kill Marwan, who’d sat high on
the FBI’s list of “Most Wanted
Terrorists.” But then all hell broke
loose. The insurgents woke up and opened
fire on the intruders, forcing the
commandos to leave Marwan’s body behind.
They had to content themselves with
cutting off the corpse’s index finger to
turn over to the FBI.
As they retreated,
nine of the Seaborne commandoes were
killed. They radioed for help, but they
were told that the “Quick Reaction
Force” charged with covering their
withdrawal was already pinned down in a
flat cornfield with little cover. Over
the next few hours, that separate unit
of 36 men was picked off one-by-one by
Moro snipers. Only one of the 36
survived, by running for his life and
jumping into a nearby river.
All in all, 44
policemen died in the bloody battle.
Moro fighters estimated that 18 of their
combatants and about four civilians were
killed.
A timely rescue effort
was not even mounted, since an infantry
battalion in the area wasn’t informed
till late in the morning that the
commandos were under fire. When
ceasefire monitors finally reached the
cornfield late in the afternoon, long
after the battle ended, they found
corpses that had been stripped of their
weapons and other gear, some exhibiting
wounds that indicated they had been shot
at point-blank range.
Biggest
Casualty: Moro Autonomy
The “Mamasapano
Massacre,” as it has come to be called,
upended Philippine politics.
The biggest casualty
was the Bangsa Moro Basic Law that was
in the last stages of being shepherded
through the Philippine Congress. Known
as the “BBL,” the bill was the product
of nearly five years of intensive
negotiations between the government and
the Moro Islamic Liberation Front to put
an end to almost 50 years of fighting in
the southern Philippines. It would have
created an autonomous region for the
Muslim Moros, a fiercely independent
people that have long resisted
integration into the broader Filipino
polity.
With emotions among
the Christian majority running high,
congressional approval of the BBL was
thrown into doubt, threatening an
eventual return to hostilities. Some
politicians rode on the incident to
stoke the latent anti-Muslim prejudices
of the dominant culture — not just to
derail prospects for Moro autonomy, but
also to advance their own political
ambitions.
Under congressional
questioning, the facts of the raid were
extracted piece by piece — on national
television — from high administration
officials. Their feelings seemed to run
the gamut of guilt, grief, disbelief,
and resentment at not being “in the
know” about the planned incursion.
The decisive element
in the unraveling of the operation, it
appears, was the deliberate withholding
of information from key people at the
top of the police and armed forces
hierarchy. Only the president, the
Special Action Force commander, and the
national police chief, General Alan
Purisima, knew about the mission. Though
suspended from office on corruption
charges, Purisima — a trusted aide of
the president — was effectively in
charge of the operation, bypassing the
acting police chief and the secretary of
the interior, who knew nothing of the
mission until disaster overtook it.
Emerging in the
hearings was the following portrait of
the tragedy: The officials who conceived
and implemented the operation to nab
Marwan chose not to inform the top
people in the police and military
leadership. They also ignored and
subverted the carefully negotiated
procedures for territorial access worked
out among the Moro Islamic Liberation
Front, the government, and third-party
monitors.
The Liberation Front
fighters — along with fighters from a
die-hard separatist group, the Bangsa
Moro Islamic Freedom Fighters —
responded that morning to what they
perceived as a large invasion force.
Once the battle began, it became very
difficult for their leaders to realize
the intent of the commando contingent
and get their forces to disengage.
It seemed evident,
too, that some wounded policemen were
finished off execution-style, though it
was not clear which group was
responsible for these atrocities.
Washington’s
Hand
The big puzzle for
many was why a government that was in
the last stages of negotiating an
autonomy agreement to end 50 years of
warfare would endanger this goal — said
to be a major legacy priority for
President Aquino — with a large-scale
commando intrusion into Moro territory
without informing its negotiating
partner.
To an increasing
number of people, the answer must have
something to do with Washington.
Indeed, Washington’s
fingerprints were all over the
operation: There was a $5-million bounty
placed by the Americans on Marwan’s
head. A U.S. military helicopter
appeared in the area after the long
firefight, allegedly to help evacuate
the wounded. Marwan’s finger disappeared
after the battle and showed up at an FBI
lab in the United States a few days
later.
Filipino officials
have remained tight-lipped on the
question of U.S. participation in the
raid, invoking “national security” or
choosing to make revelations only in
secret executive sessions with the
Senate. Thus it has fallen on the media
to probe the U.S. role.
Perhaps the most
reliable of these probes was conducted
by the Philippine Daily Inquirer,
which found that U.S. drones had
pinpointed Marwan’s hiding place, guided
the commandos to it, and provided the
capability for real-time management by
the Philippine commanders away from the
battlefield. American advisers, the
paper claimed, were the ones who had
vetoed informing top officials of the
police, the armed forces, and the
Liberation Front of the planned raid on
the grounds that news of the action
would be leaked to Marwan.
Finally, the original
plan was to have a fused team of
Seaborne Unit commandos and the Quick
Reaction Force. But that was reportedly
rejected by the American advisers, who
favored having the Seaborne Unit carry
out the raid itself and the Quick
Reaction Force provide cover — a plan
that proved disastrous. The Seaborne
Unit, it emerged, had been trained by
“retired” Navy Seals and functioned as
the Americans’ special unit within the
special forces of the Philippine
National Police.
The full extent of
U.S. involvement remains to be
unearthed, but it’s now clear to many
that taking out Marwan was a major
priority for Washington — not Manila. As
one congressman put it, the Mamasapano
tragedy was a case of “the Americans
fighting to the last Filipino.”
Into the
Bunker
As the details of the
American role emerge, the pressure is on
President Aquino to admit complicity in
a Washington-directed operation, which
he has so far refused to do.
Aquino has come under
intense fire from nationalist quarters
that earlier criticized him for
negotiating a military pact that allows
the United States to
use Philippine bases to implement
President Obama’s so-called “Pivot to
Asia” strategy to contain China.
Already under attack
for putting a suspended police general
in charge of the fatal mission and
refusing to admit command responsibility
for it, the charge of laying down
Filipino lives for an American scheme
appears to have forced the president
further into his bunker, creating the
widespread impression of a drift in
leadership that, it was feared, coup
plotters and other adventurers — of
which there is no shortage in the
Philippines — could take advantage of.
There is a personal
postcript to this. As a sitting member
of the Philippine House of
Representatives, I withdrew my political
support for President Aquino when he
refused to accept command responsibility
for the operation. Since my party
Akbayan remains allied to the
administration, I resigned as the
congressional representative of the
party.