THE TOOLS OF DEATH SQUAD DEMOCRACY
by
Roland G. Simbulan
(Book Review of OPLAN BANTAY LAYA: THE
U.S.-ARROYO CAMPAIGN OF TERROR AND COUNTERINSURGENCY IN THE
PHILIPPINES,Balay Internasyunal, U.P. Diliman, July 29, 2010)
Ibon Foundation has
published a book that explores the deady tools of our death squad
democracy. The ingredients and elements of a classic
Third World
country are there : A selfish, pro-Western oligarchy that has almost
complete control and influence over state power and institutions. Weak
and compromised government institutions that cannot render real justice
to the weak, and where we see institutionalized impunity to human
rights, corruption and abuse of power. Lack of basic social services or
even decent social security net. An economic and political system that
basically preserves the power and dominance of the local elite and their
foreign corporate counterparts in tapping the natural and human
resources of a rich country with a predominantly poor majority.
This book examines how this
situation is preserved despite people's resistance and struggles for a
better life. It examines the emergence of the U.S.-inspired Oplan Bantay
Laya (1 & 2) during the Arroyo administration. This
counter-insurgency program was used to combat people's opposition not
only to the detested Arroyo administration, but also to combat
revolutionary nationalism challenging U.S.
interests in the country.
The book tries to provide
answers to key questions like:
1. What makes Oplan Bantay Laya distinct from past,
failed counter-insurgency programs of previous administrations ?
2. What is the
U.S.
role in the formulation and implementation of Oplan Bantay Laya?
3. How does OBL compare with other past and present
U.S.
counterinsurgency campaigns, especially those ongoing in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
This book tries to fill in these gaps.
The four major parts of the book: Oplan Bantay Laya,
U.S. Counter-Insurgency Strategy, Impacts and Implications, and
Unfinished Agenda, all weave together a tightly-knit reference on what
is in fact a country case study of another failed counter-insurgency
strategy and its impact on the Philippines.
If you have watched
Christopher Nolan's latest film, "Inception", you will find that "almost
every dream is like a nightmare and you wake up just when you are killed
or fatally shot in your dream." Oplan Bantay Laya is not the only
nightmare. Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, Norberto Gonzales, Jovito
Palparan, et al are also part of the 9-year nightmare that devastated
our nation for the past nine years, causing untold bloodletting and
damage to life, liberty and safety to the people.
The canvas on which the various
authors in this book paint their chapters is splattered with the trail
of blood and sickening horror of the extra-judicial and disappeared
victims of Oplan Bantay Laya, the latest failed but nevertheless, deadly
counterinsurgency campaign to inflict our people.
A major contribution of
this book is that it firmly establishes the
U.S.
role in OBL, that is, as part of the
U.S.
strategy of suppressing revolutionary nationalism and insurgency. It
investigates the tentacles of imperial America
in directing, advising the political assassination of progressive mass
leaders and their sympathizers whose only crime was to work for
meaningful social reforms in our society.
Though there is a lot of
rhetoric and even a written blueprint for counterinsurgency to focus on
socio-economic measures to address poverty that is at the root of the
armed insurgency and conflict, on the ground, the battlefield approach
is still the dominant approach. The Armed Forces of the
Philippines,
the Philippine National Police and the paramilitaries are still the main
agencies for counterinsurgency pursuing military objectives. The
killings of unarmed social movement leaders, members and sympathizers
can only exacerbate the conflict and further feed the flames of armed
insurgency.
After Sept. 11, 2001, with
the U.S.
already thinly spread out in its direct military invasion and occupation
of Iraq
and
Afghanistan, Oplan
Bantay Laya emerges as the alternative strategy to achieve U.S.
foreign policy objectives in the Philippines.
The local insurgency and the Muslim secessionist struggle - long in
existence since the late 60s - are transformed into a " war on terror".
The Pentagon bankrolls a Philippine Defense Reform Program where it
directs the entire counterinsurgency program and structure of the Armed
Forces of the Philippines,
which now includes Bantay Laya.
Multi-dimensional but
essentially political/ psychological in nature, Oplan Bantay Laya or OBL
disguised U.S. intervention and covert operations in targeted areas in
the country by introducing USAID- funded piece-meal community services,
disaster relief and infrastructure, while selectively assassinating
local activists and leaders. The tools in this counterinsurgency kit -
now also used widely in Iraq
and Afghanistan
-- include a combination of community/social programs, but it also
includes their "special ops " which is to strip out mid-level leaders
and coordinators of militant mass movements whom they believe are part
of the "political infrastructure" of the armed insurgency.
The public is also
targeted by psychological operations to achieve support and demonize
targeted sectors. However, the role of Fr. Romeo "Archie" Intengan's
indoctrination of soldiers to eliminate all communists, and the Norberto
Gonzales - Palparan tandem in the creation of "privatized"
anti-communist death squads with the tolerance and support of the
AFP/PNP, need to be further explored.
But counterinsurgency campaigns
of terror that target unarmed people's advocates can only further
radicalize--not terrorize -- the people as is the intention, especially
those in the rural areas. The command structure of the military, police
and security forces are guilty of these dastardly activities, when they
tolerate and encourage these crimes, and where no one is arrested or
prosecuted. Police and meticulous detective work is necessary for the
prosecution of those responsible.
I would have wanted to see
included in this book an analyis of the U.S. Special Forces
Counter-insurgency Manual which is one of the classified Pentagon
documents leaked to WikiLeaks.com It has the title,
FOREIGN INTERNAL DEFENSE TACTICS, TECHNIQUES AND
PROCEDURES FOR SPECIAL FORCES
(1994, 2004 ). What is very revealing is that the manual refers to
itself as about, " what the U.S.
learned about using death squads and propping up corrupt governments in
Latin America
and how to apply it in other places."
The template and model that the manual uses is El Salvador where
killings and torturing were done by the U.S.-backed army and right wing
death squads affiliated with it, until the paramilitaries themselves got
out of hand that it raped even American missionary nuns who were stopped
at a checkpoint, causing massive outrage in the United States. According
to a 2001 report of Amnesty International, many
U.S.
-backed right wing governments through their military and paramilitary
death squads " committed extra-judical executions, other unlawful
killings, disappearances and torture."
A whole gamut of
agreements keep the AFP (and even the PNP) under the thumb of the United
States: the Mutual Defense Treaty, the Military Assistance Agreement,
the Visiting Forces Agreement, the Mutual Logistics and Support
Agreement, the Security Engagement Board Agreement. The book takes
and hard look at the tentacles of Imperial America and the
mechanisms of U.S. influence and control from the JUSMAG and the USAID
projects concentrated in areas of unrest most contested by insurgency
and the Muslim rebellion. Today, an entire contingent of 600 U.S.
Special Operations Forces composed of elite SEALS and Ranger Teams
provide direction, advise, training, intelligence and even surgical
combat operations to many of the AFP's front-line battalions all over
the country.
The selection of so-called "quality
targets" who are identified for political assassination,
abduction, and disappearances can only rely heavily on battlefield
intelligence and order of battle lists. This has been upgraded with CIA
up-country advisers and U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) technicians
who assist to improve the record-keeping ability of the Philippine armed
and intelligence services though the provision of special computers.This
monitors, records and classifies the rivers of digitized intelligence
information that flow throughout the country.
This book outlines the
nature of OBL and its different forms, and identifies the local and
foreign "agencies" that actually implement it in both lethal and
non-lethal forms. It studies the emergence and evolution of
U.S.
counterinsurgency doctrine and argues that it is also very much
operative in the
Philippines.
In so doing, it argues that counterinsurgency programs such as the OBL
are not
intentionally formulated and applied for the Philippines,
but other places as well. The dirty wars in Latin America launched by
military dictators whose armies were trained and armed by the Pentagon
and CIA to suppress progressive movements, and the Operation Phoenix in
Vietnam which liquidated as many as 40,000 unarmed suspects in the
political infrastructure of the South Vietnam National Liberation Front,
to the US training of the Indonesian Kopassus (Army Special Forces
Command) which abducted and killed many Indonesian farmers, workers and
intellectuals during the Suharto military dictatorship -- all testify
that other places besides the Philippines had been testing grounds for
this counterinsurgency doctrine -- perhaps with other names.
Counterinsurgency doctrine
simultaneously evolved in different locations as a product of similar
factors as the various U.S. administrations groped for ways of combating
revolutionary nationalism (both Islamic, Marxist and secular), in the
Third World. During the Arroyo administration, OBL and
U.S.
counterinsurgency strategy gained cohesion over time with recognition
and acceptance that its seemingly unrelated components constitute a
political / psychological strategy for achieving U.S.
objectives. But what about the role of other
U.S.
allies like
Australia and Israel,
among others, whose operatives and special forces are also now actively
involved in honing and assisting in local counterinsurgency operations?
OBL was eventually
elevated to the status of a de facto national security strategy by the
Arroyo administration, which in attempting to justify its illegal stay
in power, gave this strategy an overt profile with ideological cohesion
and rationale provided by such rabid clerico-fascists like Fr. Archie
Intengan and his disciple Norberto Gonzales. In this sense, the
Arroyo administration was itself an expression of OBL. For this
Arroyo will be remembered as as extrajudicial killer as expressed by
OBL-- distinctly stamping our own brand of death squad democracy.
I have always
believed that the state can either be a very repressive apparatus that
can cause so much misery and suffering to the people, or, if redirected,
it can be placed in the hands of an enlightened people to serve its ends
and national interests.
How do we make our
government and armed forces work for us instead of being our oppressors
and enemies? Transparency and accountability in government are necessary
to monitor and check abuses, as well as to make civilian and military
agencies accountable for actions that they do. There is a need for more
oversight and reform measures on the following:
1. The misuse of military and
intelligence funds, not only those under the DND/PNP, but also those
under "contingency funds" of the Office of the President, line
departments, and local governments.
2. Local intelligence
should likewise also be directed at monitoring
U.S.
intervention in the country as well as other foreign agencies..
3. There should be
transparency in sensitive issues as national security to curb abuse of
power and authority and so they cannot mislead or undermine our very own
people's security.
4.The Commission on Audit should
be tasked to carefully audit any intelligence program, a power COA
never had.
The victims of Oplan
Bantay Laya await justice, and we all expect that justice be
rendered from the new administration that has promised to bring the
perpetrators to the bar of justice.
Maybe it would be a kind
of redemption if we could unify as a nation against the real enemies of
national sovereignty who have divided us through their divide and rule
tactics, in order to dominate us. Better still, it would be a kind
redemption if justice was rendered to all the victims and the
extra-judicial masterminds were punished.
The prospects for peace
are always there as they have always been there. If the rest of the
developing world is any guide, economic development that benefits the
majority of the people is the best road map to lasting peace.
Overall, the book is a major
contribution to the literature on the impact of the
U.S.-
directed counter-insurgency policy, and how and why the old recycled
approaches have failed. I hope that the counter-insurgents in the new
administration will not fail to read it.
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