“A
howling wilderness” was what General Jacob Smith ordered his
troops to make of Samar, Philippines. He was taking revenge for the
ambush of fifty-four soldiers by Filipino revolutionaries in
September 1901. After the invaders killed most of the island’s
inhabitants, three bells from the Balangiga Church were looted as war
trophies; two are still displayed at Warren Air Force Base, Cheyenne,
Wyoming. Very few Americans know this. Nor would they have any clue
about the 1913 massacre of thousands of Muslim women, men and
children resisting General Pershing’s systematic destruction of
their homes in Mindanao where President Rodrigo Duterte today
resides.
Addressing this dire amnesia
afflicting the public, both in the Philippines and abroad,
newly-elected president Duterte began the task of evoking/invoking
the accursed past. He assumed the role of oral tribune, with
prophetic expletives. Like the Filipino guerillas of Generals Lukban
and Malvar who retreated to the mountains (called “boondocks”
by American pursuers from the Tagalog word “bundok,”
mountain), Duterte seems to be coming down with the task of
reclaiming the collective dignity of the heathens— eulogized by
Rudyard Kipling, at the start of the war in February 1899, as “the
white men’s burden.” The first U.S. civil governor
William Howard Taft patronizingly adopted this burden of saving the
Filipino “little brown brother” as a benighted colonial
ward, not a citizen.
Mark Twain: “Thirty
Thousand Killed a Million”
The Filipino-American War of
1899-1913 occupies only a paragraph, at most, in most US texbooks, a
blip in the rise of the United States as an Asian Pacific Leviathan.
Hobbes’ figure is more applicable to
international rivalries than to predatory neoliberal capitalism
today, or to the urban jungle of MetroManila. At least 1.4 million
Filipinos (verified by historian Luzviminda Francisco) died as a
result of the scorched-earth policy of President McKinley. His armed
missionaries were notorious for Vietnam-style “hamletting.”
They also practised the “water-cure,” also known as
“water-boarding,” a form of torture now legitimized in a
genocidal war of terror (Iraq, Afghanistan) that recalls the ruthless
suppression of Native American tribes and dehumanization of African
slaves in the westward march of the “civilizing Krag” to
the Pacific, to the Chinese market. Today the struggle at Standing
Rock and Black-Lives-Matter are timely reminders. Stuart Creighton
Miller’s 1982 book, “Benevolent
Assimilation,” together with
asides by Gabriel Kolko and Howard Zinn, recounted the vicissitudes
of that bloody passage through Philippine boondocks and countryside.
Not everyone acquiesced to
Washington’s brutal annexation of the
island-colony. Mark Twain exposed the hypocrisy of Washington’s
“Benevolent Assimilation” with searing diatribes, as
though inventing the “conscience” of his generation.
William James, William Dean Howells, W.E.B. DuBois and other public
intellectuals denounced what turned out to be the “first
Vietnam” (Bernard Fall’s rubric).
It was a learning experience for the
conquerors. In Policing
America's Empire,
Alfred McCoy discovered that America’s “tutelage”
of the Filipino elite (involving oligarchic politicians of the
Commonwealth period up to Marcos and Aquino) functioned as a
laboratory for crafting methods of surveillance, ideological
manipulation, propaganda, and other modes of covert and overt
pacification. Censorship, mass arrests of suspected dissidents,
torture and assassination of “bandits” protesting
landlord abuses and bureaucratic corruption in the first three
decades of colonial rule led to large-scale killing of peasants and
workers in numerous Colorum and Sakdalista uprisings.
Re-Visiting the Cold War/War of
Terror
This pattern of racialized class
oppression via electoral politics and discipiinary pedagogy
culminated in the Cold War apparatus devised by CIA agent Edward
Lansdale and the technocrats of Magsasay to suppress the Huk
rebellion in the two decades after formal granting of independence in
1946. The machinery continued to operate in the savage extrajudicial
killings during the Marcos dictatorship up to Corazon Aquino’s
“total war” against nationalists, progressive priests and
nuns, Igorots, Lumads—all touted by Washington/Pentagon as the
price for enjoying democracy, free market, the right to gamble in the
capitalist casino. This constitutes the rationale for U.S.-supported
counterinsurgency schemes to shore up the decadent, if not moribund,
status quo—a society plagued by profound and seemingly durable
disparity of wealth and power—now impolitely challenged by
Duterte.
Not a single mass-media article on
Duterte’s intent to forge an independent
foreign policy and solve corruption linked to narcopolitics, provides
even an iota of historical background on the US record of colonial
subjugation of Filipino bodies and souls. This is not strange, given
the long history of Filipino “miseducation” documented by
Renato Constantino. Perhaps the neglect if not dismissal of the
Filipino collective experience is due to the indiscriminate
celebration of America’s success in making the natives speak
English, imitate the American Way of Life shown in Hollywood movies,
and indulge in mimicked consumerism.
What is scandalous is the complicity
of the U.S. intelligentsia (with few exceptions) in regurgitating the
“civilizing effect” of colonial
exploitation. Every time the Filipino essence is described as
violent, foolish, shrewd or cunning, the evidence displays the
actions of a landlord-politician, bureaucrat, savvy merchant,
U.S.-educated professional, or rich entrepreneur. Unequal groups
dissolve into these representative types: Quezon, Roxas, Magsaysay,
Fidel Ramos, etc. What seems ironic if not parodic is that after a
century of massive research and formulaic analysis of the colony’s
underdevelopment, we arrive at Stanley Karnow’s verdict
(amplified in In Our Image) that,
really, the Filipinos and their character-syndromes are to blame for
their poverty and backwardness, for not being smart beneficiaries of
American “good works.” “F—ck you,”
Duterte might uncouthly respond.
Hobbes or Che Guevarra?
An avalanche of media commentaries,
disingenously purporting to be objective news reports, followed
Duterte’s campaign to eradicate the endemic
drug addiction rampant in the country. No need to cite statistics
about the criminality of narcopolitics infecting the whole country,
from poor slum-dweller to Senators and moguls; let’s get down
to the basics. But the media, without any judicious assaying of
hearsay, concluded that Duterte’s policy—his public
pronouncement that bodies will float in Manila Bay, etc.—caused
the killing of innocent civilians. His method of attack impressed the
academics as Hobbesian, not Machiavellian. The journalistic
imperative to sensationalize and distort by selective framing
(following, of course, corporate norms and biases) governs the style
and content of quotidian media operations.
Is Duterte guilty of the alleged EJK
(extrajudicial killings)? No doubt, druglords and their police
accomplices took advantage of the policy to silence their minions.
This is the fabled “collateral damage”
bewailed by the bishops and moralists. But Obama, UN and local
pundits associated with the defeated parties seized on the cases of
innocent victims (two or three are more than enough, demonstrated by
the photo of a woman allegedly cradling the body of her husband,
blown up in Time (October
10) and in The Atlantic,
September issue, and social media) to teach Duterte a lesson on human
rights, due process, and genteel diplomatic protocols. This irked the
thin-skinned town mayor whose lack of etiquette, civility, and
petty-bourgeois decorum became the target of unctuous sermons.
Stigma for All Seasons:
“Anti-Americanism”
What finally gave the casuistic game
away, in my view, is the piece in the November issue of The
Atlantic by Jon Emont entitled "Duterte’s Anti-Americanism". What does
“anti-Americanism” mean—to be against McDonald
burgers, Beyonce, I-phones, Saturday Night Live, Lady Gaga,
Bloomingdale fashions, Wall Street, or Washington-Pentagon imperial
browbeating of inferior nations/peoples-of-color? The article points
to tell-tale symptoms: Duterte is suspending joint military
exercises, separating from U.S. govt foreign policy by renewing
friendly cooperation with China in the smoldering South China Sea,
and”veering” toward Russia for economic ties—in
short, promoting what will counter the debilitating, predatory U.S.
legacy.
Above all, Duterte is guilty of
diverging from public opinion, meaning the Filipino love for
Americans. He rejects US “security
guarantees,” ignores the $3 billion remittances of Filipinos
(presumably, relatives of middle and upper classes), the $13 million
given by the U.S. for relief of Yolanda typhoon victims in 2013.
Three negative testimonies against Duterte’s “anti-American
bluster” are used: 1) Asia Foundation official Steven Rood’s
comment that since most Filipinos don’t care about foreign
policy, “elites have considerable latitude,” that is,
they can do whatever pleases them. 2) Richard Javad Heydarian,
affiliated with De La Salle University, is quoted—this
professor is now a celebrity of the anti-Duterte cult—that
Duterte “can get away with it”; and, finally, Gen Fidel
Ramos who contends that the military top brass “like US
troops”—West-Point-trained Ramos has expanded on his
tirade against Duterte with the usual cliches of unruly client-state
leaders who turn against their masters, and seems ready to lead a
farcical version of the 1968 People Power revolt, one of the symptoms
of fierce internecine strife within the corrupt oligarchic bloc.
Like other anti-Duterte squibs, the
article finally comes up with the psychological diagnosis of
Duterte’s fixation on the case of the Davao
2002 bombing when a “supposed involvement of US officials”
who spirited a CIA-affiliated American bomber confirmed the Davao
mayor’s fondness for “stereotypes of superior meddling
America.” The judgment seems anticllimatic. What calls
attention will not be strange anymore: there is not a whisper of the
tortuous history of US imperial exercise of power on the subalterns.
This
polemic-cum-factoids culminates in a faux-folksy, rebarbative quip:
“Washington can tolerate a thin-skinned ally who bites the hand
that feeds him through crass invective.” The Washington
Post (Nov 2) quickly intoned its
approval by harping on Ramos’ defection as a sign of the local
elite’s displeasure. With Washington halting the sale of rifles
to the Philippine police because of Duterte’s human-rights
abuses, the Post warns
that $ 9 million military aid and $32 million funds for
law-enforcement will be dropped by Congress if Duterte doesn’t
stop his “anti-US rhetoric.” Trick or treat? Duterte
should learn that actions have consequences, pontificated this sacred
office of journalistic rectitude after the Halloween mayhem.
On this recycled issue of
“anti-Americanism,” the best riposte
is by Michael Parenti, from his incisive book Inventing Reality: The Politics of News Media: “The media dismiss
conflicts that arise between the United States and popular forces in
other countries as manifestations of the latter’s
“anti-Americanism”….When thousands marched in the
Philippines against the abominated US-supported Marcos regime, the
New York Times reported,
“Anti-Marcos and anti-American slogans and banners were in
abundance, with the most common being “Down with the US-Marcos
Dictatorship!” A week later, the Times
again described Filipino protests against US
support of the Marcos dictatorship as “anti-Americanism.”
The Atlantic, the
New York Times,and
the Washington Post share
an ideological-political genealogy with the Cold War paranoia
currentlygripping the U.S. ruling-class Establishment.
Predictably, the New
York Times (Nov. 3 issue) confirmed the
consensus that the US is not worried so much about the
“authoritarian” or “murderous ways of imposing law
and order” (Walden Bello’s labels; InterAksyon,
Oct 29) as they are discombobulated by Duterte’s rapproachment
with China. The calculus of U.S. regional hegemony was changed when
Filipino fishermen returned to fish around the Scarborough Shoal.
Duterte’s “bombastic one-man” show, his foul mouth,
his “authoritarian” pragmatism, did not lead to total
dependency on China nor diplomatic isolation. This pivot to China
panicked Washington, belying the Time
expert Carl Thayer who pontificated that Duterte
“can’t really stand up to China unless the US is backing
him” (Sept 15, 2016). A blowback occurred in the boondocks; the
thin-skinned “Punisher” and scourge of druglords
triggered a “howling wilderness” that exploded the
century-long stranglehold of global finance capitalism on the
islands. No need to waste time on more psychoanalysis of Duterte’s
motivation.
What the next US president would
surely do to restore its ascendancy in that region is undermine
Duterte’s popular base, fund a strategy of destabilization via
divide-and-rule (as in Chile, Yugoslavia, Ukraine), and incite its
volatile pro-American constituency to beat pots and kettles in the
streets of MetroManila.
This complex geopolitical situation
entangling the United States and its former colony/neocolony, cries
for deeper historical contextualization and empathy for the victims
lacking in the Western media demonization of Duterte and his
supporters, over 70% of a hundred million Filipinos in the
Philippines and in the diaspora.
Note: For further elaboration,
see Dr. San Juan's most recent books listed below.
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