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http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/jul2004/phil-j16.shtml
Philippines government to withdraw troops from Iraq
By Laura Tiernan
16 July 2004

In another blow to the Bush administration and its occupation of Iraq, the
Philippines government, one of the staunchest US allies in the "war on
terror", has begun withdrawing its military contingent. The pullout from
Iraq-one month ahead of a mandated August 20 exit date-came despite
top-level appeals from US officials that the troops remain.

Philippine Foreign Secretary Delia Albert announced the withdrawal on
Wednesday, declaring: "The Foreign Ministry is co-ordinating the pullout of
the humanitarian contingent with the Ministry of Defence. As of today, our
head count is down from 51 to 43."

Her brief statement came amid a deepening political crisis for President
Gloria Arroyo Macapagal, provoked by the kidnapping of a Filipino contract
worker in Iraq. Angelo de la Cruz, a 46-year-old father of eight was taken
hostage last week as he was driving a truckload of crude oil from Saudi
Arabia through Fallujah.

In a video released July 7, an Islamic terrorist group calling itself the
Khaled bin Al-Waleed Brigade, demanded the Philippine government remove its
troops by July 20 or de la Cruz would be executed. Screened on Al-Jazeera
television, the footage showed de la Cruz surrounded by three armed men
wearing balaclavas.

A second video released three days later carried a plea to Arroyo from de la
Cruz: "I beg you to withdraw the troops from Iraq."

Within days, de la Cruz's capture became the focus for antiwar sentiment in
the Philippines, fuelling demands for an immediate end to its troop
commitment in Iraq. Millions attended church services across the country,
with Catholics and Muslims coming together to pray for his release. In Hong
Kong, Filipinos demonstrated Sunday outside the Philippine consulate. Two
days of protests followed in Manila, despite a media blackout imposed by
Arroyo, with hundreds dispersed by police water-cannon. Placards included,
"De la Cruz: Victim of Poverty" and "Stop supporting US war!"

Angelo De la Cruz's relatives also urged the president to act. De la Cruz
travelled to Saudi Arabia for work after lengthy unemployment. According to
Reuters, his niece, Wilma de la Cruz told a press conference: "Mrs Arroyo
should make a firm stand. She should save my uncle's life and not consider
what benefits she might get from supporting the US war in Iraq."

This antiwar sentiment is rooted in the bitter historical experience of the
Philippines and is linked inextricably to the most basic social problems
facing the Filipino masses. A US colony until 1946, the archipelago remains
beholden to US economic interests. More than $3.4 billion in direct
investment flowed into the country from the US last year. Eight out of ten
Filipinos live on less than $US2 a day and about 40 percent of the
population lives below the official poverty line. Unemployment, currently at
11 percent is steadily rising.

De la Cruz is one of eight million Filipinos who have been forced to seek
work abroad. Most are contract labourers and house servants, with an
estimated 1.4 million stationed in the Middle East. Overseas Filipino
Workers (OFWs) are often employed in dangerous and backbreaking work. Their
status is akin to that of slaves because they lack the protections afforded
to citizens and because UN and ILO conventions governing working conditions
have not been ratified in many of the backward Gulf states.

The plight of overseas Filipinos resonates throughout the country. Popular
support for de la Cruz recalls the events of March 1995 when a Filipino maid
was convicted of murder and executed in Singapore. Mass demonstrations
protesting her innocence and condemning the inhumane treatment of OFWs swept
the Philippines with two senior ministers forced to resign.

The reactionary nature of the Khaled bin Al-Waleed Brigade is underscored by
the fact that they have captured and threatened to execute de la Cruz, who
represents one of the most oppressed sections of the international working
class.

White House officials were caught off-guard by the Philippines troop
withdrawal. Prior to the hostage crisis, it was widely reported that Arroyo
was preparing to extend her country's troop commitment to Iraq. Instead, the
Philippines is following in the wake of Spain, which withdrew its contingent
just four months ago following the Madrid bombings and subsequent fall of
the conservative Aznar government.

Since the September 11 attacks on the US, the Philippines president has
aggressively promoted herself as Asia's leading proponent of the "war on
terrorism". She backed Washington's military aggression in Afghanistan and
Iraq and allowed US troops to operate in the Philippines against Islamic
separatist rebels in southern Mindanao. In addition, a Military Logistics
and Support Agreement (MLSA) gave the US military extensive storage and
other facilities in the country for the first time since the Clark Airfield
and Subic Bay naval base were closed in 1992.

These moves provoked protests in the Philippines where there is deep-rooted
antagonism to the former colonial power and its heavy handed methods. But
Arroyo ignored popular sentiment and maintained the military arrangements.
In return, the US provided substantial military and financial aid to prop up
her administration and the heavily indebted economy.

It is a measure of the domestic opposition to her policies that Arroyo is
now prepared to risk her close relationship with the US-and her political
future-by defying the Bush administration.

Over the last week, Arroyo has attempted a desperate balancing act between
the demands of Washington and political sentiment at home. After talks
between US Secretary of State Colin Powell and Arroyo on Sunday, Philippine
Foreign Affairs spokesman Gilberto Asuque announced on Monday there were no
plans to withdraw the troops by the July 20 deadline. National Security
Advisor Norberto Gonzales echoed this, saying any troop withdrawal before
August 20 would harm the nation's international standing.

But Arroyo, who was inaugurated on June 30 after a narrow election victory,
faced the prospect of mounting disaffection which threatened her presidency.
An op-ed piece in the Philippines Star indicated what was at stake:
"President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo does not or refuses to understand the
magnitude of the crisis now spreading over the Philippines. If Angelo de la
Cruz should die any hour now in Baghdad, the nation will turn on her as it
would on a riptide and seek to eject [her] from power."

On Tuesday, Foreign Undersecretary Rafael Seguis read a statement on Al
Jazeera television promising that Philippine troops would be withdrawn "as
soon as possible". But his message was ambiguous and officials refused to
confirm a withdrawal by the deadline. The White House responded with its
standard refrain that any troop withdrawal would "send the wrong signal to
terrorists" and the US State Department called for "clarification".

The announcement on Wednesday of a Philippine withdrawal provoked an angry
response from the US, as well as denials that its "international coalition"
was breaking apart. All of Washington's allies, however, confront similar
pressures from antiwar opposition at home.

Spain, Honduras, Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic have already pulled
their troops. Thailand and New Zealand are set to exit in September. By
Thursday the Bush administration was in damage control, claiming to have
increased troop pledges from El Salvador and Australia. After meeting with
Mongolia's president on Thursday, Bush declared that the continued presence
of 130 Mongolian troops in Iraq showed the strength of the multinational
effort.

As for the Philippines, the message was clear. Asked if US-Philippines
relations would be affected by Arroyo's decision, US State Department
spokesman Richard Boucher replied menacingly, "we'll have to see".






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www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substanceâ??not soap-boxingâ??please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'â??with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright fraudsâ??is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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