From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: Philippines: Up To 1,000 US Troops To South

HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
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http://www.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/asiapcf/southeast/01/11/phil.sayyaf.us/index.h
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[How many birds can be killed with one anti-terrorism
stone?
And how much longer before the Clark Air Force and
Subic Naval bases are reactivated?]



Philippines debates more U.S. troops
By Rufi Vigilar

MANILA, Philippines (CNN) --The Philippine government
is considering a U.S. proposal to send a full military
battalion to the Southeast Asian nation's troubled
south.

A confidential source said the U.S. military
deployment could comprise "up to a thousand troops"
who would set up a counter-terrorist training camp for
Philippine soldiers in Sibuco, Zamboanga del Norte,
some 500 miles (800 km) south of Manila.

The arrival of U.S. troops would take place "in
phases" starting this month, the source added.

Armed Forces spokesman General Edilberto Adan
confirmed the U.S. proposal but stressed the precise
details of the deployment was "still tentative."

"The plan has been tabled by the U.S.," Adan told CNN
from the main Philippine military headquarters in Camp
Aguinaldo, where the matter was being discussed, "but
nothing will be done without a mutual agreement with
the Philippine government."

A military battalion basically comprises some 500
soldiers, with about 100 each in five companies --
three rifle units, one heavy equipment unit, and
another unit based at headquarters.

A battalion could include hundreds more soldiers "if
artillery, armored, and special weapons complements
are added," a Philippine army colonel said.

The successive arrival and exit of U.S. troops in the
Philippines in recent months has fueled speculation
they may be allowed to participate directly in
operations against guerrillas from the Muslim
extremist group Abu Sayyaf in the south.

Abu Sayyaf
Abu Sayyaf have held hostage American Christian
missionaries Martin and Gracia Burnham and Filipino
nurse Deborah Yap for more than seven months.

The U.S. has put Abu Sayyaf on a list of terrorist
groups with suspected links to the al Qaeda network of
Osama bin Laden.

Philippine officials, however, have repeatedly
stressed that arriving U.S. troops would be limited to
training an elite Philippine counter-terrorist force
known as the Light Reaction Company.

The latest batch of 25 U.S. military trainers arrived
Thursday in Zamboanga, about 530 miles (850 km) south
of Manila, a week after eight officers arrived in
city.

A training camp is being set up in Malagutay, just
west of Zamboanga, where the Armed Forces Southern
Command is based.

General Adan said barracks for U.S. military trainers
will also be set up in Basilan Island, an Abu Sayyaf
stronghold just off the coast of Zamboanga, where the
military believes the hostages are being held.

The Armed Forces spokesman, however, stressed the
barracks "will not be a separate camp but within a
Philippine military camp."

Kidnappings
The Burnham couple and the Filipino nurse are the last
of scores of captives the Abu Sayyaf seized in four
separate incidents beginning in May last year. More
than a dozen hostages were beheaded, including
American tourist Guillermo Sobero.

"There's a great deal of concern from the parents of
the Burnhams that their children would perish," said
Rep. Todd Tiahrt of Kansas, the Burnhams' home state.

Tiahrt paid a visit to Philippine President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo last week to express the U.S.
government's concern about the Abu Sayyaf hostages and
to monitor the training of Philippine troops in the
south.

The congressman's Manila visit follows talks on the
hostage crisis held with Arroyo when she visited
Washington in November.

Deadlines
Though the U.S. government has not set a deadline for
the Philippine government to subdue Abu Sayyaf, Tiahrt
said "there have been too many deadlines" set by the
Philippine military last year which had not been met.

Tiahrt also downplayed the expected arrival of more
U.S. troops in the Philippines in the coming weeks,
saying they are part of a "long-term commitment
against terrorism" that "goes beyond the Burnhams."

Should the Burnhams be rescued, counter-terrorist
training for Philippine troops should continue, he
said.

Tiahrt, a member of House Appropriations Sub-Committee
on Defense, explained the long-term goal of both the
U.S. and Philippine governments is "eliminating the
fear of terrorism."

The U.S. government has pledged more than $70 million
in military aid to the Philippines this year as part
of its global counter-terrorist campaign, following
the September 11 suicide attacks on New York and
Washington.
 



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