Philippines 'Dirty' Duterte facing ‘same ISIS dynamic’ as Assad in Syria
25
May, 2017
Someone
has unleashed ISIS, which forces the Filipino government to come down
hard, to declare martial law, and then the international
organizations will demonize Duterte, Patrick Henningsen, Executive
Editor of 21st Century Wire.com, told RT.
Fighters
linked to ISIS went on a rampage in the Philippines' city of Marawi.
The country's President Rodrigo Duterte has declared martial law
there.
RT: With
terrorism as his new target, do you think Duterte will receive much
international support, given that his war on drugs was condemned by
many and called too brutal?
Patrick
Henningsen: This
President is already under intense scrutiny by the sort of wider
international community, if you will, and specifically by the US. He
has sort of gone at loggerheads with Washington on more than one
occasion. This is a bit of a tight spot, a bit of a Catch-22 for
Duterte in the Philippines because he will already have been somewhat
demonized for his heavy-handed approach to organized crime and the
organized drug trade that has affected his country. So comparisons
will be made to Ferdinand Marcos. This is bit of public relations
issue for this President and this government. It will have to be
ironed out.
At
the end of the day he is in the exact same situation, very similar
situation that Bashar Assad in Syria was in early on in the sort of
the terrorist takeover of that country in the early days of the FSA,
and then Al-Nusra Front, and then later ISIS. So he has to balance
out this public relations issue – is he too heavy-handed? Most
people would say looking at Syria that you can’t be heavy-handed
enough when it comes to dealing with ISIS. So we’ll see how much
progress he makes on the island in the next few weeks.
RT: With
terrorism apparently spreading around the world, don't you think
Duterte-style harsh measures should be an option now?
PH: What
is really interesting if you look at Syria, as the test case, we just
came back from Syria on a one-month fact-finding mission. If there
was any criticism of Assad – especially early on in 2011-2012, but
especially in the beginning of the crisis in Syria – the criticism
from Syrians would have been: “He wasn’t heavy-handed enough.”
You can sort of look at that situation and Duterte is probably
looking at that situation in Syria, and then taking a sort of more
tougher tack because if this gets out of hand, if he starts losing
cities, towns, provinces or governorates to terrorist control, then
you have a really big problem on your hands. There is also this issue
of military equipment. Are they ready to deal with that size of a
problem? Quite possibly not. And if they are, they will need to be
able to sort of rearm and modernize some paramilitary aspects of the
Philippine forces, which they may be or not may not be ready for. So
going in hard, going in strong in the beginning, might seem like a
better option now after looking at what has happened in Syria over
the last six years.
RT: Human
Rights Watch [HRW] has already called on Duterte to ensure the rights
of civilians would be protected under the law. Do you think the
watchdog is being subjective? Would it happen with any other country?
PH: HRW
took the same tack with the government in Syria and President Bashar
Assad for the last five or six years. Here we have the Philippines,
geopolitical foe for the moment of the US, of the West. It’s
getting the same treatment from the NGO complex, led by people like
HRW and Amnesty International, who will then sort of wage a public
relations war against governments that maybe aren’t friendly at the
moment to the US.
Certainly,
that is what we’ve seen with Syria. Someone unleashes ISIS - if
this is indeed ISIS in the Philippines - someone has unleashed ISIS.
Then the government is forced to come down hard, to declare martial
law, and then the international organizations will demonize this
government. So this is an exact same formula as what we saw in Syria,
albeit on a smaller scale, on a smaller level. Essentially, we’re
looking at the same dynamic, and especially with the negative public
relations side that the Philippine government is looking at, just
like Syria went through.
ISIS sets up checkpoints across Marawi, 80 Philippine soldiers killed
AMN,
25 May, 2017
DAMASCUS,
SYRIA (9:45 P.M.) – New details have emerged regarding the ongoing
battle for Marawi, a predominately Sunni city in the southern
Philippines which is home to over 200,000 residents and witnessed
a large-scale
ISIS insurgency on
Thursday
According
to Amaq Agency, some 70 soldiers of the Philippine Armed Forces have
been killed in the battle for Marawi since Tuesday while an
additional 10 were killed in an ambush on two armored vehicles
patrolling the Jolo municipality on the island of Jolo.
In
contrast, the Philippine Army said they had only sustained 8 deaths
and 31 injuries to their forces while 13
ISIS militants had been killed.
Meanwhile, the Phillipine Air Forceconducted
dozens of pinpoints airstrikes over
the city on Thursday.
Islamic
State forces in the Philippines are composed of the two franchise
groups, known as Maute and Abu Sayyaf, both of whom have sworn
alliegence to ISIS leader Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi.
Pictures
of ISIS militants inside Marawi, backing up earlier exclusive
reports by Al-Masdar News which
indicated jihadists had captured most of the city
ISIS
reportedly also captured a lot of military vehicles, ammunition
storages and weapons from the Philippine Army which temporarily
withdrew from much of the city on Tuesday, allowing ISIS to capture
Marawi’s main hospital, police station and prison among other key
facilities.
Some
500 ISIS insurgents are estimated to be scattered across Marawi,
controlling much of the city despite a somewhat
succesful army counter-offensive on
Thursday.ALSO
READ
Unless
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte and his army are able to defeat
the jihadist rebellion quickly, the Islamic State may use Marawi as
regional capital to expand its influence in southeast Asia
The
people of the Philippines are facing an uncertain future after
President Rodrigo Roa Duterte's declaration of martial law in the
Mindanao province, population 22 million, following a flare-up of
violence between the Armed Forces of the Philippines and the small
Islamist Maute militant group. Increasingly, mass movements of poor
people across the Southeast Asian nation are feeling that the brash,
and unpredictable president is attempting to cast himself in the mold
of a dictator, the head of a military junta, on the flimsy pretext of
the Maute group's “terrorist threat.”
“Declaring
martial law all over Mindanao because of turmoil and clashes in one
of its cities is definitely an overreaction,” Professor Roland
Simbulan of the University of the Philippines, Manila told teleSUR,
pointing to Duterte's earlier threats to declare martial law as part
of his bloody anti-drug campaign. Simbulan is a noted scholar of
Philippine-U.S. relations, and of the U.S.-funded militarization of
the country in particular.
“Now,
the Maute group in one city in Mindanao has given him an excuse to
use his martial law powers,” Simbulan added. “In the United
States, even the most serious national security threats such as the
9/11 attacks against the very centers of political and economic power
in the U.S. didn't merit such a declaration to deal with the
situation.”
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