CONFIRMED:
US enters fight against ISIS in Philippines
Can
American 'assistance' ever be fully trusted?
10
June, 2017
The
Philippine military has confirmed that the United States has started
to offer limited support to President Rodrigo Duterte’s battle with
ISIS.
Duterte
had said that the US is unreliable as an ally insofar as they impose
ideological conditions as a prerequisite for any kind of assistance.
Duterte contrasted this with Russia and China which operate in a more
straightforward and businesslike manner.
The
recent announcement of US forces aiding the Philippine struggle
against ISIS may largely be due to the fact that Donald Trump and
Rodrigo Duterte seem to have developed a good relationship. Duterte
continues to speak positively about Trump in spite of his broader
negative views on America’s colonial attitude towards post-colonial
Philippines.
Philippine Lieutenant
Colonel Jo-Ar Herrera spoke at a press conference in the ISIS
besieged city of Marawi and stated,
“They (US forces) are not fighting. They are just providing technical support”.
According
to Reuters, the
US Embassy in Manila has confirmed that they are supporting the
Philippine fight against ISIS at the request of the Philippine
government but did not release any further details.
Unlike
in Syria or Libya, the United States does have a legal mandate and
even a moral one to genuinely help Philippines. However, the dangers
of mission creep are ever present.
President
Duterte’s opposition have
been trying to remove him from office after questioning his decision
to put the southern Philippine island of Mindanao under martial
law. Opposition leaders, many from the Liberal Party of
Philippines tend to take a much more traditional view of Philippines
as a US ally/dependant than does Duterte who has engaged in historic
positive bilateral relations with both China and Russia.
There
remains a danger that the United States could co-opt forces still
loyal to the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and use them
as ‘moderate rebels’ who fight ISIS on behalf of their own local
interests as well as America’s wider geo-political interests which
are keen not to let Philippines slip out of the American orbit and
into the Chinese sphere of influence.
That
being said, MILF has engaged in a ceasefire with the government in
Manila dating back to 2014. The ceasefire still generally holds and
furthermore, unlike his neo-liberal and right-wing opponents,
President Duterte had promised autonomy to Muslim regions of southern
Philippines from which Duterte (whose background is Roman Catholic)
himself hails.
It
is important for Duterte to make sure that Islamist groups in
southern Philippines remain focused on doing any future deals
directly with Manila in exchange for participation in the
united front against ISIS which Duterte has proposed. There exists a
manifest danger of such groups working with the United States to
unilaterally re-shape the political sovereignty of Philippines.
Although
the situation in Philippines is not yet as internationalised as that
in Syria, there remains a danger that the US could seek to use the
crisis as leverage against Duterte’s sovereignty minded policies
which remain highly popular among Philippine voters.
In
this sense Philippines has a more fortunate geographical disposition
than Syria. Syria shares borders with multiple hostile countries
including Turkey, Israel and Jordan. The often unsafe border with
Lebanon and the at times open border with ISIS controlled Iraq have
made things difficult for Syria during its long war against
terrorism.
For
Philippines, because ISIS is for now limited to the island of
Mindanao, a Philippine naval blockade could help to prevent ISIS
fighters from making the journey to Philippines from neighbouring
states with a small but significant radical Salafist population,
Indonesia in particular.
Philippines
needs support from its allies and partners, but one must always be
cautious of the kind of military support which the United States
tends to give.
There tends to be a great deal of extra baggage that
accompanies this support and President Duterte is well aware of this.
There is only so much that Donald Trump and Rodrigo Duterte’s good
personal relationship can do to change this long term historical
trend
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