|
|
 |
Philippines Leader Did the Right Thing by Pulling Out of Iraq
Commentary/Analysis
By Rene Ciria-Cruz, Filipinas /
Pacific News Service
The Philippines' troop pullout from Iraq did not send the wrong
signal, it sent the right one. Not just one life was at stake, but also
the livelihoods of millions of guest workers,
as well as the sovereign right of nations to negotiate with whomever
they deem necessary.
July 22, 2004 - American officials, several of their allies and many
U.S. media criticized Philippines President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's
decision to recall her nation's small military contingent in Iraq in
order to save the life of Filipino hostage Angelo de la Cruz. They
called the move cowardly and said it sent terrorists "the wrong signal."
For most of De la Cruz's compatriots, however, and from the standpoint
of their national interest, it was a sensible, even courageous, move.
There was more at stake in Arroyo's decision to pull out of Iraq than
saving the life of an unfortunate hostage or avoiding the ire of the
U.S. government, a key source of foreign aid for the Philippines. The
hostage crisis imperiled a crucial survival mechanism for the
impoverished nation -- the gainful employment of millions of overseas
Filipino workers in the Middle East.
Some 2 million Filipinos work in the region, with nearly a million in
Saudi Arabia alone. These large contingents of Filipino workers have
become a critical prop of the Philippine economy. They represent the
millions who can't find work in their own country. They send home some
$8 billion a year (remittances were largely responsible for a 4.5
percent GNP growth in 2002), providing otherwise income-strapped
families the spending power that keeps the economy afloat.
A number of Filipinos have been among the unintended victims of suicide
bombings in Israel, and a number were killed in recent attacks on
foreigners working for American firms in Saudi Arabia. For Arroyo to
insist on remaining in the so-called "Coalition of the Willing," despite
the terrorists' threats, would have exposed all Filipinos in the region
to a dramatically higher level of danger -- where they are transformed
into deliberate targets of terror because their government persists in
giving political cover to Bush's "coalition" by keeping a symbolic
military contingent in Iraq.
In such an eventuality, the mass return of millions of Filipino workers
evading terrorist attacks in the Middle East would mean disaster for the
Philippine economy. The Philippine government is simply not prepared to
absorb a sudden influx of jobless returnees.
Nearly
unanimous in praising Arroyo, Manila's
media excoriated The Times'
spurious distinction between her
decision (which it called deplorable)
and Spain's pullout after the Madrid bombing (which it said was
understandable)
|
The large-scale repatriation of Filipinos from the Middle East also
would mean trouble for many Arab countries -- including some of
America's allies -- that have come to depend on imported Filipino labor
or expertise for a multitude of tasks, from domestic work to
construction and management. As a British-educated Saudi blogger wrote
on his website, "Now if there's one expat group that we couldn't do
without long term, it's the Filipinos." There can be no doubt that
President Arroyo's decision to pull out of Iraq to protect other
Filipinos was quietly encouraged by many an Arab host government.
Clearly Arroyo's decision was also politically self-serving, given
the popular outcry in the Philippines for De la Cruz's safe return.
Overseas Filipino workers -- an estimated 8 million labor in 150
countries -- risk their lives and endure long absences from their
families. They're often called modern-day heroes by Filipino officials
and media alike. In 1995, President Fidel Ramos' popularity plunged when
he failed to save the life of Flor Contemplacion, a domestic worker who
was hanged by the government of Singapore on a questionable murder
conviction.
De la Cruz's kidnapping brought back memories of that execution, and
the political danger was not lost on Arroyo. She had just assumed office
after a bitter election whose credibility is held in doubt. Failure to
bring back De la Cruz alive would have given her enemies effective
ammunition in a poisonous political climate rife with talk of
destabilization plots.
Manila's media are nearly unanimous in praising Arroyo's decision. From
the start, her unnecessary deployment of a military contingent to Iraq
was widely criticized, both as a sign of subservience to the United
States and as a ploy to corner American support for her looming run for
the presidency. Her decision to quit Bush's "Coalition of the Willing"
is seen as a rectification of that error and a hopeful sign of
independence from Washington.
Editorials bristle at American and Australian criticism of the pullout.
They recall the U.S. exchange of arms for hostages with Iran and the
American retreat from Somalia and Beirut, and they question the wisdom
of supporting an occupation that Americans, polls show, no longer
support.
Several commentators excoriated The New York Times for making a spurious
distinction between the Philippines' decision (which the Times called
deplorable) and Spain's pullout from Iraq after the Madrid bombing
(which it said was understandable). For most Filipino opinion-makers --
and from the standpoint of the Philippine's national interest -- pulling
out of Iraq was not a "wrong signal" to terrorists. The wrong signal was
to send a troop contingent to begin with, which only served to
militarize the longstanding and purely civilian Filipino presence in the
Middle East and made it a likely target of terrorist attacks.
As for Washington's implied threat of leaving the Philippines at the
mercy of its homegrown terrorists, it's empty and face-saving. The
Philippines remains the most important staging area for any U.S.
operations against Al Qaeda's affiliates in Southeast Asia, as
predominantly Muslim Indonesia and Malaysia are less than ideal hosts.
In fact, several U.S. military exercises are set to take place in
Southern Philippines. Like it or not, Washington is stuck with Manila,
and the latter knows it.
Other Recent Readings of Interest
Rene P. Ciria-Cruz is a PNS editor and a longtime
editor of
Filipinas Magazine. |