This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VI, No. 5, March 5-11, 2006
Crisis and
Disintegration of the Arroyo Fascist Regime
BY THE PHILIPPINE CULTURAL
STUDIES CENTER
“Ang sagot sa dahas ay dahas, kapag bingi sa
katwiran.”[The answer to force is force if the other party is deaf to reason.] –
JOSE RIZAL, national hero of the Philippines The end of the Arroyo
fascist regime is fast approaching. It is bound to implode in one big
catastrophic upheaval that will unleash violence and murderous abuses
symptomatic of the decay of the bankrupt neocolonial system. Or it will exit
peacefully if disciplined mass mobilization in the Metro Manila area and
elsewhere can prevent the regime’s deployment of whatever armed elements it can
use to postpone its ruin. To be sure, U.S. intervention – military and
diplomatic – will try to save its lackeys, or sacrifice them for a new set of
servants who will do Washington’s bidding –U.S.-tutored military officers and
unscrupulous business technocrats tied to transnational financial-corporate
interests. Either way, there is no escape from the intensifying crisis of a
moribund clientelist system ridden with irresolvable contradictions. Events seem to be unfolding
with a vengeance. Since her access to government power through the flawed 2004
electoral exercise, Gloria Arroyo has turned out to be a huge disappointment to
those who supported her in People Power II as an alternative to Estrada. Arroyo
was definitely not a Cory Aquino with the charisma of the martyred Ninoy.
Arroyo’s experience in politics conformed to the routine career of a member of
local oligarchic dynasties; but her clan grew rich primarily from bureaucratic
and business manipulation, not landlord exploitation. Today, criminal linkages
surround her family and cronies. She might appear for some to resemble Ferdinand
Marcos – without the savvy and pretense to intellectual substance of the latter.
Despite U.S. tutelage, Arroyo’s managerial mode and policies demonstrate an
essentially autocratic style of governance wholly subservient to the dictates of
the World Bank, IMF, WTO, and the Washington Consensus. Right from the beginning,
Arroyo’s ascendancy was characterized by rampant human rights violations. She
presided over an unprecedented series of political assassinations of
journalists, lawyers, church people, peasant leaders, women activists, and
workers. The human rights group Karapatan (Alliance for the Advancement of
People’s Rights) has documented the brutalization of 169,530 individual victims,
18,515 families, 71 communities and 196 households. Arroyo has been tellingly
silent over the killing and abduction of countless members of opposition parties
and popular organizations. Most of those killed or “disappeared” belong to
progressive groups such as Bayan Muna (People First), Anakpawis (Toiling
Masses), Gabriela, Anakbayan (Nation’s Youth), Karapatan, KMU (May 1st
Movement), and others. They were protesting Arroyo’s repressive taxation,
collusion with foreign capital tied to oil and mining companies that destroy
people’s livelihood and environment, fraudulent use of public funds , and other
anti-people measures. Such groups and individuals have been tagged as “communist
fronts” by Arroyo’s National Security Advisers, the military and police; the
latter agencies have been implicated in these ruthless atrocities. Just as what
happened to the torturers of the Marcos regime, no one has been brought to trial
and found responsible for any of the killings and other outrageous brutalities. Meanwhile, Arroyo has hired
a U.S. lobbying firm, Venable, for national governance. The US firm will
ostensibly raise money for the modernization of the AFP (Armed Forces of the
Philippines). It will also propose crucial amendments to the Constitution so as
to allow foreign ownership of land, public utilities, and the mass media. Arroyo
is also heeding the Bush administration’s strategy of devising Anti-Terrorism
Laws and National ID Systems to suppress the articulation of grievances by the
poor, deprived majority. Because of severe unemployment, soaring prices of oil
products and basic commodities, unjust salaries and wages, increased tax
burdens, chronic corruption in government, insufficient and costly social
services, lack of genuine land reform, alarming proliferation of gambling,
drugs, and State violence against ordinary citizens, millions of Filipinos,
including landed elite, businessmen and professionals, have called for Arroyo’s
resignation (see March 2005 survey of Pulse Asia; Philippine Daily Inquirer,
May 4, 2005). Since 2004, Arroyo’s
administration suffered a stunningly rapid erosion of support from the
traditional comprador and oligarchic segments of the ruling bloc. On one hand,
the ousted Estrada camp has really never reconciled itself to its loss of power,
given its populist tendencies and residual nationalist leaning. On the other
hand, the Arroyo clique failed to offer a viable compromise to those excluded,
given its dependence on bureaucratic corruption, extortions from business and
other criminal activities. Never really interested in popular mobilization, the
Arroyo clique has relied on bribery and other mendacious machinations. It
operates with a narrow circle of parasitic generals, “trapos” (traditional
politicians), and mediocre hirelings from media and academy. Its popular base is
non-existent. Its influence on landlord oligarchs and the Makati elite has
always been superficial and precarious, mediated by brokers like Fidel Ramos,
Jose de Venecia, and assorted confidence tricksters. In short, Arroyo’s mode of
governance has always been fundamentally unstable, unconsolidated, and
opportunistic. One of the first signs of
the vulnerability of Arroyo’s position may be found in her yielding to the
massive popular demand for withdrawal of Filipino troops in Iraq following the
Angelo de la Cruz kidnapping. Of course, she tried to exploit its “nationalist”
potential. But her continuing servility to Bush’s imperialist aggression in
Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere, together with her obedience to the WTO
neoliberal program of privatization and deregulation, reinforced her utter
dependency on global forces that only served to undermine her authority, her
claim to represent the Filipino nation. Arroyo followed Fidel Ramos in
implementing the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA), together with other onerous
treaties, thus maintaining U.S. control of the Philippine military via training
of officers, logistics, and dictation of policies toward the Moro insurgents as
well as to the New People’s Army (NPA) guerrillas. This is the profound legacy
of the persisting colonial subjugation of the Philippines and the
instrumentalization of the local bureaucracy and military to carry out U.S.
imperial strategy in the first half of the twentieth-century up to Cold War
anti-communist policies and the current “war against global terrorism.” Without
U.S. support, the Filipino elite cannot sustain the oppression and exploitation
of the propertyless workers, peasants, and middle strata now driven to flee and
settle in other lands. This explains why the AFP
continues to pursue a fanatical anti-communist program today even after the
collapse of the Soviet Union and the capitalist reversal in China and in Eastern
Europe. Its Christian chauvinist orientation militates against any pluralist
outlook or even multiculturalist sympathy for the plight of the Bangsa Moro
people and other indigenous communities (Igorots, Lumad) who have organized and
armed themselves to fight for justice and dignity, for regaining their ancestral
habitats. But this AFP subservience to Washington does not insure the absence
of internal rifts and breakdown of “professionalism” due to abuses and
corruption of the politicized officer ranks (see Alfred McCoy’s book, Closer
Than Brothers, Yale University Press, 2000). This is a pattern which has
almost become institutionalized for lack of any genuine democratic, nationalist
ethos, given the function of this organ of government (established by the U.S.
colonial authority) to suppress the revolutionary forces of the first Philippine
Republic, the Moro Sultanate resistance, and numerous peasant insurrections
(including the Huk uprising) constantly reproduced by the fierce class divisions
in a semi-feudal and neocolonized formation. We can thus understand the
“Hello Garci” episode, following the Oakwood “Mutiny,” as a symptom of the
internal divisions in the AFP and the loss of Arroyo’s full control. Whatever
sliver of moral legitimacy Arroyo’s administration still possessed then,
gradually dissolved in the AFP squabbles caused by this exposure. Not even her
successful attempt to stop impeachment proceedings in Congress could really
repair the rupture of political legitimacy dating back to the May 2004
elections. The “Hello Garci” scandal may be read as a symptom of the advanced
disintegration of the comprador-landlord hegemony eviscerated by the Marcos
dictatorship, temporarily revived by Cory Aquino, and given extension by Fidel
Ramos’ mock-utopian resuscitation of Marcosian rhetoric. Arroyo cannot rescue
this coalition of conflicting political forces because of lack of the abundant
foreign subsidies that Ferdinand Marcos then enjoyed. This is worsened by the
depletion of natural resources and educated social capital (due to emigration,
breakdown of schooling, etc.) and the strict limits of local capital
accumulation (no independent industrial ventures) due to the pressures of
globalization and the US “war” to re-establish its global hegemony by systematic
torture and unrelenting bombing. Arroyo has no other way
out. The Economic Crisis of 1997-1998 destroyed any illusions of the Philippines
becoming a new Asian Tiger. While Ramos and Estrada offered compromises to the
working people and the intelligentsia, they failed to halt the advance of the
armed struggle in the countryside and the national-democratic social movements
in the cities. Civil society continues its resurgence despite State/military
repression. With a profit-centered neoliberal hegemony in control, the unimpeded
impoverishment of the countryside has resulted in mass exodus to the cities and
outward, hence a million Filipinos leave every year for jobs abroad. The failure
of the neocolonial regimes of Ramos, Estrada and Arroyo is also evidenced by the
continuing Bangsa Moro insurgency led by the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, and
the breakdown of the MNLF-Misuari accommodation. Hence the need of the U.S.
after the 9/11 attack to stigmatize the New People’s Army and the Communist
Party of the Philippines as terrorist organizations, capitalizing on the
repulsive acts of the Abu Sayyaf and the pervasive climate of fear following the
bombings in Bali, Indonesia, and elsewhere. This will not stop the
disintegration of the neocolonial order and the defeat of U.S. interventionary
salvaging of its Frankenstein monster. Structural conditionalities
continue to extract enormous debt payments to the World Bank and other financial
consortiums, draining two-thirds of the social wealth of the Philippines and
depriving education and other social services of sorely needed funds.
Neoliberalizing schemes enforced by U.S.-dominated agencies (WTO, IMF) continues
to inflict havoc and misery on the majority of 86 million Filipinos. It has bred
criminality, worsened corruption, inflamed reactionary Christian fundamentalism,
and exposed everyone to the wrath of natural disasters (witness the Leyte flood,
a repeat of previous devastating calamities in Luzon and elsewhere). It has
contributed to the staging of the Wowowee tragedy, a glaring symptom of how the
iniquitous system gambles the dreams of the desperate millions. Marcos’
institutionalization of “the warm body export” in 1974 to tax the poor and
relieve labor-peasant unrest has structured the economy to be wholly dependent
on regular remittances of Overseas Filipino Workers, the main source of dollar
earnings required to pay the foreign debt. The remittance topped $18 billion
last year, giving the impression that the country was becoming prosperous.
Arroyo prematurely celebrated this index of an economic recovery entirely
contingent on the unpredictable fluctuation of the global labor market. This
infamous “warm body export” has led to nearly ten million Filipinos displaced to
140 countries, chiefly as OCWs (Overseas Contract Workers) in poorly paid jobs
(mainly as domestics, caregivers, and semi-skilled labor), often victimized by
unscrupulous racist employers, abandoned by their own government to fend for
themselves – an average of five OCW corpses arrive each day at the Ninoy Aquino
International Airport. These “New Heroes” (“mga bagong bayani” to Cory
Aquino) are now clamoring for Arroyo’s ouster. Relentless corruption,
cynical manipulation, and the outright lack of any concern for the people’s
welfare have distinguished Arroyo’s unconscionable rule from its inception.
Faced with the loss of moral and political legitimacy, Arroyo has
institutionalized a pattern of terror throughout the country since taking the
reins of government. Particularly with the election of party-list
representatives from BayanMuna, killings, abductions and outright harassment of
anyone criticizing the government have intensified. The Ecumenical Movement for
Justice and Peace has confirmed that the majority of human rights violations
have been committed by the AFP, the Philippine National Police, and the CAFGU
(Civilian Armed Forces Government Units). And this could not have occurred
without the tacit or covert approval of Arroyo and her advisers. As the
Promotion of Church People’s Response put it in their Feb. 24 Statement: “GMA
cheated her way to victory in the May 2004 elections, using public funds to
secure votes in her favor and rig the election results… GMA’s record of
political killings and violations of civil liberties, especially with her
Calibrated Preemptive Response scheme, is now the worst since the downfall of
Marcos.” Having reviewed the history
of this current conjuncture, we take the position of denouncing President
Arroyo’s flagrant violation of the Philippine Constitution via the pretext of a
“National Emergency.” In truth, it is Arroyo’s emergency. This has been
convincingly demonstrated by the lawyers of CODAL (Counsels for the Defense of
Liberties) and the Catholic Bishops. Arroyo’s suppression of civil liberties
and democratic freedoms imposed by Proclamation 1017, carried out by the
military and police, opens the way to militarist brutal dictatorship similar to
Ferdinand Marcos’ authoritarian rule. Unlike Marcos, however, Arroyo does not
have the full support of the comprador and landlord oligarchy; Ramos, Estrada,
Aquino and other factions of the ruling class that they represent have demanded
her resignation. Clearly these groups, with obvious support from the U.S., would
prefer “business as usual”—a managed transition to a legitimate administration
elected by the majority, with a program of economic and political reforms to
solve rampant graft and corruption, endemic unemployment, deepening poverty and
hopelessness of the masses. Can such a transition be peacefully administered by
the traditional politicians (such as De Venecia) with U.S. patronage? Utilizing the pretext of a
coup by right, left and other anti-Arroyo forces, Arroyo issued Proclamation
1017 chiefly to intimidate, harass and selectively punish her critics. With her
emergency powers, she has arrested all the duly-elected representatives of Bayan
Muna, thus intimidating others who might voice criticism and protest. Her police
and military have suppressed street demonstrations and public rallies, raided
the offices of newspapers and other media, and threatened the arrest of
hundreds, including such prestigious members of political dynasties such as Jose
“Peping” Cojuangco. It appears, however, that Arroyo is using the usual
“divide-and-rule” tactic, isolating the “communist” elements, frightening their
allies, and threatening others with “warrantless arrests.” Arroyo and her
advisers believe that we are still engaged in the Cold War, fighting agents of
the Soviet Union and Communist China. However, this bogey of a “coup” conspiracy
fails to convince people because those arrested do not include the military
officials that the regime has named as complicit in the plot to overthrow the
Arroyo clique. Arroyo surely cannot afford to alienate the military hierarchy
she depends on; but can she fool all the honest nationalist officers whose
sympathies are with the people? Systematic State terror has been unleashed on
the progressive and nationalist sectors of the citizenry. Clearly the hand of
the U.S. and its agents has been exposed in directing this selective dragnet,
even as the U.S. Embassy continues to refuse to surrender four American soldiers
charged by the Philippine Court with rape. Meanwhile, thousands of U.S. Special
Forces and their mighty warships are standing by, just in case…. Exposed for cheating,
lying, and stealing the people’s money, Arroyo’s fascist rule can no longer
claim even a semblance of legitimacy. Nor can the State apparatus controlled by
Arroyo claim the authority that solely emanates from the Filipino people,
assuming that a constitutional democratic republic is still the framework of
order and security. The Arroyo regime’s moral rottenness and political decay
have precipitated its total repudiation and condemnation by the Filipino masses. We call on all
conscienticized Filipinos, democrats and nationalists to unite and rally against
the Arroyo fascist group imposing terror on the whole country. Civil liberties
promulgated in the 1987 Constitution and by the United Nations’ Universal
Declaration of Human Rights can only be guaranteed by public demonstrations,
street rallies, strikes, and other visible manifestations of the exercise of
social and civic rights. We call on all peoples around the world concerned with
justice, democracy, and human dignity to express solidarity with the Filipino
people in overthrowing the Arroyo regime, releasing all political prisoners, and
restoring full and genuine sovereignty to the Filipino people. Posted by
Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
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