From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (May 27): Slain soldiers in Sulu were on test mission
Querubin: They were not there to engage Abus
STUDENTS The bodies of Philippine Marines killed during a clash with Abu Sayyaf
bandits in Sulu are loaded into a military truck for transport to Manila. At
least seven soldiers and four bandits were killed. AP
We still haven’t learned our lessons,” retired Col. Ariel Querubin, a former
superintendent of the Philippine Marine Corps Training Center, said of the
killings of seven Marines in a clash with Abu Sayyaf bandits in Patikul, Sulu,
on Saturday.
“They were on a test mission, these were students, they may be the best
considering they were with the Recon (reconnaissance team), they belonged to the
Marines’ elite team but the doctrine of the Recon is basically just to go out
there to gather data and they are not there to engage their enemies,” Querubin
said Sunday in a phone interview.
Around 20 soldiers on two teams of the Force Reconnaissance Battalion were
sent to Tugas, a hilly jungle in Patikul, for the purported test mission that
led to the incident in which seven Abu Sayyaf bandits were also killed.
The soldiers, led by 2nd Lt. Alfredo Lorin VI, were on a mission to track
down the kidnappers of Casilda Villarasa, wife of Sgt. Faustino Villarasa.
Col. Jose Johriel Cenabre, commander of the 2nd Marine Brigade and head of
Joint Task Force Sulu, said the soldiers had a “chance meeting-encounter” with
about 50 men in Tugas at around 6:30 a.m. on Saturday.
But Senior Insp. Conrad William Gutierrez, chief of the Patikul police, said
the soldiers were on their way to their detachment when “they were ambushed.”
Five Marines were killed on the spot and nine others were wounded, he said.
Cenabre, however, denied that what happened was an ambush, insisting that it
was a chance encounter.
“Our troops were not able to reposition and retaliate because the engagement
was within the civilian area, which is adjacent to a mosque. The attackers took
advantage of the civilians, thus making it more difficult for our troops to fire
back,” he said.
Before sundown on Saturday, the Marine toll of lives had climbed to seven
with the deaths of those wounded. The fatalities included Lorin, 26, a 2011
graduate of the Philippine Military Academy, and Privates First Class Rene Gare,
Andres Bogwana, Jay Alasain, Jayson Durante, Roxas Pizarro and Dominador Sabijon
Jr.
Wounded were Sgt. Noel Cornelio and Privates First Class Miguel Edwin Maluyo,
Roel Aquino, Carlito Sabellita, Cris An Bangalisan, Rajan Gadong, John Ywayan,
Joemar Monte and Richard Gomez.
Clash, not ambush
In Manila, Maj. Ramon Zagala, spokesman of the Armed Forces of the
Philippines, confirmed Cenabre’s version of the incident.
“It was an encounter and not ambush, as what the early sketchy reports
mentioned,” Zagala said in a mobile phone interview.
“It was part of the operations of the Marines to curb the dominance of the
Abu Sayyaf in the area,” he told the Inquirer.
Zagala said two Marine companies, numbering about 100 soldiers, were
conducting military operations against the local terrorist group when they
clashed with a large group of Abu Sayyaf in Barangay (village) Tugas.
Zagala said the Marines suffered a large number of casualties because the Abu
Sayyaf fighters had positioned themselves on higher ground. According to him,
Tugas is a hilly area, where Khadaffy Janjalani, the bandit leader, was killed
in 2006.
Zagala said the losses in Patikul would not hamper military operations
against the Abu Sayyaf, which had been crippled over the years with the killings
of its leaders.
“The military will continue pursuing the Abu Sayyaf. These are the things
that the AFP has to risk in order to have a secure environment. It’s a sad loss
but it only shows the resolve the AFP,” he said.
Querubin said in Manila in the telephone interview a test mission was usually
given to any specialized elite unit of the military.
“It’s a class which, basically, runs about six months or longer and whatever
they learn inside a classroom for that period, they apply it on the ground. Once
they have completed the test mission, they automatically graduate and become
part of the regular forces of the Recon Battalion,” he said.
Every battalion sends its best soldiers to be part of the Recon team. “They
were trained, passed the screening for special skills like scuba diving and
more. They are like superheroes, intelligent. These are the chosen ones,”
Querubin said.
But unlike the Special Forces and Scout Rangers, the Recon Units are not
allowed to engage their enemies, he added.
“They are there to gather data and pass the data to the operating troops. The
problem with the senior officers, they always look up to the elite forces as
supermen. Definitely these units will never say no because they belong to elite
forces,” Querubin said.
The retired Marine colonel, whose son is also a Marine officer based in Sulu,
said it was too early to judge claims of lapses in Saturday’s operation.
“They will not experience five killed in action on the spot and many wounded
if they were not ambushed. Definitely, it was a surprise attack and the troops
later engaged the attackers,” he said.
Querubin cited the “test mission” involving Marines in which five junior
officers were killed in Silangkum village, Ungkaya Pukan town, in August 2007.
“After that, when the doctrine on Recon was strictly followed, there were no
more casualties when there were test missions,” he said.
Troops hunt bandits
The Associated Press said Sunday troops backed by assault helicopters were
hunting down the fleeing bandits, who were believed to be led by Jul-Aswan
Sawadjaan, an Abu Sayyaf commander accused in the kidnappings of a Jordanian
journalist and two European bird watchers who were still being held captive.
One of Sawadjaan’s sons and a minor Abu Sayyaf commander are believed to have
been killed in the firefight, Cenabre said.
The firefight was part of a new military offensive that started last week and
was aimed at rescuing the three foreign captives, who were abducted last year,
along with three Filipinos kidnapped separately by the militants in recent
weeks, he said.
Although a large number of Marines and policemen are involved in the
offensive, only small units have been deployed to hunt down the Abu Sayyaf in
two jungle encampments in Sulu, Cenabre said without providing details. US
forces were providing intelligence but were not involved in actual combat, he
said.
Security forces, meanwhile, killed one of two gunmen who were trying to
extort money on Saturday from a restaurant in Sulu’s capital town of Jolo,
Cenabre said.
Armed with pistols, the two men shot it out with government forces. One was
shot in the head and died and the other was captured, Cenabre said.
He said investigators were trying to determine whether the two had ties with
the Abu Sayyaf, which was also notorious for extortion.—
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/415659/7-soldiers-killed-in-sulu-were-supposed-to-gather-info-says-retired-colonel
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