The 72 Filipino peacekeepers in Golan
Heights are the pride of every Filipino soldier: they
are living testaments of extraordinary courage.
You can joke all
you want about the Vietnam War assets of the Philippine military, but trust
that if it has to come down to battle, man to man, these soldiers will fight –
if not for their country, for their life and their honor.
"I just like to emphasize that our troops are well
armed. They are well trained before their deployment. They are well disciplined
warrior peacekeepers," said Colonel Roberto Ancan, the
commanding officer of the peacekeeping operations center in the Philippines. (READ: PH troops in Golan to defend posts vs rebels)
The peacekeepers belong to the 80th Infantry Battalion of the Philippine
Army, a group of soldiers in their 20s holding ranks of Private First Class or
Corporal led by Colonel Ezra Enriquez and Lieutenant Colonel Ted
Dumusmog, contigent commander and commander of the Philippine Battalion, respectively.
Prior to their deployment to Golan in November 2013, the
entire battalion went through the Army's Battalion of Excellence
(BOE) program. They were plucked out of their operational area
in Mindoro – where they fought communist insurgents – to undergo months-long
rigorous retraining in Fort
Magsaysay
in Nueva Ecija. They got new firearms, too.
On Thursday,
August 28, Syrian rebels surrounded the encampments
of 75 Filipino peacekeepers in the central part of Golan
Heights, demanding that they surrender their firearms.
The soldiers of the 80th Infantry Battalion of the Philippine Army stood their
ground, refusing to meet the fate of their fellow Fijian peacekeepers who were
taken hostage after they surrendered their firearms.
The standoff is
nearing Day 3 at 10 am Saturday morning, August 30, in Syria
(3 pm in Manila).
Morale of the troops remain high inspite of the difficult situation, according
to an officer who was able to communicate with the troops Friday afternoon.
Rebels get bolder
In the Philippines,
Filipino soldiers are beaming with pride. Their sentments have overflowed into
their Facebook pages. There is confidence that like the 25 troops abducted in Golan
Heights last year, the troops will be able to wiggle
their way out of the situation and come home safe and complete. The United
Nations (UN) is in backchannel talks to end the standoff.
The Filipino
peacekeepers were out on patrol and were unarmed when they were taken by Syrian
rebels last year. UN protocol discourages them from bringing their firearms
around because the rebels would want those guns to fight government forces.
They were eventually released.
The situation is
different this time around. As the internal conflict in Syria
escalates, the rebels have become bolder. They trooped to the encampments of
the UN peacekeepers to demand their firearms. The Filipinos refused and the
standoff began.
It would have
been a harvest for the rebels. The
troops are equipped with M4 assault rifles, M60 light machineguns, K3 squad
automatic weapons, and Caliber 45 pistols.
The order to the troops is clear: Stand your ground. As members of the United Nations
Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF), the troops get their orders from the UN.
In another post in northern Golan, the UN has ordered another group of 58
Filipino peacekeepers to leave theirs posts and consolidate at the UNDOF
headquarters.
Ancan said the 72
troops in a standoff with the Syrian rebels are prepared to fight if it comes
down to it. "They know the risks they have to face as soldiers. They are
professional soldiers. It’s just part of the job. They are committed,"
Ancan told reporters.
Unlike last year,
the troops can fight back. They are armed and are in a defensive mode. The
encampment is also well fortified with a CCTV camera that can monitor movements
of rebels outside the encampment.
The incident
happens as the Philippine government is finalizing the pullout of the troops in
Golan. The peacekeepers are only supposed to monitor the ceasefire between Israel
and Syria
in Golan Heights,
a buffer zone between the two warring countries. The situation has chaged since
the internal conflict in Syria
erupted in 2011 however.
The Philippines
already considered pulling out its Golan peacekeepers after the kidnapping
incidents last year but was prevailed upon by the UN to stay inspite of
continued withdrawal of countries like Australia,
Croatia
and Japan.
Escalating internal violence prompted the new decision to pull out.
Warriors
Retired General
now Defense Undersecretary Natalio Ecarma III, former Force Commander of the UN
Continget to Golan
Heights, is monitoring the situation closely.
"Rebels are
rebels....I am concerned but I believe in our Filipino peacekeepers. They are
experienced warriors and Filipino soldiers do not just easily give up their
firearms," Ecarma told reporters Friday afternoon.
Inspite of the confidence that the rebels will not risk
antagonizing the United Nations, there is a hushed recognition that the
situation in Syria
is deteriorating and the rebels they've made friends with last year may be
different people today.
But there has
been no firefight within the Filipino encampments, which officials interpreted
as a good sign that the situation will be resolved peacefully.
The world awaits
the peaceful resolution of the standoff. But soldiers are soldiers, too. Like
the rest of the Filipino troops used to fighting and losing men in the
country's own internal conflicts – the communist insurgency, the Muslim
separatist groups, and terrorists, among others – the soldiers of the 80th
Infantry Battalion are ready for this.
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