US Ambassador to the Philippines Philip Goldberg: Watching. AFP FILE PHOTO
In a separate interview with the Inquirer, the splinter
group Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) on Monday confirmed that it
had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State and was in constant communication
with the group, including its leader Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi.
In a phone interview, BIFF spokesperson Abu Misry Mama said
the group feared that the US
government’s pronouncement about neutralizing Isis would affect Mindanao, and
that its declaration of a “war on terror” against the Islamic State would launch
proxy or direct hostilities in other countries outside the Middle East,
including the Philippines .
“Are we afraid? Yes, we are afraid. But we are ready to
defend ourselves if ever they will attack us,” Mama said.
Speaking at the Kapihan sa Embahada held at the US Embassy
in Manila , Goldberg said the US was “concerned about the idea of Isis trying to recruit foreign fighters all around the
world.”
Possible recruitment
places
Goldberg added that the US
was aware of foreign fighters from the US ,
United Kingdom , Europe and Australia who had gone to the Middle East, and
that Southeast Asia, particularly the Philippines ,
Indonesia and Malaysia could also be “possible places for
recruitment” by Isis .
“It’s everywhere, including the West,” the ambassador said
of Isis ’ recruitment efforts.
“We’ve taken note of the public announcements that have been
made by some groups in the southern Philippines
about Isis, but I don’t want to say that we have no information to indicate
that there have been fighters going to the Middle East .
(W)hat I’m saying (is that) we and the Philippine government are watching it
very closely and it concerns us, wherever it may be taking place,” Goldberg
said.
Degrade, destroy
Mama scored the US
“war on terror” and recalled how it had been used before in the Philippines .
“Remember… the Filipino-American War? Mindanao
was not annexed by the Americans because our ancestors bravely fought using
their bolos,” the BIFF spokesperson said, adding that the “tactic” was also
employed during martial law.
“Lately, when we were still with the MILF (Moro Islamic
Liberation Front), we were able to engage Filipino soldiers with Americans
(among) them,” Mama said. The MILF, he added, had also recovered guns allegedly
from Americans after fighting them in North Cotabato
and Maguindanao.
The rebel leader described the guns as “balikatan,” claiming
that these were the firearms used by American troops during the Balikatan joint
military exercises.
Very dangerous
Mama added that one of the BIFF’s concerns was the use of
unmanned aerial vehicles or drones by foreign troops in Mindanao .
“We saw (them) flying over our heads before. (They’re) very
dangerous for the communities,” Mama said.
In 2002, militant organizations criticized the massing of
foreign troops in Mindanao that the US government had tagged the
“second front of the war on terror.”
Both the Philippine and US governments had denied that
American forces were joining combat operations and said that their presence was
only for joint military exercises.
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/111155/goldberg-us-watching-isis-in-ph
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