Key Philippine Military and Insurgency-Related Events

By Retired Analyst

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

CA confirms appointments of ranking officials of DFA, AFP

From the Manila Bulletin (Mar 4, 2020): CA confirms appointments of ranking officials of DFA, AFP (By Mario Casayuran)

The Commission on Appointments (CA) confirmed Wednesday the appointments of ranking officials of the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) and the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP).


Commission on Appointments (MANILA BULLETIN)

But the public hearing of the CA foreign affairs committee chaired by Sen. Panfilo M. Lacson to determine the fitness and capability of Millicent Cruz-Paredes to be a ranking DFA official was deferred.

The DFA has to explain why Paredes held two DFA posts as submitted to the CA: Chief of Mission, Class II as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the Kingdom of Thailand and Permanent Representative to the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific; and as Chief of Mission, Class I.

Leading the 24 DFA envoys confirmed by the CA in a plenary session chaired by Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III was Enrique Austria Manalo who will now sit as Chief of Mission, Class II as Permanent Representative of the Republic of the Philippines to the United Nations, USA.

An economist, Manalo briefly held the post of acting DFA secretary in mid-2017.

Allen T. Paredes was the most ranking AFP officer confirmed as lieutenant general.

The others are Eric Vinoya as major general; John V. Oberio and Ramon J. Guiang as brigadier generals; and Carlos V. Sabarre as commodore.


Imelda Macapundag Panolong was confirmed as Chief of Mission, Class II as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the Sultanate of Oman. She is the first Muslim woman to hold such a high DFA post.

Others confirmed were Jose Maria Ancheta Carino as Chief of Mission, Class I; Myla Grace Ragenia Catalbas Macahilig as Chief of Mission, Class II; and Arnel Marcos Sanchez.

Also confirmed were 19 Foreign Service Officers (FSOs). The group was headed by Chryzl Torres Sicat as FSO, Class IV.

https://news.mb.com.ph/2020/03/04/ca-confirms-appointments-of-ranking-officials-of-dfa-afp/
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[ANALYSIS] Recalibrate the Philippine Navy’s compass before it even sets sail

From Rappler (Mar 3, 2020): [ANALYSIS] Recalibrate the Philippine Navy’s compass before it even sets sail (By Jay Tristan Tarriela)

'The Philippine Navy remains to have underlying institutional issues that continually challenge and disrupt the various programs of whoever is at the helm'



The following piece was first published on the Strategic & Warfare Studies Initiative website.



In his speech as the new Flag Officer in Command (FOIC) of the Philippine Navy (PN), Vice Admiral Giovanni Carlo Bacordo highlighted 3 priority programs under his administration: capacitate the Naval Sea Systems Command; implement skills specialization for its personnel; and “modernize the mindsets” of every sailor and marine.

Indeed, these are remarkable concerns that the Navy has to undertake in its quest to be a formidable force in defending Philippine sovereignty. However, it is essential to emphasize that the PN remains to have underlying institutional issues that continually challenge and disrupt the various programs of whoever is at the helm. Thus, one could argue that settling these lingering matters may be the best approach for the new FOIC; otherwise, his plans will never be realized.

The most intriguing of these issues is the attempt to separate the Philippine Marine Corps under its organizational supervision. The Senate Bill 1731 of Sen. Angara and the House Bill 7304 of Congressman Fariñas both stressed the importance of a rapidly deployable amphibious maneuver force in an archipelagic country like the Philippines. These bills emphasized that the current existence of the PMC needs to be institutionalized by the passage of its own charter, which would categorize it as the fourth branch of service of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP).

“In retrospect, it is about time that the PN must have an enabling law that defined its institutional structure and roles...gone are the days that brute force and offensive military action could justify why the military is still performing constabulary roles. The lack of a relevant charter allows the Navy to tread on the gray area, where there is no clear delineation between law enforcement and military operations.”

Secondly, though the Strategic Sail Plan 2020 vision of the PN states that “it will be a strong and credible Navy that the Philippine nation can be proud of by 2020,” it is satirical to allude that it does not just have antiquated equipment, but it is preoccupied in performing maritime law enforcement roles and other constabulary functions. The PN is still tied up in supporting the AFP’s internal security operations. With these domestic threats, although necessary for the military to address as well, it is worth accentuating that the long history of insurgency in the Philippines has hampered the PN to develop as a potent naval force strategically.

Lastly, the PN’s constabulary roles avert collaboration with other law enforcement and regulating institutions. The Navy’s lack of concrete mandate to validate its law enforcement activities results in failure of convergence with other law enforcement agencies like the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) and Philippine National Police Maritime Group (PNP-MG). Since these agencies recognize that the fundamental role of the PN is territorial defense while they have the mandates in carrying out law enforcement, they wonder why gray ships are even engaged in such operations.

These 3 issues of organizational dilemma, ambiguous mandates, and inter-service “turf wars” can be adequately addressed by an enacted law. However, what is startling is that the PN, despite its long history, never had an enabling law enacted by Congress. Surprisingly, most of our current naval officers assume that it is the 1987 Philippine Constitution, and the National Defense Act of 1935 (Commonwealth Act No. 1) distinctly defined the PN’s existence. In scrutinizing these legal instruments, it is apparent that there are no provisions that mentioned the creation of the PN and even its mandates.

The first instance that a naval force was mentioned in the Philippine laws was through Executive Order 94, signed by President Manuel Roxas when he reorganized the government. The Philippine Naval Patrol was created as a successor of the offshore patrol and was considered as one of the major Commands of the regular force of the AFP. Subsequently, Executive Order 389, during the time of President Elpidio Quirino, became the reference of the PN’s official title. This was also the first time that the Navy’s functions were clearly defined.

Since then, until the fall of Marcos in 1986, the PN continuously exists and performed these mandates by merely referring to the EO. However, when the new Constitution was crafted in 1987, and Executive Order 292 or the Administrative Code of the Philippines was promulgated, the PN’s mandates shifted on the provisions laid out by the latter.

Accordingly, the stipulated PN’s law enforcement mission set in EO 292 became its justification for carrying out constabulary functions related to navigation, the safety of life at sea, immigration, customs revenues, narcotics, quarantine, and even fishing. Nevertheless, since the EO 292 was enforced, new laws were enacted by Congress that apparently repealed these functions: “Domestic Shipping Act,” “PCG Law,” “Quarantine Act,” “Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act,” “Customs Modernization and Tariff Act,” and the “Fishery Code of the Philippines,” among others.

In retrospect, it is about time that the PN must have an enabling law that defined its institutional structure and roles. If the PN fails to secure a law that would establish its organization, perhaps it will not just be the Marines that would attempt to separate from the Navy’s hierarchy of command. Moreover, gone are the days that brute force and offensive military action could justify why the Philippine military is still performing constabulary roles. The lack of a relevant charter allows the Navy to tread on the gray area, where there is no clear delineation between law enforcement and military operations.

Besides, the charter would allow them to set their annual budget percentage and even its modernization programs without actually waiting on the affirmation of the Army-dominated AFP leadership. It is common knowledge that the priority of funding has always been given to the Army. This was justified by the continuous counterinsurgency efforts and the emergence of terrorism in Mindanao. The collective setting of the military has made it difficult for the PN to massively recruit personnel since the Army’s additional foot soldiers remains a priority.

Without a dedicated law for the Navy, it will continuously struggle as an institution. The PN will never be able to grow independently as a formidable force since it is not just “resource competition” with the Philippine Army that it has to grapple with, but most importantly, it has to fight for strategic relevance with other agencies that were backed by Congressional mandates to carry out constabulary roles. – Rappler.com

[Jay Tristan Tarriela is a commissioned officer of the Philippine Coast Guard with the rank of Commander, and is currently a PhD candidate and Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) scholar at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS) under the GRIPS Global Governance (G-cube) Program in Tokyo, Japan. He is also a Young Leader with Pacific Forum, Honolulu.]

https://www.rappler.com/views/imho/253291-analysis-recalibrate-philippine-navy-compass-before-sets-sail
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Army chief lauds troops for neutralization of 22 NPA rebels in week-long ops

From the Manila Bulletin (Mar 3, 2020): Army chief lauds troops for neutralization of 22 NPA rebels in week-long ops (By Martin Sadongdong)

Philippine Army (PA) commanding general Lt. Gen. Gilbert Gapay commended his troops on Tuesday for the neutralization of 22 suspected New People’s Army (NPA) rebels in week-long focused military operations conducted nationwide.



Lieutenant General Gilbert Gapay (10th Infantry Agila Division Philippine Army / MANILA BULLETIN)

Gapay said troops from the 2nd Infantry Division (2ID), 3rd Infantry Division (3ID), 4th Infantry Division (4ID), 10th Infantry Division (10ID), and 11th Infantry Division (11ID) conducted a series of military operations in their areas of responsibilities from Feb. 24 to March 1.

The 2ID is based in Tanay, Rizal; 3ID in Jamindan, Capiz; 4ID in Cagayan de Oro City; 10ID in Mawab, Davao de Oro; and 11ID in Jolo, Sulu.

The military units recorded nine “successful” engagements which resulted in the death of four rebel suspects and the surrender of 18 others, Gapay said.


One of those killed was Marcelo Maldos, who the military said was a “political instructor” of the Bohol Party Committee, Komite Rehiyon-Negros, Cebu, Bohol, and Siquijor.

“[He] was responsible for promoting and instilling anti-government teachings and propaganda among communities in Bohol,” according to 3ID’s 47th Infantry Battalion.

The troops also recovered 22 assorted firearms from the rebels’ lairs.

“Your sustained efforts to end insurgency against these lawless groups play a critical part in the attainment of our mission,” Gapay told the troops.

“With your adept demonstration of leadership, teamwork, and dedication to the service, I [am] assured that the Filipino people can truly live secure against any threats posed by [the] enemy,” he added.

https://news.mb.com.ph/2020/03/03/army-chief-lauds-troops-for-neutralization-of-22-npa-rebels-in-week-long-ops/
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Army now deploys women to frontlines

From the Philippine Star (Mar 4, 2020): Army now deploys women to frontlines (By Jaime Laude)

Women members of the male-dominated Philippine Army (PA) are no longer confined to performing desk jobs but are actually doing combat duties, either as frontliners or as field commanders.

Current Army records show that six female officers are assigned as battalion commanders. They are among the 795 female officers and 3,777 women-soldiers in the PA.

Col. Ramon Zagala, Army spokesman, said the women’s deployment and assignment in top posts highlight the key role that the female officers and enlisted personnel play in the PA as it celebrates National Women’s Month.

Among them are Lt. Col. Leah Santiago, 9th Fire and Artillery Battalion commander; Lt. Col. Nelicar Corsin, headquarters support battalion commander of the Sulu-based 11th Infantry Division; Lt. Col. Imelda Nadal, battalion commander of the 6th Forward Service Support Unit based in Central Mindanao; Lt. Col. Marites Agliam, commander of the 4th Signal Battalion; Lt. Col. Madeline del Guzman, commander of the 8th Signal Battalion and Lt. Col. Leonara Bascoguin, commander of the 11th Forward Service Support Unit.

Also occupying a top position is Brig. Gen. Joseline Bandarlipe who serves as commander of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) Engineering Brigade.


Aside from them, there are many other female junior officers assigned in the frontlines either as platoon leaders or company commanders. These smaller units are the ones that do actual field operations against known threat groups like the New People’s Army (NPA), Abu Sayyaf and Maute group remnants.

Lt. Gen. Gilbert Gapay, Philippine Army chief, emphasized that women empowerment calls for women members to become holders and active contributors to development and mission accomplishment.

“No woman should be left behind. Let us cultivate a space where women are confident to build on their potentials, enhance their skills, make their own choice,” Gapay said.

As Malacañang joins in the celebration of International Women’s Month, presidential spokesman Salvador Panelo said the Duterte administration has already “made significant strides to empower our women.”

He noted the laws where the government pushed for the interest of women, “some of these are giving them more financial, health and medical benefits or assistance, better work opportunities and improved working conditions.”

According to Panelo, the changes are designed not only to promote the welfare of women but also to fill the gaps in upholding gender equality.

“We cannot quantify the contributions of Filipinas in the political, social and economic growth of the Philippines. This month-long celebration therefore underscores the recognition our country gives to women in the family, community and nation,” he said.

Panelo recognized that a lot of work still has to be done to empower the Filipino woman. “Hence, we urge each one to help one another to motivate Filipinas in reaching their full potential, especially in nation-building. This government will continue its advocacy for women’s rights and women empowerment.” – With Christina Mendez

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2020/03/04/1998033/army-now-deploys-women-frontlines
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Commentary: The tiny island that's key to China's maritime ambitions

Posted to the Japan Times (Mar 3, 2020): The tiny island that's key to China's maritime ambitions (BY TOBIN HARSHAW/Bloomberg)



NEW YORK – Nobody would ever call Thitu Island a Pacific Ocean paradise. The second-largest of the chain of reefs, shoals and atolls in South China Sea known as the Spratly Islands, Thitu is a sunbaked 37-hectare rock, dotted with scruffy trees and long-abandoned military bunkers, eking out existence just a few feet above high tide.

Yet obscure Thitu — known as Pag-asa (“Hope Island”) in the Tagalog language of the Filipinos who inhabit it — has become an object of desire in the increasingly contentious geopolitical dispute involving the Philippines, China and four of their Pacific Rim neighbors: Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam. And, thanks to recent actions by the erratic Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, the island and its residents are increasingly vulnerable to China’s vast ambitions across the entire South China Sea.

Roughly 390 km from Palawan, the westernmost major island in the Philippines, Thitu has three things most of the Spratlys lack: fresh water; a year-round population (roughly 200, including many veterans and schoolchildren); and a crumbling concrete airfield about 1,120 meters long.

It also has a new neighbor. Starting in 2014, China began a land reclamation project 25 km to Thitu’s south at Subi Reef, which previously poked its head above water only at low tide. The Subi development, like half a dozen other Chinese constructions in the South China Sea, is a forward position in Beijing’s effort to control all the waters up to 1,930 km off its southeastern shores, to what it has long referred to as the “Nine-Dash Line” in the Pacific.

Ever since, China has become increasingly aggressive in the Spratlys. Three years ago, satellite photos released by a Filipino congressman, Gary Alejano, showed a flotilla of five Chinese fishing ships, coast guard vessels and frigates of the People’s Liberation Army-Navy within 5 nautical miles of Thitu.

“The Chinese may have a sinister plan to occupy sandbars just west of Pag-asa that belong to us,” Alejano said at the time. And don’t let the term “fishing ship” fool you. These craft and the military vessels supporting them are part of a vast maritime militia deployed across the South China Sea.

Things heated up in late 2018, when the Philippines began building a beaching ramp to allow the delivery of machinery for repairing Thitu’s airfield. Almost immediately, some 100 Chinese coast guard and fishing boats ringed the island in what amounted to a blockade.

In July 2019, the Philippine government filed a diplomatic protest after its national security adviser, Hermogenes Esperon Jr., revealed that 113 Chinese fishing boats were again “swarming” off Thitu’s shores. In late February, Philippines Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana texted that Chinese vessels remain near the island, “varying in numbers.”

Is the Chinese presence legal? Maybe. If the Chinese development is considered a legitimate ocean feature, Beijing could make the case the vessels are operating within the territorial waters of both Subi and Thitu.

But that is somewhat beside the point. They appear part of a broader attempt by China to intimidate the Philippines into acquiescing to its territorial claims in areas where it hasn’t built any artificial islands. This includes the modest fishing boats. Whether the fisherman are ostensibly after traditional seafood such as tuna, exotic reef fish now on the menus at trendy restaurants or giant clams harvested for their valuable shells, they are often the tip of the spear for Chinese military adventurism.

In 2016, the Philippines won a monumental decision in the Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague, prevailing on seven claims it put forward under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. The court even went beyond the Philippines complaints, saying that “China’s claims to historic rights, or other sovereign rights or jurisdiction, with respect to the maritime areas of the South China Sea encompassed by the relevant part of the nine-dash line are contrary to the convention and without lawful effect to the extent that they exceed the geographic and substantive limits of China’s maritime entitlements.”

Unfortunately, what should have been a crushing blow to Beijing’s expansionist dreams turned into a little more than a slap on the wrist.

While it was expected that China would ignore the court finding, the Philippine government of Rodrigo Duterte has been utterly negligent in pushing his nation’s legal advantage. While, with great fanfare, Duterte met with Chinese President Xi Jinping last fall to discuss the matter, the summit was widely been derided as political theater, choreographed in advance to let Duterte save face. It failed at even that, based on his own spokesman’s summary: “President Xi reiterated his government’s position of not recognizing the arbitral ruling as well as not budging from its position.”

Duterte’s motives are transparent (and to some extent understandable): He is courting Chinese investment and trade to lift his nation’s sagging economy. While he has established a personal populist bond with U.S. President Donald Trump, he’s not dumb to hedge his bets at a time Washington is looking less and less dependable as a military ally for any of its treaty partners.

Some observers insist Duterte is cagily playing the U.S. and China off against each other. But Gregory Poling, director of the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, says we should take the Philippine president at his word: “Duterte has consistently said he wants to sever the U.S.-Philippines alliance in favor of a strategic alignment with China, and he is willing to turn a blind eye to Beijing’s aggression in the South China Sea to make that happen.”

So perhaps it shouldn’t have come as a surprise that Duterte last month said he would abrogate the Visiting Forces Agreement, which since 1999 has allowed American troops to work with and train Filipino forces, who are now putting down an insurgency led by an al-Qaida affiliate in the southern islands of the archipelago.

Fortunately, Duterte is limited to a single six-year term, and may be replaced by someone with a little more backbone in defending Filipino territorial rights. But for now, China has pretty much a free hand, and the immediate fear is that its forces will land, and perhaps build an installation, on one of Spratly islets now claimed by Manila.

That would be a replay of its actions in 2012 on Scarborough Shoal, two previously uninhabited coral islands 270 northeast of Thitu. The expropriation of Scarborough was at the heart of the international court’s ruling against Beijing.

Clearly, no matter how many legal victories its neighbors win, China will simply shrug them off and push toward the nine-dash line (and probably some other lines beyond it). Just as clearly, it isn’t a practical goal for the U.S. and its democratic allies to build a seawall against Chinese influence — military, economic or diplomatic.

The smaller nations of Asia will have to make accommodations with the new hegemon, and Washington will have to allow them some leeway. But Duterte is setting a dreadful example by rolling over so completely for China’s maritime expansion. And it’s his own citizens on Thitu who may pay the price next.

[Tobin Harshaw is an editor and writer on national security and military affairs for Bloomberg Opinion.]

https://www.japantimes.co.jp/opinion/2020/03/03/commentary/world-commentary/tiny-island-thats-key-chinas-maritime-ambitions/#.XmAuGCFKiM8
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The Pros And Cons Of The Philippines-US Military Decoupling – Analysis

From the Eurasia Review (Mar 3, 2020): The Pros And Cons Of The Philippines-US Military Decoupling – Analysis (By Mark J. Valencia)

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte. Photo Credit: PCOO EDP, Wikimedia Commons.

The Philippines has notified the U.S. of its intention to abrogate their 1999 Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) in six months. This has elicited a wide spectrum of responses ranging from ‘this will be a disaster for US strategy in Asia, and for the Philippines – to – ‘this will be of great long term benefit to both. The likely outcome is somewhere in between these extremes.

The context is important. The US military has had a presence in the Philippines at least since it took over colonial rule from Spain in 1898. The Philippines was an American colony from 1898 to its independence in 1946. Since 1951 the Philippines and the U.S. have had a Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) which under certain conditions provides that each would support the other if either were attacked. Under this arrangement the U.S. had large bases in the Philippines of strategic importance to its continued regional dominance– Subic naval base and Clark air force base. The U.S. supported the brutal Marcos dictatorship until he was overthrown by a popular rebellion. Many Filipinos considered this and the bases as evidence of US imperialism and wanted the bases closed. https://quizlet.com/64789103/wh-chapter-342-the-colonies-become-new-nations-section-2-southeast-asian-nations-gain-independence-flash-cards/

The two parties could not agree on the terms of extending the leases and in 1992, the Philippines canceled the lease and the US troops departed. In 1999 the VFA was negotiated to provide a framework for temporary deployment of US forces in the country for training with Filipino forces including, most controversially, which country has jurisdiction over US troops who commit crimes in the country. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visiting_Forces_Agreement _(Philippines_%E2%80%93_United_States)

In 2016, an Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA) was negotiated to allow the U.S.to rotate troops into the Philippines and to build and operate facilities on Philippine bases. Its implementation has been delayed by the Duterte administration.

Many think the abrogation of the VFA may make EDCA moot and threaten the very basis of the US-Philippines military alliance – – the MDT. https://www.japantimes.co.jp/opinion/2020/02/12/commentary/japan-commentary/duterte-poised-shake-regional-security-order/#.XkdQtShKiAQ This was corroborated by Philippines Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. who indicated that ‘without the VFA, the MDT would be “hollow” and the EDCA “practically useless.” https://globalnation.inquirer.net/185263/us-wrong-move-to-end-vfa-amid-china-buildup#ixzz6DzoSL9wZ

An example of “the sky is falling reaction” is that of Derek Grossman of Rand who holds that the collapse of the alliance would send the “message to Washington’s remaining allies and partners that you simply shouldn’t trust that the US will defend or assist you against China. https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/politics/article/3050833/ending-philippines-us-military-pact-will-affect-south-china-sea James Stavridis, former NATO commander says the Philippines is “critically important to American security and geopolitical influence.” https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020-02-21/the-u-s-can-t-afford-to-lose-the-philippines-to-china James Holmes of the Naval War College thinks terminating the VFA “could ripple throughout Southeast Asia to the detriment of _ _ US maritime strategy toward China”. https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/us-philippines-alliance-dying-123841 The reason that the abrogation could be a threat to U.S. China strategy is that it would deny the U.S. a forward base to deter and contain China – either with intermediate range missiles or the projection of conventional air and sea power. https://original.antiwar.com/bello/2020/02/20/duterte-does-the-right-thing-for-a-change/

Some officials in the US government are clearly worried. According to Secretary of Defense Mark Esper – – it would be a move in the wrong direction as we _ _ are trying to say to the Chinese: You must obey the international rules of order.”
https://globalnation.inquirer.net/185263/us-wrong-move-to-end-vfa-amid-china-buildup#ixzz6DzoSL9wZ Indo-Pacific Commander Admiral Phil Davidson fears that ending the defense relationship would undermine the counter terrorism campaign in the Philippines south. https://www.scmp.com/news/asia/australasia/article/3050435/china-threatens-pacific-stability-us-commander-warns-citing

A few Filipino commentators worry that it would leave the Philippines vulnerable to China’s aggression in the South China Sea. Constant Duterte critic former Supreme Courte Justice Antonio Carpio thinks that the only reason that China did not occupy and build on the disputed Scarborough Shoal was the MDT and that without it the Philippines will now be vulnerable to that. https://www.msn.com/en-ph/news/national/end-of-vfa-paves-way-for-china-build-in-scarborough-shoal-carpio/ar-BB107hsd?ocid=ob-fb-enph-370 Before the decision was final, Locsin argued for maintaining the VFA saying that “the continuance of the agreement is deemed to more beneficial to the Philippines compared to any predicates were it to be terminated.” https://apnews.com/4404cae9d2eb241ec1f6b141c91f60fb

However, at the other end of the spectrum are completely opposite views based on the same facts. Some US analysts think this development could benefit the U.S. on the long term. Lyle Goldstein at the Naval War College, argues that “U.S. taxpayers, servicemen, and strategists alike should thank the hot-headed leader for helping to inject a major dose of reality into contemporary American strategy formulation. It provides an opportunity to think anew about the vastly over-extended U.S. defense commitments across the whole Asia-Pacific region.” https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2020/02/14/dutertes-gambit-why-americans-should-thank-the-hot-headed-leader-of-the-philippines/ Perennial conservative pundit Pat Buchanan agrees, writing that it could stimulate a “revisit and review [of]all the defense alliances and war guarantees entered into 60 and 70 years ago, to address threats that no longer exist in a world that no longer exist”. Some argue that there is no vital interest at stake for the U.S. in defending the Philippines’ claims to rocks and maritime claims in the South China Sea. Indeed they see this Philippine move as an opportunity for the U.S. to extricate itself from being drawn into a conflict with China on its behalf. .” President Donald Trump simply quipped “I don’t really mind if they would like to do that, it will save a lot of money.” https://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2020/02/12/world/asia/12reuters-philippines-usa-defense-trump.html

Some Filipino nationalists consider this a positive milestone for the Philippines and Filipinos. Duterte himself told China in 2016 that “I want may be in the next two years, my country free of the presence of foreign military troops.” https://buchanan.org/blog/if-duterte-wants-us-out-lets-go-138177 Walden Bello – a frequent critic of Duterte –sees the “the MDT and the VFA [as] vestiges of a colonial past that subordinated the country’s national interest to the strategic designs of the United States in the Asia Pacific”.

There are also practical reasons why it could benefit the Philippines in the long run. As Presidential spokesman Salvador Parelo said “Visiting Forces Agreement is not advantageous to us because the more we rely on them, the more our position weakens and stagnates our defenses.” Duterte thinks American power in the region is waning and that China’s is rising. He is unsure if America will back up the Philippines in a conflict with China. He also believes that the Philippines will have to live with and get along with China for the long term. Besides, allowing the U.S. to continue to use the Philippines as part of their anti-China defense/offense would make it a target if hostilities broke out between the U.S. and China. Worse Duterte thinks that the U.S. might use the situation to spark a wider conflict that no regional country wants. https://amti.csis.org/dutertes-decision-to-scrap-the-vfa-whimsical-or-insidious/ Becoming more neutral militarily is more compatible with this view.

Despite these extreme positions there is much middle ground—and some wiggle room. The two have nearly six months to negotiate an alternative outcome. Indeed some see this move as part of Duterte’s strategy” to win concessions from either Washington or Beijing by playing the two nations off one another”. https://inhomelandsecurity.com/philippines-duterte-political-strategy/ If so, he is playing a dangerous game. One possible result is the alienation of both China and the U.S.. He is also making his administration and country a possible target of regime change

Others point out that scrapping the VFA does not automatically end the EDCA or the MDT. Goldstein thinks that “Washington might wish to leave the bare bones of the alliance in place as a deterrent” to China—and to prevent China from acquiring military bases in the Philippines. Stavridis agrees suggesting that the VFA can be replaced with a “VFA lite” acceptable to both. Locsin has proposed that the agreement be renegotiated rather than terminated. https://www.militarytimes.com/news/your-military/2020/02/26/duterte-says-philippines-can-survive-without-american-military-help/ Collin Koh of Singapore’s Rajaratnam School of International Studies suggests that the U.S. can compensate for the end of its alliance with the Philippines by enhancing military cooperation with Singapore, Vietnam and Indonesia https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/politics/article/3050833/ending-philippines-us-military-pact-will-affect-south-china-sea , and maybe with Australia and Papua New Guinea as well.

I would be surprised if this incipient rift became a permanent decoupling. There really is too much to lose too quickly for both. I suspect the U.S. will wait out Duterte and try to repair the relationship with his successor. But Duterte’s move should stimulate some soul searching and rethinking by both parties and perhaps eventually result in a more equitable and thus stable relationship.

[Mark J. Valencia, is an internationally known maritime policy analyst, political commentator and consultant focused on Asia. He is the author or editor of some 15 books and more than 100 peer-reviewed journal articles and Adjunct Senior Scholar, National Institute for South China Sea Studies, Haikou, China.]

https://www.eurasiareview.com/03032020-the-pros-and-cons-of-the-philippines-us-military-decoupling-analysis/
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Arrest of MILF leader for role in 2015 Mamasapano clash draws BARMM intercession

From the Manila Bulletin (Mar 2, 2020): Arrest of MILF leader for role in 2015 Mamasapano clash draws BARMM intercession (By Ali Macabalang)

COTABATO CITY – The recent arrest here of a Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) field leader for his alleged role in the bloody 2015 “Mamasapano clash” has drawn intervention from the Bangsamoro Human Rights Commission (BHRC), calling for proper dispensation under the MILF-government peace process.

Lawyer Abdulnasser A. Badrudin, BHRC chairperson, issued a corresponding statement on February 28, two days after operatives of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) handcuffed Dumamba “Abuhalil” Sabpa to his bed while being confined at the Cotabato Regional Medical Center here.

The CIDG team served the arrest warrant on Sabpa that was issued by Judge Alandrex Betoya of the Regional Trial Court-Branch 15 here for a pending “direct assault with murder” case stemming from his group’s involvement in the Jan. 25, 2015 bloody clash in Mamasapano, Maguindanao.


The infamous clash left 44 elements of the Philippine National Police (PNP)-Special Action Froce (SAF), 15 MILF resident-fighters in Barangay Tukanalipao, and five civilian villagers dead.

The SAF operation, which a police board of inquiry found to have been uncoordinated with police and military entities in Maguindanao as well as the government-MILF peace process mechanisms, was meant to neutralize Indonesian bomb-maker Zulkifli ‘Marwan” Binhur and his Filipino student Basit Usman at barangay Tukanalipao.

A few days after clash, Sabpa, an MILF commander operating in Mamasapano town and nearby areas, surfaced and recounted in a TV interview how he and his men slugged it out with the SAF commandos.

“We defended our territory (recognized under the MILF-government peace process) from the attack. We did not know who were attacking because it happened before dawn. We only learned later that they were police elements of SAF,” Sabpa said in Pilipino.


Public outrage over the death of the 44 SAF troops prompted the 16th Congress to shelve the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) bill that the government of former president Benigno Aquino III had contemplated to enact in March 2015.

President Duterte revived the peace process with the MILF in a series of talks leading to the passage in July 2018 of Republic Act 11054, known as Bangsamoro Organic Law (BOL). The new law established the Bangsamoro region in replacement of the 29-year old Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.

In his Feb. 28 statement, BHRC Chairman Badrudin urged the Bangsamoro Transition Authority (BTA), the governing body of Bangsamoro autonomous government and the GPH-MILF peace accords implementing panels intervene in the arrest of Sabpa and “ensure that (his) rights” under existing peace mechanisms will be preserved.

Badrudin said Sabpa should be dealt with according to existing GPH-MILF peace process mechanisms, particularly the Normalization Annex on Confidence Building Measure that provides for possible grant of amnesty or pardon.

Other Moro legal luminaries corroborated the BHRC call, saying that some top MILF leaders like Chairman Murad Ebrahim who are now ruling executives of the new autonomous government had been pardoned of political crimes involving loss of lives as a positive consequence of the Mindanao normalization process.

Earlier reports said the CIDG had allowed SBPA to recuperate fully in hospital before taking him on custody to face the “direct assault with murder case” in court.

https://news.mb.com.ph/2020/03/02/arrest-of-milf-leader-for-role-in-2015-mamasapano-clash-draws-barmm-intercession/
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Suspected Militant Surrenders to Philippine Military

Posted to BenarNews (Mar 2, 2020): Suspected Militant Surrenders to Philippine Military



Rommel Aguirre, a suspected member of a militant group, answers questions from reporters as Col. Antonio John Divinagracia, commander of a military task force, listens during a news conference in southern Zamboanga city, March 2, 2020.  BenarNews

A suspected member of a terrorist cell that allegedly once plotted deadly bomb attacks with the Islamic State-linked Abu Sayyaf has surrendered to the Philippine military in southern Zamboanga city, six years after eluding capture, officials said Monday.

Authorities
identified the suspect as Rommel Aguirre, a mechanical engineer believed to be a bomb expert of the Rajah Solaiman Movement (RSM), a group composed mostly of former Christians who had converted to Islam and aligned with the IS.

A son of a former army ranger, Aguirre was charged with illegal possession of explosives in 2014. But instead of clearing his name, he eluded arrest then went into hiding, the military said.

“He was convinced by his father to surrender and clear his name,” Col. Antonio John Divinagracia, commander of a military task force, told reporters.


But Aquirre denied the allegations against him on Monday. He said he was unaware of any bombing plot and just wanted “to widen my connection as a Muslim” by connecting with other converts. He said he fled because he feared for his life.

RSM was accused of involvement in the bombing of a ferry near Manila Bay on Feb. 27, 2004, in a terror attack that killed 116 people. The following year, the group helped the Abu Sayyaf carry out three bombings that struck several targets across the country on Valentine’s Day, killing nine people and wounding dozens of others, officials said.

Philippine military authorities said the RSM was one of 23 Filipino groups that intelligence officials had identified as sympathetic to IS.

Founded in the mid-1990s and based in the northern Philippines, RSM provided training and recruitment to aspiring militants who were later fielded to Abu Sayyaf and al-Qaeda operations in the Philippines, the only predominantly Catholic country in Southeast Asia.

RSM’s founder, Ahmed Santos, was arrested in 2006. He had admitted to having forged an alliance with Umar Patek, an Indonesian bomb maker, who is serving a 20-year-sentence in his homeland for his role in several attacks, including the 2002 bombings in Bali, which killed 202 people, including 88 Australians.

A military official told reporters that Aquirre was monitored to have plotted to bomb the U.S. Embassy in Manila with the help of two other militants in 2014. He was allegedly seen carrying a black bag that contained explosives, but an employee of the hotel where he stayed alerted the police about the suspicious package. He fled before police arrived at the hotel, officials said.

https://www.benarnews.org/english/news/philippine/philippines-militants-03022020173527.html
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WESTMINCOM: Rangers, sayyafs clash in Sulu

Posted to the Western Mindanao Command (WESTMINCOM) Facebook Page (Mar 4, 2020):  Rangers, sayyafs clash in Sulu

Amid the conduct of focused military operation, troops from the 1st Scout Ranger Battalion encountered more or less ten fully armed members of the Abu Sayyaf Group under sub leader Hatib Hajan Sawadjaan in Barangay Liu Bud Pantao, Talipao, Sulu in the afternoon of March 3, 2020.

Firefight ensued which lasted for 30 minutes after which enemies withdrew bringing along their casualties with them.

No casualty was reported on the government side while that of the enemy is yet to be determined.

Recovered from the encounter site were: three bandoleer; three jungle pack; three poncho tent; one long and one short magazines of M16; cash amounting to Php14, 000.00; one android cellular phone; one 40mm cartridge ; 10 kilos rice; food stuff; and assorted kitchen utensils.

“While we continue with our peace campaigns, we are also intensifying our military operations to neutralize the obstinate members of the different threat groups in our area of operation who remain to be the menace of society,” said Lt. Gen. Cirilito Sobejana, commander of the Western Mindanao Command.

Pursuit operations are being conducted as of press time.

#DefeatingTheAbuSayyaf
#EliminatingTerrorism
#FromTerrorismToTourism

6th Infantry Division - Kampilan
601 Infantry - Unifier Brigade
602nd "Liberator" Brigade
603 Persuader Brigade
1st Mechanized Infantry Brigade
Unang Marinong Brigada
Team Tabak
Joint Taskforce Basilan
Team Igsoon
Haribon Troopers
Magbalantay Cmo
11 Infantry Division "Alakdan Troopers"
Gagandilan Siete
1102 Infantry "ganarul" Brigade
1st BCT Aegis
Kwatromarinobrigada Sulu
Jtf Tawi Tawi Indomalphi
Joint Task Force Zamboanga Virtual Center
Unbeatable Ranger Battalion
29th Infantry "Matatag" Battalion, Philippine Army
Tow Westmin Cmo
Tow Westmin Pio
Naval Forces Western Mindanao
Cmou Western Mindanao
Katapatan Pangkatihan-Dagatan

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https://www.facebook.com/afpwestmincom/photos/a.532970753511652/1666706636804719/?type=3&theater

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WESTMINCOM: HPFAs, IEDs seized in encounter sites in Maguindanao

Posted to the Western Mindanao Command (WESTMINCOM) Facebook Page (Mar 4, 2020): HPFAs, IEDs seized in encounter sites in Maguindanao

Operating troops recovered high-powered firearms and improvised explosive devices in two areas where military troops previously clashed with the Daesh-inspired terrorist group.

While conducting combat clearing operation in Barangay Salman, Ampatuan, Maguindanao at 4:50pm on March 3, 2020, operating troops from the 57th Infantry Battalion discovered two IEDs made of jetmatic pump.

Said IEDs are placed in the custody of the 57IB for safe keeping and documentation.

Likewise, troops of the 1st Mechanized Infantry Battalion recovered two high-powered firearms while continuously scouring the encounter site in Barangay Tuayan, Datu Hoffer, same province at 6 in the morning on March 4, 2020.

Seized were one 7.62mm improvised sniper rifle and one 5.56mm improvised rifle. Also recovered were several sacks of rice.

“Operating troops continue to scour the two areas of engagement while surgical operations are continuously being conducted in possible withdrawal route of the enemies,” said Col. Jose Narciso, commander of the 601st Infantry (Unifier) Brigade.

Troops are still pursuing the fleeing enemies.

“We are continuously gaining grounds and we remain steadfast in our efforts to crush down the remaining militants who refuse to return to the folds of the law,” said Lt. Gen. Cirilito Sobejana, WestMinCom commander.

“Congratulations to our troops from the Joint Task Force Central led by my mistah, Maj. Gen. Diosdado Carreon. Carry on your good work,” Lt. Gen. Sobejana added.

#DefeatingTheTerrorists
#SecuringThePeopleOfMindanao
#AFPYouCanTrust

6th Infantry Division - Kampilan
601 Infantry - Unifier Brigade
602nd "Liberator" Brigade
603 Persuader Brigade
1st Mechanized Infantry Brigade
Unang Marinong Brigada
Team Tabak
Joint Task Force Basilan
Team Igsoon
Haribon Troopers
Magbalantay Cmo
Gagandilan Sietei
1102 Infantry "ganarul" Brigadey "ganarul" Brigade
1st BCT Aegis
Kwatromarinobrigada Sulu
Jtf Tawi Tawi Indomalphi
Joint Task Force Zamboanga Virtual Center
Unbeatable Ranger Battalion
Matatag Battalion
Tow Westmin Cmo
Tow Westmin Pio
Naval Forces Western Mindanao
Cmou Western Mindanao
Katapatan Pangkatihan-Dagatan

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CPP/NDF-Panay Region: Senate Bill 1083, layi sa pagterorisa sa pumuluyo

NDF-Panay Region propaganda statement posted to the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) Website (Mar 4, 2020): Senate Bill 1083, layi sa pagterorisa sa pumuluyo

CONCHA ARANETA
NDFP PANAY REGION
NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC FRONT OF THE PHILIPPINES
MARCH 04, 2020

Hayagan nga pagtraidor sa pumuluyong pilipino ang ginhimo sang senado sa pagpasar sang senate bill 1083 o anti terrorism bill 2020. Sa amo nga layi mahimo nga dakpon kag silutan ang sin-o man nga ginasuspetsahan nga naga-instigar, kahimbon, nagapartisipar sa pagplano, paghanas, preparasyon kag pagpatigayon sang mga akto sg terorismo kag nagapangrekrut para ipatapo sa “terorista” nga mga organisasyon.

Mahimo nga ipaidalum sa arbitraryo nga surveillance, pagdakup nga wala sang warrant of arrest kag pagkahunong sa sulod sang 14 ka adlaw bisan wala pa sang ginpasaka nga kaso sa baylo nga 2 ka adlaw sadto ang sin-o man nga ila masuspetsahan.

Maathag nga ang katuyoan sang amo nga layi amo ang paghatag sang dugang nga poder sa Rehimeng US Duterte agud pahugon kag lupigon ang sin-o man nga nagakontra sa iya maki-dumuluong nga mga programa kag polisiya. Ginbutang sini sa makatalagam nga sitwasyon ang kaugalingon nga pumuluyo labi na ang mga patriyotiko kag progresibo nga mga indibidwal kag organisasyon nga nagaduso o nagasuporta sa mga lehitimo nga mga demanda para sa matuod nga reporma sa duta, trabaho, nagakaigo nga serbisyo sosyal, pagpangapin sa tawhanon nga kinamatarung, pagproteher sang kapalibutan kag madamo pa bilang mga target kag biktima sang pasismo kag terorismo sang estado.

Samtang nagalipas ang mga inadlaw dugang nga nagaathag ang desperasyon ni Duterte kag sang iya sindikato nga hubon nga magpabilin sa poder. Nagailusyon ini nga paagi sa pagpatuman sang serye sang mga layi pareho sang memo 32, EO 70 nga nagpaidalum sa bug-os nga pungsod sa de facto nga martial law paagi sa NTF-ELCAC kag sang Anti Terrorism Bill 2020 mapahipos kag mapunggan sini ang pagbato sang pumuluyo.

Mabaskog nga ginakundena sang NDFP Panay kag sang mga rebolusyonaryo nga organisasyon ang nasambit nga hublas nga pag-atake sang Rehimeng US Duterte sa basehan nga kinamatarung sang pumuluyo. Wala liwan nga padulungan ang amo nga lihok sang rehimen kundi ang wala hawid nga pagtapak sa kinamatarung sang pumuluyo, malaparan nga pagsabwag sang kakugmat kag pagpamatay sa mga inosente nga Pilipino.

Nagapanawagan ang NDF-Panay sa tanan nga rebolusyonaryo kag makibanwahanon nga pwersa nga hugot nga maghugpong kag tukuron ang malapad nga alyansa sang pumuluyo sa tanan nga saray kag sektor sang katilingban. Isulong ang armado nga rebolusyon agud batuan kag pukanon ang tuman ka mapanghimulos kag mapamigos nga teroristang Rehimeng US Duterte.

https://cpp.ph/statement/senate-bill-1083-layi-sa-pagterorisa-sa-pumuluyo-2/
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CPP/NPA-Central Negros: In Negros Island: NPA ambush mercenary Philippine Army

NPA-Central Negros propaganda statement posted to the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) Website (Mar 4, 2020): In Negros Island: NPA ambush mercenary Philippine Army

KA ANN JACINTO 
SPOKESPERSON
NPA-CENTRAL NEGROS
NEW PEOPLE'S ARMY
MARCH 04, 2020

A unit of the Leonardo Panaligan Command of the New People’s Army (LPC-NPA) Central Negros Guerrilla Front ambushed Philippine Army forces under the 303rd Brigade yesterday, March 3.



According to LPC-NPA deputy spokesperson Ka Ann Jacinto, 10 elements of the 62nd IB were on board an army truck when an NPA unit open fired at them at Sitio Compound, Barangay Luz, Guihulngan City.

In a statement Jacinto said that state forces suffered two killed-in-action, four wounded while two others fled and another soldier was missing.

“The NPA unit no longer pursued the ambushed soldiers because they were nearing a populated area and civilians might be harmed,” she said.

She further explained that their military action was a response to orders of their Regional Operational Command to launch tactical offensives against massive militarization and killings in the countryside.

Meanwhile, Jacinto condemned the torture of two captured NPA members by the 94th IB.

Last February, two NPA members were allegedly killed in an encounter with the Philippine Army at Barangay Binobohan still in Guihulngan City.

But Jacinto clarified that the two guerrilla fighters were captured after the said encounter and did not actually resist.

“Nonetheless, they were brutally tortured before they were killed since they did not give any information against their comrades to the soldiers,” she said.

“In fact, the 94th IB refuses to release the body of Ka Rido who was supposed to be buried today to his family because his fingers were cut off and his body was heavily bruised; the two were made to suffer until they were shot to death a day after they were captured,” she added.

Jacinto stressed that if it was the NPA who took prisoners of war or even during armed encounters and the soldiers can no longer fight, the International Humanitarian Law and the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect of Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law will be strictly observed.

The LPC-NPA denounced the Philippine Army’s senseless killings and forced mass surrender of farmers wherein after being coerced to surrender and promised rewards from the government’s so-called surrenderee program, they did not receive anything.

Lastly, the revolutionary army assured that whatever the reactionary government will do and despite the ruthlessness of the military, the people will continue to wage a revolutionary armed struggle until social justice is achieved.###

https://cpp.ph/statement/in-negros-island-npa-ambush-mercenary-philippine-army/
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Survey shows big majority of Filipinos satisfied with military

From Rappler (Mar 4, 2020): Survey shows big majority of Filipinos satisfied with military (By JC Gotinga)

Majority of Filipinos also trust in the AFP's capability to defeat security threats, but less so when it comes to West Philippine Sea intruders, says an SWS survey



ARMED FORCES. Hundreds of soldiers from the Philippine Marine Corps and the Philippine Army arrive at Villamor airbase in Pasay City after battling terrorists in Marawi City on October 21, 2017. File photo by Inoue Jaena/Rappler

A big majority of Filipinos are satisfied with the military’s performance and have much confidence in its capability to defeat security threats, a nationwide public opinion survey, partially sponsored by the military itself, showed.

The survey was conducted last December, but the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and private pollster Social Weather Stations (SWS) publicized findings for the first time on Wednesday, March 4, at the weekly Kapihan sa Manila Bay media forum in Malate, Manila.

Of the survey’s 1,200 respondents from Metro Manila, other parts of Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao, 79% said they were satisfied with the AFP’s performance, while 5% said they were dissatisfied, for an “excellent” net score of +74.

The rest – 15% – were undecided.


The survey respondents, 300 from each of the 4 main regions, were asked, “Batay sa kabuuang nagawa nila, ano po ang pakiramdam o opinyon ninyo sa Armed Forces of the Philippines o AFP? Kayo po ba ay lubos na nasisiyahan, medyo nasisiyahan, hindi tiyak kung nasisiyahan o hindi, medyo hindi nasisiyahan, lubos na hindi nasisiyahan, o wala pa kayong narinig o nabasa kahit na kailan tungkol sa [AFP]?” (Based on their overall performance, what are your feelings or opinion about the AFP? Are you very satisfied, somewhat satisfied, undecided, somewhat dissatisfied, very dissatisfied, or have not heard or read anything at all about the AFP?)

The survey also showed a general upward trend in the AFP’s public satisfaction ratings since 2015. The military is more highly rated in terms of public satisfaction than the Philippine National Police, noted SWS Deputy Director Vladymir Joseph Licudine.

Capability to defeat security threats

The military also scored well in terms of the public’s confidence in their capability to deal with the country’s main security threats.

In fighting rebels from the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) and its armed wing, the New People’s Army (NPA), 79% of survey respondents said they had “much confidence” that the AFP can beat them, while 4% said they had only “little confidence.” The rest were undecided.

Some 75% of respondents said they had “much confidence” that the military can defeat terrorist groups like the Abu Sayyaf and the Islamic State (ISIS), while 6% said they had “little confidence” it could. The others were undecided.

Fewer respondents gave affirmative answers when it came to the West Philippine Sea and external defense. Only 62% said they had “much confidence” that the AFP can “defend the territories of the Philippines in the West Philippine Sea and other places against any foreign threats,” and 12% said they had “little confidence.” More than a quarter of respondents – 26% – were undecided.

Communist rebels, terrorist groups, and foreign intruders in the West Philippine Sea are the country’s main security concerns, and the focus of military operations.

‘Whom you gonna call?’

“You have to take into context the Marawi siege….This is still a residue of the Marawi siege,” said Licudine, explaining the AFP’s excellent survey ratings.

The siege of Marawi City by the ISIS-linked Maute terror group that began in May 2017 was the toughest battle the military faced since World War II, said AFP spokesperson Brigadier General Edgard Arevalo.

They flushed out the terrorists and regained control of Marawi within 5 months – faster than US-led coalition forces were able to retake Mosul, Iraq, from ISIS – and it inspired public confidence, he added.

Licudine noted positive depictions of the military in TV shows and movies. “In the last 2 to 3 years, there were so many dramas that depict the military na maayos (as being orderly), etcetera. It also helps the image of the military,” he said.

“And you would also notice kasi, wala namang balita na negative masyado sa AFP (there hasn’t been much negative news about the AFP), especially during the martial law time in Mindanao…nothing really serious,” added Licudine, referring to the imposition of martial law in Mindanao from the time of the Marawi siege until it was lifted after December 31, 2019.

It was the military’s professional performance of its duty and its leaders’ commitment to excellence that must have shaped public opinion, along with its “modest modernization,” Arevalo told reporters at the forum.

Even President Rodrigo Duterte calls the AFP an “all-around” service that can be counted upon during natural disasters, accidents, and in any crisis, Arevalo said.

When trouble strikes, “whom you gonna call? It’s the Armed Forces,” the marine general quipped.

The survey was not entirely commissioned by the AFP, but it paid for 4 "rider" questions that were included in the SWS quarterly public opinion polls.

https://www.rappler.com/nation/253435-survey-shows-majority-filipinos-satisfied-military-march-2020
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Indignation rally staged vs violence, terrorism

Posted to Panay News (Mar 5, 2020): Indignation rally staged vs violence, terrorism


Around 600 more Negrenses from various civil society groups in southern and central Negros Occidental denounce the atrocities committed by the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army during an indignation rally in La Carlota City, Negros Occidental on Feb. 29. The said activity was coincided with the interment of Captain Efren Espanto Jr., a Negrense policeman who was killed during an encounter with NPA rebels in Janiuay, Iloilo last Feb. 12. THIRTYSECOND CMOC

BACOLOD City – Hundreds of Negrenses from various localities in the province staged an indignation rally to denounce the atrocities of the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s (CPP-NPA).

The gathering at the La Carlota City Public Plaza, which was supported by the Philippine Army and the Philippine National Police, coincided with the interment of Captain Efren Espanto Jr., a Negrense policeman who was killed during an encounter with NPA rebels in Janiuay, Iloilo last Feb. 12.


Espanto, who hails from La Carlota, was laid to rest at the La Carlota Memorial Park on Saturday.

Captain Kelvin Bayaban, head of the Philippine Army’s 32nd Civil Military Operations Company, lauded the people of La Carlota City for honoring the life of the fallen police captain.

Around 60 former members and supporters of the militant farmers’ group Kilusang Magbubukid nang Pilipinas from Barangay Nagasi, La Carlota also participated in the indignation rally.

The said group denounced all forms of violence and terrorism acts perpetrated by the CPP-NPA among the farmers’ sector and vowed not to be used by them to organize people and gain support from the masses.

All the participants of the gathering marched from Doña Hortencia Salas Benedicto National High School campus going to La Carlota’s plaza. There, they held a short program that was attended by a former rebel, who shared his experience being deceived by the CPP-NPA.

On Feb. 25, a similar activity was held in Bago City, where a wake for Espanto was held. About 300 Negrenses have paid tribute to the slain police captain and rallied to condemn the atrocities committed by the terrorist group. It was held in front of the Manuel Y. Torres Coliseum.

https://www.panaynews.net/indignation-rally-staged-vs-violence-terrorism/
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PRO XI help in surrender of five former NPA rebels

From the Mindanao Times (Mar 4, 2020): PRO XI help in surrender of five former NPA rebels (BY RHODA GRACE SARON)

The Police Regional Office XI facilitated the surrender of five former communist guerrillas from Bukidnon, Agusan del Sur, and Davao del Norte.

Davao regional director, Brig. Gen. Filmore Escobal, said alias Nick, a squad medic of Front Committee 89 operating in Kabangsalang, Malaybalay to Impasog-ong, Bukidnon, was the one who first surrendered.


He was helped by the different units supervised by Col. Edgar Alan Okubo, the deputy regional director for operations, such as the Regional Intelligence Division, Regional Logistics and Research Development Division, Regional Mobile Force Battalion, Davao del Norte and Davao del Sur Police provincial offices, Criminal Investigation and Detection Group XI, PRO XI, PRO III, and 1001st Brigade, 10th Infantry Division.

The team then coordinated with the Anti-Kidnapping Group-Mindanao Field Unit-Internal Security operation (AKG-MFU-ISO), Agusan del Sur and the 26th Infantry Battalion to facilitate the surrender of two more rebels.

They were identified as alias Rob, team leader, and alias Bong, both from the Front Committee 88, in Barangay Marbon, Talacogon, Agusan del Sur.

Earlier on Monday, the composite team coordinated with the 1003rd Brigade, 10th Infantry Division, 1st Special Action Battalion and 4th SAB, Special Action Force, CIDG XI, and Regional Health Service, facilitated the surrender of alias Piken, team leader of Guerrilla Front 56, and alias Langilan, Milisyang Bayan of Front 55 in Tagum City, Davao del Norte.

In his statement, the regional director was grateful as the rebels choose the regional office to facilitate their surrender.

“Ang pagpili nila sa ating rehiyon ay patunay lamang ng ating sinseridad upang tulungan ang sinuman miyembro ng NPA naghahangad na magbalik loob sa atin gobyerno,” Escobal said.

“With this, PRO 11 will continue to strengthen our effort to End the Local Communist Armed Conflict before the term of President Rodrigo Roa Duterte ends,” he further added.

https://mindanaotimes.com.ph/2020/03/05/pro-xi-help-in-surrender-of-five-former-npa-rebels/
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PAF needs applicants

From the Mindanao Times (Mar 4, 2020): PAF needs applicants

The Philippine Air Force Davao has announced that it is accepting applicants for PAF officer and enlisted personnel.

Capt. Jonathan Gregorio, acting commander of the Tactical Operation Wing-Eastern Mindanao, said during the AFP-PNP press conference that they lowered the required height for both male and female applicants to just five feet.

They should also be a natural born citizen, single, and with good moral character. The PAF officer candidate must be at least 21 years old and a degree holder, while candidate soldier must be 18 years old, with 72 units taken in college or a K-12 graduate.

For the initial requirements, applicants must submit their PSA birth certificate, transcript of records, diploma and two pieces 2×2 ID picture on a white background. Applicants who already passed the AFP Service Aptitude Test must bring a photocopy of their AFPSAT Individual Report Form with a valid result until March 31, 2020. 

https://mindanaotimes.com.ph/2020/03/05/paf-needs-applicants/
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OVERVIEW: Retired soldier/civilian analyst - Vietnam veteran- Southeast Asia specialist - Spent some time in Vietnam, Europe, the Middle East, Korea, and the Philippines - Now old and long-retired - Enjoying the good life - Blog helps to keep me mentally active
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