Deal Welcoming US Military Into Philippines Slammed As 'Betrayal'

October 15, 2020 0 By HearthstoneYarns

The U.S. and Philippine governments have agreed on a 10-year pact to open this southeast Asian country to more U.S. troops, warships, and fighter planes, flouting the people’s movements that booted the U.S. military from its permanent Philippine bases over twenty years ago.

“We have lost too much because of the U.S. military presence in our country,” Bernadette Ellorin, Chairperson of BAYAN-USA—an alliance of Filipino organizations in the U.S, told Common Dreams. “The Philippines has long history of protests against militarization. The protests now are only going to grow.”

The Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement was announced Sunday by the White House and confirmed by two anonymous Philippine officials speaking to the Associated Press.

According to AP, which obtained a Philippine government primer, the accord “would give American forces temporary access to selected military camps and allow them to preposition fighter jets and ships.” The primer did not specify how many U.S. troops will be deployed.

The agreement will be signed on Monday before President Barack Obama arrives on a two-day visit to Manila. The deal comes in the midst of Obama’s tour of the Asia-Pacific region, in what is widely seen as a bid to secure a U.S. military “pivot” to the region and push for the Trans-Pacific Partnership—a so-called “free trade” deal that has been slammed as “corporate colonialism.”

Critics say the U.S. economic and military agenda in the Asia-Pacific is aimed at securing dominance over the region and hedging against China. “Militarization is always the other side of economic intervention,” said Ellorin.

Throughout the Asia-Pacific, and in cities across the U.S., Obama’s trip has been met with protests. “Even before Obama is planned to arrive, they already started holding protests at the U.S. embassy in Manilla, and they were met with violent reaction from security forces,” said Ellorin.

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