With Us or Against Us

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With Us or Against Us Page 40

by Tony Judt

hegemony was almost complete, as was made apparent by the

  president herself during her recent visit to the United States when she

  stated that:

  While Asia must take greater responsibility for its own political and eco-

  nomic security, it must also recognise that strong relations with the

  United States of America will contribute greatly to regional peace and

  prosperity, stability and security, especially from terrorism.33

  It is clear that the Philippines has always been a client state of the United

  States and that American political, economic, and military interests

  extend deep into the country’s domestic politics and political/

  governmental institutions. Furthermore, half a century of American

  colonization, coupled with half a century of indirect U.S. intervention

  into Philippines politics, means that, in terms of both its domestic and

  foreign policies, the Philippines is no more than a proxy state acting

  under the direction of the United States.

  How the War against Terror has

  Divided the Governments of

  ASEAN and Allowed the United States

  to Assume Center Stage Once More

  ASEAN, today, is at a crossroads of its history. Since its formation in

  1967, the regional grouping has been trying to carve a place for itself

  as a major actor in global politics and its membership has now been

  expanded to include Brunei, Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam.

  Yet, despite the pomposity and grandeur of ASEAN meetings and

  conferences, the regional grouping has little to show in terms of concrete

  political success.

  ASEAN’s attempts to put forward and implement the Zone of

  Peace, Freedom and Neutrality (ZOPFAN) was soon exposed for the

  cosmetic phenomenon that it really was. Despite claims to neutrality

  during the Cold War, it was clear that ASEAN was quietly neutral “on

  the side of the West.” Committed as they are to free market principles

  and being among the first countries to embrace the globalization

  process, the nation-states of ASEAN have been important trading

  allies and strategic partners to their Western counterparts—though

  the relationship between the two sides was never one based on equality

  of stature and respect. The governments of ASEAN turned to the

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  Uncle Sam to the Rescue?

  237

  West, and most notably to the United States, to save them from the

  grip of Soviet expansion and America remains the number one trading

  partner of every ASEAN state, including the Muslim-majority states

  of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Brunei.

  This unequal relationship, brokered between Washington’s elite

  and its nominated counterparts in ASEAN, has also been based on

  very real differentials of political, economic, and military power which

  the leaders of ASEAN are more than aware of. As a result of this

  enduring legacy of dependency that has been underwritten by American

  intervention (or threats of intervention), sponsorship, and patronage,

  the governments of ASEAN have also been at the mercy of the whims

  of America’s political elite and economic managers.

  This was most clearly evident in the wake of 9/11 when each and

  every leader of ASEAN echoed America’s concern over the danger of

  “global Islamic terrorism” and the “threat” that it posed for global

  economic and political relations. Despite the cautious words of warning

  issued by the political leadership of Malaysia and Indonesia about

  America’s subsequent military exercises in Afghanistan and Iraq, both

  countries have played along with the American line and Malaysia has

  even gone as far as laying the foundations for a regional ASEAN Anti-

  Terror Center that is meant to coordinate the intelligence activities of

  the security services of the ASEAN states, with the Americans (via the

  CIA and FBI) giving close support. Malaysia has also shifted the focus

  of the Five-Nation Defence Group (comprising of Malaysia, Singapore,

  Britain, Australia, and New Zealand) toward the issue of “terrorism”

  and religious extremism in its bid to ensure that its military and strategic

  links with the West are not broken.34

  As we have seen, the divisive nature of intra-ASEAN rivalry and

  competition has also meant that some ASEAN governments have

  been able to exploit Washington’s ambitious agenda to the pull, pay-

  ing lip-service (if not more) to American designs on the region as a

  whole. Already the governments of Singapore, Thailand, and the

  Philippines have gone out of their way to ingratiate themselves to the

  Bush administration and both Lee Kuan Yew and Gloria Arroyo have

  openly called for a more visible and lasting U.S. military presence in

  the region.

  The Americans, in turn, have reciprocated these demands with

  their own renewed commitment to ASEAN’s future, no doubt with

  the intention of ensuring that ASEAN’s future development will be

  in line with U.S. political, economic, and strategic-military interests.

  During her recent trip to Washington (May 2003), Philippine presi-

  dent Gloria Arroyo was given the assurance that America will protect

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  238

  F arish A. Noor

  the interests of the Philippines, which the U.S. president described

  as America’s “oldest ally” in the region. The Philippines was also

  described by the U.S. president as a “major non-NATO ally” and a

  key country in the global war against terror.35 While the American

  government was busy improving its ties with the Philippines and

  Singapore, the military campaign conducted by the Indonesian armed

  forces against Islamist “rebels” in the north Sumatran province of

  Aceh, received scant attention. Despite numerous reports of atrocities

  being carried out by Indonesian troops against the civilian population

  in Aceh (including the burning down of hundreds of schools, col-

  leges, and religious seminaries), it was clear that Washington was more

  concerned about the ongoing war against terror in Southeast Asia at

  the time.36

  This trend, if continued unchecked, can only help to deteriorate

  the already poor and weakening state of human rights and democracy

  in ASEAN as a whole and to foreground long-existing tensions and

  rivalries between states and religious and ethnic communities in the

  region. In countries like Malaysia and Indonesia with Muslim majority

  communities, the dubious presence of the United States is bound to

  lead to even more vocal (and possibly violent) anti-American senti-

  ments spilling out onto the streets. While in those countries with

  Muslim minority communities, like Singapore, Philippines, and Thailand,

  the unwelcome intrusion of American military and intelligence per-

  sonnel to deal with the so-called Muslim problem will also lead to

  greater alienation and feelings of discrimination among the Muslims,

  who increasingly feel that they have been typecast as the “fifth col-

  umn” within. The net effect of U.S. intervention in the region would

  be the emergence of a politics of divide-and-rule, with Washington in

  the pivotal
position to play the role of patron–protector to regimes of

  its choice—regardless of the human rights records of the governments

  in question.

  Under such circumstances, what hope is there for an ASEAN bloc

  with a meaningful independent foreign and domestic policy to call its

  own? Those ASEAN leaders, like Dr. Mahathir of Malaysia, who have

  spoken up against the misguided policies of the United States in

  Afghanistan and Iraq have been summarily put down and chastised by

  America’s ambassadors with the warning that such talk could jeopar-

  dize the economic and political stability and future of their own

  countries.37 The “Great Game” has returned to Asia with a vengeance,

  and American global hegemony is set to rise once more as it rewrites its

  history and pursues its “manifest destiny” as part of a global crusade

  against terror.

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  Uncle Sam to the Rescue?

  239

  Notes

  1. On the same day (October 8) that the United States invaded Afghanistan,

  the leaders of PAS came out with their strongest statement against the

  Americans yet. For the Murshid’ul Am (spiritual leader) of PAS, Tuan

  Guru Nik Aziz Nik Mat, the attack on Afghanistan was clearly an attack on

  Islam and Muslims in general. Speaking out in defence of the Taliban gov-

  ernment, he claimed that: “The US hates the Taliban because the latter is

  firmly committed to upholding Islamic values. Osama bin Laden is just an

  excuse for the US, which has time and again shown its hostility towards

  Islam, to wage war against the religion,” Mohd Irfan Isa, Osama an Excuse

  to Wage War against Islam: Nik Aziz (Malaysiakini.com, October 10,

  2001). PAS’s (then) president Ustaz Fadzil Noor also stated that the

  attacks were not only against Afghanistan’s Taliban regime but that they

  constituted a direct assault on Muslims the world over. Speaking to local

  and foreign journalists in a press conference of his own, Fadzil Noor said

  that “America has attacked a small and defenceless country like

  Afghanistan without showing the world strong reason or proof, (and) they

  are war criminals,” US Embassy under Guard, PAS Labels Americans “War

  Criminals ” (Malaysiakini.com, October 8, 2001). He then added: “If the

  Americans are really waging a war against terrorism, why don’t they attack

  Israel, who are terrorists against the Palestinians?” (ibid.) The President of

  the Islamist party ended the interview with a clarion call to arms when he

  stated that: “all Muslims must oppose these criminals—this time, there is

  no denying a call for Jihad.” (Ibid.)

  2. See Tong Yee Siong, US Thanks Mahathir for Support, Understands

  Malaysia’s Dilemma (Malaysiakini.com, October 15, 2001). At a special

  press conference held in Kuala Lumpur, the U.S. Trade Representative

  Zoellick stated that the United States “respects Malaysia for all the internal

  challenges and tensions it has to deal with, which makes its support more

  meaningful.” He also denied that the Mahathir government’s objection to

  the U.S. air strike on Afghanistan could jeopardize the countries’ bilateral

  trade: “Our trade ties are based on close economic relationship. The sup-

  port we received in many areas will only strengthen the nature of our rela-

  tionship.” He added that “I don’t see any negative variety [of views] in

  there. The difference of views is understandable.”

  3. See “Admiral Blair: contain terrorism for political stability,” New Sunday

  Times, November 25, 2001.

  4. See Rohan Gunaratna, Inside al-Qaeda: Global Network of Terror

  (London: Hurst and Co., 2002).

  5. See Farish A. Noor, Fighting Demons of Their Own Making, in

  Malaysiakini.com, July 6, 2002.

  6. Robert J. McMahon, The Limits of Empire: The United States and

  Southeast Asia Since World War II (New York: Columbia University Press,

  1999).

  7. Ibid., 1999, p. 73.

  * * *

  240

  F arish A. Noor

  8. Robert J. McMahon, The Limits of Empire: The United States and

  Southeast Asia Since World War II (New York: Columbia University

  Press, 1999), p. 85.

  9. Ibid., p. 88.

  10. Ibid., p. 89.

  11. Ngo Dinh Diem was, however, totally out of touch with the Vietnamese

  people like Bao Dai. He ruled like a feudal warlord and was dependent on

  his own network of Catholic advisers, Chinese business cronies, and family

  members. Diem also preferred to speak in French, had spent years

  abroad, and was known to be supported by the Americans who saw him

  as their last chance to block a communist takeover of the country.

  12. Ibid., p. 107.

  13. Ibid., p. 115.

  14. Ibid., p. 115.

  15. Ibid., pp. 130–131.

  16. McMahon (1999) notes that “in a no-holds-barred effort to block a

  North Vietnamese victory, Nixon would unleash the most intensive

  bombing campaign of the war . . . Removing previous restraints, the

  President ordered the sustained bombing of Hanoi and Haiphong, the

  mining of Haiphong harbour and a naval blockade of the entire North

  Vietnamese coast” (p. 167).

  17. Ibid., p. 130. McMahon notes that “the grossly inflated body counts pro-

  duced by US and South Vietnamese forces as the principal index for

  military progress never even approximated the real figures. Nor could any

  mere statistical measure capture the indomitable will and determination

  of the other side, that was conditioned by historical experience and cultural

  values that few Americans knew and even fewer still appreciated” (p. 131).

  Vietnam would remain under Communist rule for the next two-and-a-half

  decades, though, by 1978, it would find itself at war again, this time

  against its communist ex-allies, Cambodia and China.

  18. For a more detailed account of the development of American policy toward

  the Moros, see Thomas C. McKenna, “Appreciating Islam in the Muslim

  Philippines,” in Islam in the Age of Nation-States, edited by Hefner and

  Horvatich (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997), pp. 48–67.

  19. Ibid., p. 51.

  20. Blum, 1995, p. 40. By the end of 1945, the Americans were training a

  local force of 50,000 Filipino troops that were later used to contain the

  Huk uprising. When the Huk leaders attempted to reintegrate themselves

  into mainstream Filipino society, their moves were blocked by the

  Americans and pro-American Filipino leaders. Luis Taruc, the leader of

  the Huks, was prevented from taking his seat in the Philippines Congress

  even though he had won the elections fairly.

  21. William Blum, Killing Hope: U.S. Military and CIA Interven-

  tions Since World War II (Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press,

  1995), p. 41.

  22. Ibid., p. 44.

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  Uncle Sam to the Rescue?

  241

  23. Ibid., p. 43.

  24. See Edward G. Landsdale, In the Midst of Wars (New York, 1972); Blum,

  Killing Hope.

  25. American military and intelligence personnel were stationed in Malaysia

  after World War II, tagging along with the British.
At the time was a

  detachment of security and intelligence personnel from the American

  Office of Strategic Services (OSS), which arrived to survey the political

  terrain in the region. The American agents were based at the offices of

  the OCBC bank in Kuala Lumpur, close to the Chinatown district of the

  capital where they could observe the activities of the Chinese communist

  and leftist movements there. Among the American OSS agents based at

  the OCBC building were Brig.-Gen. R.C. Pape, L.J.W. Smith, and

  Captain Post. It was at the OCBC office that the OSS agents attempted

  to lure members of the MCP-backed MPAJU, and one of the MPAJU

  leaders, Koon Swan, even tried to gain the support of the Americans in

  the MCP’s struggle against the British. None of the MCP’s efforts were

  to prove successful, and, in the end, it was the OSS (with the help of the

  Malayan intelligence expert C.C. Too) who managed to win over the

  communist leaders (like Chan Tai Chee) to their side. Though small in

  number, the American presence in Malaysia was destined to be a long-

  lasting one. As they had shown in the Philippines, the Americans were

  keen to impress upon the people of Southeast Asia that they were the new

  power to be reckoned with.

  26. See Mohd Irfan Isa, Osama—an Excuse to Wage War against Islam: Nik

  Aziz (Malaysiakini.com, October 10, 2001).

  27. See We Do Not Support War Against any Muslim Nation: PM

  (Malaysiakini.com, October 8, 2001).

  28. Ibid.

  29. See Tong Yee Siong, Mahfuz Wants Gov’t to Provide Military Aid to

  Taliban (Malaysiakini.com, October 11, 2001).

  30. Since the Philippine Senate defeated the bases treaty in September 1991,

  the Pentagon has been trying to reestablish its military presence in the

  Philippines in order to be able to use that country again as a springboard

  for U.S. power projection. President Ramos and his administration have

  been the Pentagon’s main allies in this effort.

  31. In November 1992, at the initiative of high U.S. military officials in the

  Pacific, their Philippine counterparts agreed to give the U.S. military

  access to Philippine ports, air fields, and military installations for purposes

  of ship visits, air transit, and small unit military exercises (as was reported

 

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