Insulting Barack Obama made the headlines, but Rodrigo Duterte’s remarks referred to a long and dark history of US interference in the Philippines. |
He may have insulted Obama, but Duterte held up a
long-hidden looking glass to the US
September 9, 2016 10.14am AEST
This article is part of the Democracy Futures series, a joint global initiative with the Sydney Democracy Network. The project aims to
stimulate fresh thinking about the many challenges facing democracies in the
21st century.
Philippine
President Rodrigo Duterte has taken his “bad manners” – having gained global notoriety with his election campaign insults
earlier this year – to a new level.
At a press conference at Davao International Airport on
Monday, on his way to meet US President Barack Obama and other
leaders attending the ASEAN summit, Duterte muttered a few short words in tagalog at the end of a lengthy and irritated
reply to a local journalist. With those words, he again made international headlines.
If
that were all there was to it, we could rightly roll our eyes and move on.
After all, Duterte’s language is vulgar; his slander of people and groups is
liable to incite violence; and his determination to kill drug pushers (to fight “crime with crime”) an abuse
of power. He should not be defended for any of this.
But as someone who has spent a long time
studying US-Philippine relations, I think there’s
something more for us to see here. And if we want to judge the Philippine
president (and, by default, the nation for electing him) from high moral
ground, I think we have a responsibility to pay attention to it.
Restoring an invisible history
Who
is he to question me about human rights and extrajudicial killings?
So asked Duterte on Monday. It’s actually a very good
question, and one long overdue from a Philippine president. The extent to which
the violence of US relations with the Philippines has been made invisible by a
history written predominantly by Americans themselves cannot be overstated.
It began with a three-year war (1899-1902) that most Americans have
never heard of. The war overthrew a newly independent Philippine republic and
cost between 250,000 and a million Filipino lives – only to be called “a great misunderstanding” by American
colonial writers.
After all, the US had chosen the
Philippines to be its great Asian “showcase of democracy”. The invasion was a
benevolent act. Hence the complete erasure of acts of American violence from
the Philippine national story.
The 20th Kansas Volunteers march through Caloocan after the battle of February 10, 1899, early in the war that toppled the first Philippine republic. |
You don’t need to be
a conspiracy theorist to smell something rotten. Since the 1950s Philippine
writers, academics, journalists and so on have been trying to reframe the
historical narrative to point out this fact: to be invaded by a military power,
told you don’t possess the character or capability for self-government, and
then controlled by another nation for four decades, to the occupier’s lucrative
commercial benefit, was not to be the recipient of a benevolent act.
Even at the time the
war was taking place, one of America’s best-loved authors was writing just as
much. Mark Twain was prolific in writing about the paradox
of the “democratising mission” to the Philippines.
Penned in 1901, but
still stunningly poignant, is this extract from his essay, To the Person Sitting in Darkness:
The Person Sitting in Darkness is
almost sure to say: ‘There is something curious about this – curious and
unaccountable. There must be two Americas: one that sets the captive free, and
one that takes a once-captive’s new freedom away from him, and picks a quarrel
with him with nothing to found it on; then kills him to get his land.'
In America, these
remain Twain’s least-known works.
Before his (now regretted) distasteful remark, Duterte
had much to say in response to the question about being confronted over human rights in an upcoming meeting with
Obama. He was responding to murmurs from critics that, if he wouldn’t listen to
anyone else about the extrajudicial killings in the Philippines, just wait
until he meets the US president.
No-one seems to have
listened to or cared much about the other six minutes of Duterte’s reply. So let me tell you
something about it. It was a reclaiming of the historical narrative of
Philippine-US relations, a holding up to the US of the hidden
“looking glass” Mark Twain had written about 100 years earlier.
An assertion of independence
Calling out the hidden insinuations, as
Duterte did, that the US continues to have authority over the politics of the
Philippines, is bold and brazen, but reasonable. Consider his statement:
I
am a president of a sovereign state. And we have long ceased to be a colony. I
do not have any master but the Filipino people.
These words are less evidence of his
demagoguery or an intention to personally disparage Obama than a reference to
history, and are more accurately read as such.
After the second world war, colonies of any
sort, even the so-called “democratic” US one in the Philippines, were on the
nose. But this didn’t stop Washington officialdom from continuing to claim the
right of access to the Philippines' political and economic realms.
When the US finally granted the Philippines
its (second) independence in 1946, it required the new republic to amend its
constitution so a bill could
be passed that, as well as legislating preferential trade conditions for the
US, would grant American citizens equal rights with Filipinos to Philippine
natural resources. It was the beginning of a new phase: neocolonialism.
It was not just a matter of political
interference and the power to make or break Philippine presidents with
endorsement and strategic financial support. In a visceral sense, the nation
was always being watched and judged
by its democratic “teacher”.
School Begins: Uncle Sam lectures his class in Civilisation (the pupils are labelled Philippines, Hawaii, Puerto Rico and Cuba). |
Asked about being
confronted with human rights concerns by Obama, Duterte said:
You must be kidding. Who is he to
confront me? America has one too many to answer for the misdeeds in this
country … As a matter of fact, we inherited this problem from the United
States. Why? Because they invaded this country and made us their subjugated
people … Can I explain the extrajudicial killing? Can they explain the 600,000 Moro massacred in this island [Mindanao]?
Do you want to see the pictures? Maybe you ask him. And make it public.
I’m reminded of a
comment by Alicia Garza, a founder of the Black Lives
Matter movement ignited by police killings of black Americans.
Speaking in Sydney last weekend at the Festival of Dangerous Ideas, she related
how, when civil rights protests get uncomfortably heated, she is often asked:
“Why are they so angry?” She paused. Then softly giggled, giving the audience
time for the ludicrousness of the question to sink in.
Why is the
Philippines president so angry about the prospect of the US president
confronting him about human rights abuses? History. As Duterte said himself on
Monday, violent acts of the past don’t stay in the past. They get passed on
from generation to generation, especially when the injustice goes
unacknowledged and unaddressed.
It is difficult to
stomach Duterte’s style. It certainly is difficult to look past the serious
issues raised by his administration’s “war on drugs”. We should condemn his
misuse of power.
But if we condemn the
president for his recent remarks because we claim to be concerned about the
rights of Filipinos while showing no interest in acknowledging the past crimes
and injustices against the Philippines, we fall into our own sort of hypocrisy.
Let’s be honest, if
Duterte didn’t curse and swear and offend our sensibilities, would we be paying
so much attention to the Philippines? For once, I heard a Philippine president
holding the US to account for all its doublespeak and hypocrisy in
US-Philippine relations. And I couldn’t help but appreciate that.
.
http://theconversation.com/he-may-have-insulted-obama-but-duterte-held-up-a-long-hidden-looking-glass-to-the-us-65085
.
http://theconversation.com/he-may-have-insulted-obama-but-duterte-held-up-a-long-hidden-looking-glass-to-the-us-65085
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