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Philippines Resisting U.S. Pressure To Join War Against Iraq

“Although we are part of the international agreement against terrorism, it doesn’t follow that we will be involved in the war against Iraq”

By Kazi Mahmood, IOL Southeast Asia Correspondent

KUALA LUMPUR, September 16 (IslamOnline) - A green light from the United Nations is not enough for the Philippines to join another war against Iraq, and the U.S. can’t invoke its Mutual Defense Treaty with the Southeast Asian nation to open its airspace and facilities to American warplanes that would take part in a war on Iraq, government officials said Monday, September 16.

A high-ranking official at the Department of Foreign Affairs in Manila said the government would also have to consider the country's own interests that would be placed at risk if the United States launched a full-scale attack on Iraq.

"Aside from the 1.5 million Filipinos in the Middle East, we also have to consider the effects of our decision on our Moro [Muslim secessionists] problem in Mindanao," the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said, according to The Inquirer.

On Saturday, September 14, Malacanang announced that American warplanes would be allowed into Philippine air space only for humanitarian reasons, and on the condition that the U.N. Security Council supported any U.S. military action.

Presidential Press Secretary Ignacio Bunye said the treaty would take effect only if the war being fought were in the country or within the Asian region.

Bunye said past military pacts between the Philippine government and the U.S. do not compel the government to get involved in all the wars that the U.S. will fight, and that includes its war against Iraq.

“Although we are part of the international agreement against terrorism, it doesn’t follow that we will be involved in the war against Iraq,” he said.

Arroyo’s earlier offer of the country’s airspace and facilities to the U.S. drew fire from the opposition

Several important figures of the opposition altogether lauded the current government’s decision to reject the use of the country’s airspace for military purposes.

According to local newspapers, the Department of Foreign Affairs source said that Iraq remained an influential country among Arab states and its support for Philippine government initiatives in solving the Moro secessionist movement would be quite valuable.

"We should understand that we still have a Moro secession problem in the South and that Iraq has allies in the Arab community [who] could help us solve our own issues in Mindanao," the source reportedly said.

President Macapagal-Arroyo had earlier offered the country’s airspace and facilities to the U.S. after U.S. President George W. Bush threatened to stage a unilateral strike against Iraq, which he accused of allegedly possessing weapons of mass destruction.

The President’s statement immediately drew fire from the opposition, and triggered a formal protest from Iraq.

 

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