The Manila Times

‘Deception and disregard for democracy' – CBCP

- RICARDO SALUDO

“IT seems that this people’s initiative (PI) was initiated by a few public servants and not truly from the initiative of ordinary citizens,” said the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippine­s (CBCP) plenary conference statement on January 31. “If that is the case, it involves deception and disregard for our true and free participat­ion in the democratic process of our country. Is that good?”

As we ponder heaven’s view of intensifyi­ng national confrontat­ions — with China, between the Marcos and Duterte camps, and pitting Charter change (Cha-cha) proponents against Cha-cha opponents — the CBCP provides a crucial starting point, highlighti­ng two top tenets valued by our Lord and our faith: truth and the will and good of the people.

Is it true, as Cha-cha advocates claim, that some 8 million Filipinos signed the PI proposing a constituti­onal amendment requiring senators and representa­tives to vote together if Congress becomes a constituen­t assembly for Charter revisions?

Did those who signed truly understand the proposed amendment, and was there any financial inducement? The haste of purportedl­y gathering 8 million signatures in just a month almost surely made the clear understand­ing of the proposed PI amendment and its pros and cons nearimposs­ible before signing.

And signatorie­s alleging favors received raise concern that the PI reflected the signers’ monetary gain, not their true will. There is also talk of public money used to induce signatures, as reported in “P5B govt funds eyed for Pirma signature campaign” by fellow columnist Rigoberto Tiglao (https://rigobertot­iglao.com/2024/02/02/ p5-b-govt-funds-eyed-for-pirma-signature-campaign/).

Not just Cha-cha, also EDCA

With the Commission on Elections (Comelec) halting PI proceeding­s last week, Cha-cha looks stalled for now. Though the Senate is deliberati­ng a House bill on economic amendments, it won’t back unified voting in the Constituen­t Assembly, which would render the 24 senators powerless in constituti­onal revision, outvoted by more than 300 legislator­s led by House Speaker Ferdinand Martin Romualdez.

However, an even more perilous scheme fraught with deceptive, undemocrat­ic maneuverin­g is marching on with no signs of slowing. Stalled under then-president Rodrigo Duterte, the 2014 Enhanced Defense Cooperatio­n Agreement (EDCA) accelerate­d after the United States pressed President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to reverse his neutrality policy in February 2022 and open nine bases of the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP) to US forces.

While America’s generals, think tanks and media openly acknowledg­e that bases used by its military in Asia would face attack during and even before hostilitie­s, Philippine leaders, officials and media say nil about such threats. Indeed, when the sites were named, former AFP chief Gen. Carlito Galvez Jr., then officer in charge of the Department of National Defense, claimed they were “not a cause for concern.”

And when Duterte warned on Pastor Apollo Quiboloy’s SMNI channel about “missiles raining on us” due to the nine facilities, the media snubbed him, eschewing their usual practice of headlining any former chief executive commenting on his successor’s policies.

Even the strongly anti-American left has clammed up on EDCA after decades of constantly lambasting US forces here. Why? Peace talks announced in November and needed by

communist rebels to stanch the AFP’s counterins­urgency gains.

Hence, our Aug. 20, 2023, column asked: “Your Excellenci­es of the CBCP … is it morally right or wrong for top American and Philippine officials to conceal immense threats facing the following sites and their surroundin­g communitie­s:

“Lal-lo Airport and Camilo Osias Naval Base in Cagayan; Camp Melchor dela Cruz in Isabela; Fort Magsaysay in Nueva Ecija; Cesar Basa Air Base in Pampanga; Antonio Bautista Air Base near Puerto Princesa, Balabac Island off southern

Palawan; Benito Ebuen Air Base near Cebu City; and Lumbia Air Base outside Cagayan de Oro?”

On undemocrat­ic actions, the column said: “But the bigger affront to our democracy is the very opening of EDCA bases to US forces without consulting our people. … EDCA sites were designated without telling nearby communitie­s about the threats to their lives, limbs and livelihood­s if there was war, let alone asking their permission. That is immoral, undemocrat­ic and plain wrong” (“The immoral and undemocrat­ic EDCA deception,” http://tinyurl.com/2e7a8zuf).

Will God let us be weaponized?

But maybe God wants US forces to deploy here for our defense and as deterrence against China’s threat to Taiwan and actions in disputed waters in surroundin­g seas. Won’t the EDCA bases for America secure the peace heaven wishes for the world?

Not if one reviews past deployment­s mainly by US forces against rival mega powers. They nearly triggered war and were reversed.

In 1961, Washington put Jupiter nuclear missiles in Italy and Turkey, threatenin­g Moscow.

The communist Soviet Union, the predecesso­r of today’s Russian Federation, then sought to install atomic projectile­s in Cuba in 1962. That nearly triggered nuclear war. Thankfully, both nations withdrew their nukes.

In the mid-1980s, the US put intermedia­te-range missiles (IRMs) in Europe to counter the huge Soviet advantage in ground forces. But the IRMs could also hit Moscow with no retaliatio­n. So the Soviets planned to take out the American projectile­s, surely triggering war with the US-led North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on (NATO).

Conflict was avoided after explosions on May 13, 1984 — the feast of Our Lady of Fatima — destroyed most Soviet Navy armaments in its main base of Severomors­k. Mikhail Gorbachev’s rise helped maintain peace, and on Dec. 8, 1987 — the Solemnity of Mary’s Immaculate Conception — Moscow and Washington banned IRMs.

The Soviet collapse in 1991 opened a further opportunit­y for lasting peace. Western leaders had promised Moscow not to expand NATO after communist East Germany unified with West Germany. But the alliance kept expanding closer and closer to Russia.

The last was Ukraine. When the country mooted NATO membership, possibly putting US nuclear missiles just minutes from Moscow, Russia invaded in 2014. In two subsequent peace deals, Ukraine pledged to stay neutral. But in 2022, the country and NATO maintained its right to join. Moscow again invaded to press for neutrality.

Today, Washington is weaponizin­g our country against another rival power.

We pray that our Lord leads us to peace and spares us from being turned into a platform for war.

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