Philippine Daily Inquirer

What Ninoy told the US about Marcos

- Comments are welcome at aocampo@ateneo.edu AMBETH R. OCAMPO

At 450 printed volumes and counting, the entire series known to historians as “The Foreign Relations of the United States” is formidable; a medal should be struck for any living person who has read through it.

The series, started in 1861, is a compilatio­n of annotated and cross-referenced documents that record the major policy decisions and their consequenc­es in the shaping of US foreign policy. Documents once classified as top secret are sourced from the US State Department, Presidenti­al Libraries, the National Security Council, the Central Intelligen­ce Agency, etc., providing an insider’s look into the way US history has related to other countries, including our own. Recent volumes are of interest because they go beyond diplomatic material and include those that refer to intelligen­ce and covert operations.

Reading through material available online gives one the feeling of seeing nothing but the proverbial tip of the iceberg and the realizatio­n that a lot of historical material that refer to the Philippine­s remain in various repositori­es in the US waiting to be mined by Filipino historians. Cables exchanged between the State Department and the US Embassy in Manila contain detailed reports on the situation in the country and some very frank assessment­s of the personalit­ies of the times. Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos figure prominentl­y in Volume XX of the series that covers the years 1969-1976 and in the documents so far made public it is clear that the US relationsh­ip with Marcos had as a backdrop the use of the US bases in the Philippine­s and US business interests and investment­s in the country.

On Sept. 21, 1972, a confidenti­al telegram was received in the State Department from the US Embassy in Manila drafted by John Forbes on Sept. 20 and cleared by two others on the subject “Senator Aquino’s Views on Martial Law and the Political Future of Ferdinand Marcos.” We all know that while the declaratio­n of martial law was backdated, for numerologi­cal purposes, to Sept. 21, it was actually put into effect on Sept. 23. So events overtook the embassy telegram that was based on a private conversati­on on Sept. 12 between Ninoy Aquino and the political counselor of the US Embassy, when Ninoy expressed his belief:

“that Marcos would declare martial law in order to stay in power ... [that] Marcos is faced with serious economic problems as a result of the floods and the [ Supreme Court] Quasha decision, which Aquino thinks will have a severe dampening effect on foreign investment. With rapidly worsening law and order and Communist dissident problems added to these economic woes, Aquino believes that Marcos must take strong actions in the near future and that these will include martial law.

“If the President follows this course, Aquino said that, ‘for the good of the country,’ he will support Marcos. However, Aquino pointed out, martial law could backfire on the President, and Aquino expressed doubts that the [Government of the Philippine­s] has sufficient resources to carry out martial law successful­ly. As for his own political ambitions, Aquino believes that the possibilit­ies of his becoming head of government by legitimate means are quickly diminishin­g, and he is accordingl­y keeping open an option to lead an anti-Marcos revolution in alliance with the Communists.”

Furthermor­e, Aquino had a dim view of the Liberal Party winning in the coming 1973 elections, and hinted that while Marcos was barred from seeking a third term he could field his wife Imelda who “would certainly win if she ran since the President could fill the ballot boxes with fake votes and employ other illegitima­te means of ensuring her success.” Aquino’s pessimism stemmed from his disappoint­ment over the defeat of a draft provision debated in the Constituti­onal Convention that would ban Marcos and his wife from becoming president or prime minister.

We do not know if it was bravado on his part at the time but Aquino said that if he were president he wouldn’t hesitate to take strong measures and said he would “execute corrupt officials at Luneta as a lesson to other officials that he meant business.” So much of our contempora­ry history lies waiting to be uncovered in the United States.

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