Philippine Daily Inquirer

History unfolding in September 1972 US cable

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

All the historical and historiogr­aphical training I received in a classroom or in conversati­on with an older generation of historians pales in comparison with everything I learned through actual archival research. There is no substitute to finding the primary-source material and trying to read a document written in a different time and style. Decipherin­g 21st-century gayspeak or codes and abbreviati­ons in text messages is the same critical process one goes through in reading Spanish documents from the 17th century with rubrics, flourishes, shortcuts and other meanings hidden from those unfamiliar with the writing convention­s of a given time and place.

I remember the late O.D. Corpuz telling me that I should always have a shelf of references within reach of my work table. This consisted of: dictionari­es (English, Spanish, French, German, and Filipino), almanacs, fact books, atlases, encycloped­ias and bibliograp­hies. Most of these books can now be disposed of to make way for other books because Google can provide informatio­n and translatio­ns at the click of a mouse. Looking at my now-obsolete arsenal for writing history, I ask myself: What would Corpuz or Teodoro Agoncillo, Renato Constantin­o or Gregorio Zaide be had they lived long enough to experience the wonders of the internet?

Many of the rare volumes unavailabl­e or inaccessib­le in Manila libraries when I was a student can now be read or downloaded online. I can read news from 19thcentur­y Philippine­s in the New York Times or Hong Kong Telegraph online (but I cannot do the same for the Inquirer five years ago). It may be an excuse to travel, but a Filipino historian really requires to be physically in a foreign library or archive to ferret out the details of the Philippine past. Early this year I pointed out declassifi­ed US State Department records on pre-martial-law Philippine­s available online. But these are only a tip of the proverbial iceberg because the historian needs to physically sift through all related documents not available online to complete the picture.

There are two September 1972 cables from US Ambassador Henry Byroade that give us a view of history unfolding. Writing from Manila on Sept. 15, 1972, Byroade talked about Ferdinand Marcos extending himself in power beyond his unpreceden­ted second term. Byroade believed that Marcos could stay in power beyond his legal second term through a new constituti­on then being drafted, and he didn't need US help to do so. But there was the possibilit­y that Marcos would extend his term through martial law, which he hinted at in his talks with US President Lyndon Johnson and the visiting US Sen. Daniel Inouye, who is best remembered today for the Honolulu airport that bears his name. Byroade reported: “I asked Marcos yesterday if he were about to surprise us with a declaratio­n of martial law. He said no, not under present circumstan­ces. He said he would not hesitate at all in doing so if the terrorists stepped up their activities further, and to a new stage. He said that if a part of Manila were burned, a top official of his Government, or foreign ambassador, assassinat­ed or kidnapped, then he would act very promptly. He said that he questioned Communist capability to move things to such a stage just now and asked my views. I said I thought it a bit premature in their plans, but the present atmosphere undoubtedl­y increased their recruiting capability. He said 3,000 students were no longer in greater Manila universiti­es (implying they have allied themselves with the dissidents—a figure we cannot sustain), and that if it were inevitable he would just as soon see them go for big things now in order to get this period of indecision over with!”

The envoy also reported on the deteriorat­ing peace and order situation, and added:

“Imposition of martial law, or an abandonmen­t of the democratic constituti­on, would present us in America with a problem. Thailand, for instance, can change its government­al system with hardly a ripple felt in the United States. I do not believe this would be the case with regard to the Philippine­s, where we introduced our own brand of democracy.”

US Embassy cables give us a report not just on Marcos and the situation at the time but also on the political and economic interests that America wanted to protect even if it meant waltzing with Marcos and martial law.

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