... ...Universal Declaration of Human Rights, December 10, 1948 -- "A Cause for Celebration" ... 'Demands of Dignity' 'Demands of Dignity' <DEVELOPING THE DISCOURSE ON OUR DECEMBER 1Oth DECLARATION>
On-Line Edition of the Book by Ed Aurelio C. Reyes Chapter 2-- TP '98: A Cause for Indignation |
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CONTENTS OF THIS BOOK:
CHAPTER
1
CHAPTER
2 Motive & Conduct of US War with Spain Aug.13: Historic Date Between Centuries Negotiating and US Domestic Moves for Ratification App 2-A:
Text of
Treaty of Paris, 1898 App 2-B:
War
to Enforce the Sale
CHAPTER3 Response
to the Spanish Response Response to the American Non-Response Demands of Dignity EXCERPTS: -o0o- "The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, signed Dec. 10, 1948, has been a cause of celebration, and the Treaty of Paris, signed Dec. 10, 1898, has been a cause for indignation... on the part of ALL HUMANS." -o0o- "The HUMANITY of ALL is ONE! Assaults on the Rights of a human anywhere are assaults on the rights of all humans everywhere." -o0o- "The current Human Evolutionary Imperative is attaining Synergy in Conscious Oneness." -o0o- "We demand apologies not to uphold our national dignity, but to give the offenders the opportunity to uphold theirs." -o0o- "Demands for Human Dignity come from within Human Dignity itself." -o0o- "We seek redress, closure and healing... Since the governments involved and the international organizations that depend on the consent of governments cannot be expected to support these calls or accord them any serious attention, we are calling upon the citizens of these and other nations, on the citizenry of the world." -o0o- "One of the factors underpinning the habit of trying to hide or mangle the truth is the illusion that facts hidden well enough as secrets can stay as such forever. Another is the illusion that you can harm your fellow-humans without harming yourself." -o0o- "Inevitably, eventually and ultimately, all wrongs cry out to be fully acknowledged, regretted, and set aright. Your peace of mind now and in the future demands it. Your very dignity demands it." -o0o- "Smile for Synergy! Seek One Humanity!"
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LINKS TO THE MAIN PARTS OF THE Demands of Dignity BOOK: Introductory Essay by Bernard Karganilla, Kamalaysayan chair Introduction: Campaigning for Deeper, Broader Discourse CHAPTERS: Introduction Ch.1 Ch.2 Ch.3 Ch.4 Ch.5 Epilogue Bibliography Alphabetical Index Publication Information The Author: Ed Aurelio Reyes The Publisher: Kamalaysayan GENERAL FEEDBACK SPECIFIC FEEDBACK FEEDBACK BOX
Chapter Two --------------------- TP 1898: A Cause for Indignation WHAT
IS WIDELY REFERRED TO in Philippine history as the Treaty of Paris1
is not the only, and is not the first, Treaty of Paris in broader human
history. It is not even
really officially titled that way; the actual heading of the document is
“Treaty of Peace.” The
French capital city seems to have been a favorite venue for signing
important treaties. One such “Treaty of Paris” came to be also
called “Peace of Paris.” It was signed on February 10, 1763 by the
Kingdoms of France, Great Britain, Spain and Portugal to end the French
and Indian War, also known as the Seven Years’ War.
Twenty years later, on September 3, 1783, another “Treaty of
Paris” was signed between the 13 British colonies in North America and
the Kingdom of Great Britain, formally ending the American Revolutionary
War. This clarification is
being made here to address a possible source of confusion.
The
Treaty of Paris referred to here was the one with a
similar-sounding official title – “Treaty of Peace” – seeking as
it did seek to reestablish peace between the United States and Spain,
signed on December 10, 1898 to formally end the grossly lopsided
Spanish-American War, providing for the disposition of
arbitrarily-involved properties, possessions, and even supposed
possessions mainly of Spain, and completely excluding from the signing
and even from any part of the negotiation process the slightest
participation of the main stake-holders, the peoples of the Philippines
and their respective home territories. Prelude
to the negotiation, signing and ratification of the Treaty of
Paris of 1898 has been the unfolding of firm decision on the
part of the US to consistently pursue a policy of expanding its external
markets. This explains all the official acts of the government of the United States pertinent to
grabbing the just-liberated Philippines and forcibly transforming it
from being a Spanish colony into an American one.
This chapter shows how in its preparation, contents and forcible implementation this treaty has been a cause of indignation not only among the informed Filipinos but also on the part of other people who know the value of upholding human rights as part of the dignity shared by all humans everywhere. After all, the Humanity of all is one, and assaults on the rights of some are assaults on the rights of all. Motive
and Conduct of US War with Spain What
could have moved the United States, a former colony – after
highlighting “self-evident” principles on human equality and
self-determination in its Declaration of Independence – to pursue the
status of an empire with its own colonies?
This narration from Howard Zinn is enlightening: “(In the) year of the massacre at Wounded Knee, 1890, it was
officially declared by the Bureau of the Census that the internal
frontier was closed. The profit system, with its natural tendency for
expansion, had already begun to look overseas. The severe depression
that began in 1893 strengthened an idea developing within the political
and financial elite of the country: that overseas markets for American
goods might relieve the problem of underconsumption at home and prevent
the economic crises that in the 1890s brought class war. “And would not a foreign adventure deflect some of the rebellious
energy that went into strikes and protest movements toward an external
enemy? Would it not unite people with government, with the armed forces,
instead of against them? This was probably not a conscious plan among
most of the elite — but a natural development from the twin drives of
capitalism and nationalism.”
2 Back
in 1853, after the US beat the British in their race to open up Japan,
President John Quincy Adams was described by book author Professor
George Taylor as having “considered the Chinese anti-commercial policy
as a crime against the free intercourse of nations. He put his finger on
the real issue; China and Japan had to be brought into the world market for
our good, not their own.”3
(Emphasis mine) By
1897, Theodore Roosevelt wrote to a friend: “In strict confidence . .
. I should welcome almost any war, for I think this country needs
one.”4 As
quoted by Prof. Renato Constantino, author John W. Foster reminds his
readers of the prophetic words of W.H. Seaward, who had said: “We are rising to another and more sublime stage of national progress
– that is expanding wealth and rapid territorial aggrandizement.
Our institutions throw a broad shadow across the St. Lawrence,
and stretching beyond the valley of Mexico; reaches even to the plains
of central America; while the Sandwich Islands and the Shores of China
recognize its renovating influence.
Whenever that influence is felt, a desire for protection under
these institutions is awakened…. Commerce has brought the ancient
continents near to us and created necessities for new positions –
perhaps connections or colonies there.”
5 Sen.
Alfred Beveridge was publicly emphasizing China’s “illimitable
markets” for US goods just beyond the Philippines.
He claimed the Pacific for possession by the Americans. Beveridge said, “The Pacific is our ocean,” he said.
Answering his own rhetorical question as to where to turn for consumers
of the surplus produce of US industries, he pointed out that possession
of the Philippines “gave us a US base at the door of all Asia.”6
A
year after the ratification of the Treaty of Paris in February 1899,
Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge would say at the Philadelphia Republican
Convention of 1900 that: “We make no hypocritical pretense of being interested in the
Philippines solely on account of others. We believe in trade
expansion.”7 Various
geopolitical and domestic considerations were at play in shaping the
American policy that led to the Spanish American War, the taking of the
Philippines, and its retention as an American colony.
These include the Cuban Crisis, starting with American sympathies
toward the Cubans who were severely being oppressed under Spanish
colonization; the political calculations being made by the group of
President William McKinley; and the pendulum-swinging battle for broader
public opinion between the industrialists desirous of expanded markets
well beyond the domestic market, and the groups – notably the members
of the Massachusetts-based Anti-Imperialist League — who chose to be
faithful to the ideals that the Founding Fathers had enshrined in the
American Declaration of Independence and Constitution. Of
the Anti-Imperialist League, Daniel Boone Schirmer describes what
developed as a reciprocal relationship of mutual growth with the
nationalist movement of the Filipinos in the Islands: “It was the (initial assembly of anti-imperialists) at Faneuil Hall
that took the first step toward transforming what had been a matter of
individual protest against the Spanish War into an organized movement,
and Boston men got this meeting together only after hints in the press
that the McKinley administration was tempted by (prospects of
colonizing) the Philippines. Later,
the open avowal of the Administration’s intent to annex those islands
led to the organization of the Anti-Imperialist League, and when the
Filipinos then showed resistance to the United States occupation of
their homeland, further impetus was given to the anti-imperialist
movement. “In turn, the movement that the anti-imperialists built in the United
States gave political and moral support to Philippine independence,
creating difficulties for the American imperialists in the execution of
their program. The relationship that came about between American
anti-imperialism and Philippine nationalism proved reciprocal in effect,
and so it continued, with varying intensity, as long as did the movement
that originated at Faneuil Hall. (This relationship was distorted by
imperialist spokesmen so as to make it appear that American
anti-imperialists were responsible for the Philippine struggle for
independence. Such
assertions, frequently repeated, suggested a racist
underestimation of the Filipinos on the part of those who made
them, rather than the reality of the situation.
In truth, Philippines had (had) a flourishing movement for some
time before organized American anti-imperialism saw the light of day,
and would seem to have influenced the American anti-imperialists more
than the latter did it.) (Emphasis supplied.)”8 The
Cuban crisis led to the deployment and subsequent mysterious explosion
and sinking of the USS Maine in the port of Havana that
built up to the American declaration of war against the already spent
colonial force that was Spain. In
his History as a Weapon, Howard Zinn shares: “As Philip Foner says in his two-volume study The
Spanish-Cuban-American War, ‘The McKinley Administration had plans
for dealing with the Cuban situation, but these did not include
independence for the island.’ He points to the administration’s
instructions to its minister to Spain, Stewart Woodford, asking him to
try to settle the war because it ‘injuriously affects the normal
function of business, and tends to delay the condition of prosperity,’
but not mentioning freedom and justice for the Cubans. Foner explains
the rush of the McKinley administration into war (its ultimatum gave
Spain little time to negotiate) by the fact that ‘if the United States
waited too long, the Cuban revolutionary forces would emerge victorious,
replacing the collapsing Spanish regime’.” In February 1898, the U.S. battleship Maine, in Havana harbor as a symbol of American interest in the Cuban events, was destroyed by a mysterious explosion and sank, with the loss of 268 men. There was no evidence ever produced on the cause of the explosion, but excitement grew swiftly in the United States, and McKinley began to move in the direction of war.” 9 Conditions
in the Philippines In
the Philippines, meantime, after four years of solid political,
spiritual and military preparation, the Filipinos had established an
independent state, called “Haring Bayang Katagalugan” (Sovereign
State of the River-dwellers) in August 1896,10
and immediately entered the state of belligerency when they launched a
people-centered and people-powered revolutionary war that was waged in
most of the Spanish-held provinces throughout the country, mainly in
Luzon and the Visayas.11
(Except
for a Spanish toehold on the tip of the Zamboanga peninsula where the
Spaniards were able to maintain a fort, Mindanao was ably defended and
kept free by its indigenous inhabitants led by the largely-Muslim Moros;
and these peoples had found common cause with the Filipinos against the
Spaniards and the latter’s religious orders, some of which held
parcels of landholdings here and there, like the Jesuit parishes in
northwestern Mindanao where Jose Rizal was exiled for four years.)12
Factional
rivalry in one province developed into coup d’etat that unseated and
eventually executed Andres Bonifacio, the moving spirit and practical
leader of the revolutionary movement and elected President of the
nascent state,13 but the Filipinos in most other provinces kept up the spirit of
fighting for Philippine emancipation from more than three centuries of
Spanish colonization. The usurpers of leadership, found their forces
finally up against a significant Spanish force (earlier they could
easily “liberate” town after town in their province because the
Spanish colonial government was then just keeping a skeletal military
presence there) and had to escape to another province before sur-rendering
to the Spanish regime through a mediated “political set-tlement”14
that accorded for them (the leaders) money and passage to their place of
exile: Hong Kong, then a British Crown colony in China. Before boarding the ship to leave the Philippines, their leader, General Emilio Aguinaldo, shouted “Viva España!” and ordered the revolutionary forces to stop all fighting. He said those who would persist in the struggle would be regarded as lowly bandits. The Filipino people did not pay him heed. And while he was in Hong Kong the Filipinos fought on, systematically weakening the Spanish forces in the diminishing territories the latter still significantly held. It was because of this progress in the uninterrupted struggle that the Americans saw something to be gained by making contact with Aguinaldo in Hong Kong. Early
American Deception Aside
from Commodore George Dewey, other US official func-tionaries also
talked to him, all expressing interest in his options and actual
decisions, and leading him to plainly understand that the
US government was supportive of the Filipino struggle for independence. From
the column item written by Prof. Bernard L.M. Karganilla for the June
15, 2007 issue of the Malaya national newspaper, titled
“Hobbled Sovereignty,” we learn of the following interludes, which
the University of the Philippines - Manila (UP-M) history professor and
Social Sciences Department chairperson, and also chairman of Kaisahan sa
Kamalayan sa Kasaysayan (Solidarity on Sense of History) or
Kamalaysayan, had culled from memoirs written by Aguinaldo: “While grieving over the bad faith of the Spaniards in March 1898,
Aguinaldo was visited by (Captain Wood,) commander of the U.S.S.
Petrel, who urged him to return to the Philippines to renew
hostilities against the Spaniards with the object of gaining Philippine
independence. Did Aguinaldo need the Americans to egg him back to the
fight? “In Singapore, the U.S. Consul, Mr. Spencer Pratt, sought Aguinaldo
who was also wooed by Admiral Dewey with the message that the United
States would at least recognize the Independence of the Philippines
under the protection of the U.S. Navy. “Aguinaldo
was as “anxious” as Admiral Dewey and the North American Consul
‘to be in the Philippines,' making him take “the opportunity
afforded me by these representatives of the United States, and, placing the fullest confidence in their word of honor,’ pledged
‘to renew the struggle for our Independence.’ “Before Aguinaldo left Singapore, Consul (Spencer) Pratt ‘asked (the
Filipino general) to appoint him Representative of the Philippines in
the United States.’ In response, Aguinaldo (said he) intended to offer
the American Consul ‘a high position in the Customs Department,
besides granting certain commercial advantages.’ “Back in Hong Kong, Aguinaldo was met by (Consul) Wildman, the U.S.
Consul, who ‘strongly advised (him) to establish a Dictatorship as
soon as (he) arrived in the Philippines.’ Accepting the American's
advice, Aguinaldo unveiled a Dictatorial Government on May 24, 1898. “But before Aguinaldo proclaimed himself Dictator, he gave Consul
Wildman $67,000 for the purchase of firearms for delivery ‘to (him) in
the Philippines.’ What happened? (Aguinaldo was to state, with regret,
later) that ‘Mr. Wildman has failed to comply with (his) request and
(he was) informed that (Wildman) refuses to refund the money. “Pratt in Singapore wanted Aguinaldo’s award of office, while
Wildman at Hong Kong took Aguinaldo’s money and ran. The Americans
still had more instructions for Aguinaldo. ‘Admiral (Dewey) advised me
to at once have made a Filipino National Flag, which he said he would
recognize and protect in the presence of the other nations represented
by the various squadrons anchored in Manila Bay.’ Is this the reason
why the June 12, 1898 Proclamation of Philippine Independence at Kawit
enumerates the “colors of Blue, Red, and White” of the National
Pennant as “commemorating the flag of the United States of America, as
a manifestation of our profound gratitude towards this Great Nation?” “In any case, Aguinaldo was told by Dewey at the end of June 1898 that
the American naval officer had “allowed the Filipinos to display on
their vessels a flag that was not recognized” by the German and French
Admirals. Dewey was of the opinion that “the Filipinos deserved the
right to use their flag.” Aguinaldo “thereupon expressed to the
Admiral my unbounded gratitude for such unequivocal protection.” “In July 1898, Dewey visited Cavite, asking Aguinaldo for a favor.
‘How pretty your flag is! It has a triangle, and is something like the
Cubans’. Will you give me one as a memento when I go back home?’ The
Dictator from Cavite replied that the American ‘could have one
whenever he wished.’ “General (Thomas) Anderson, commander of the first U.S. military
expedition that arrived in the Philippines on July 4, 1898, “solemnly
and completely endorsed the promises made by Admiral Dewey” to
Aguinaldo. Sadly, these promises were not kept.”15 About
Captain Wood, it was not in his own initiative that he visited Aguinaldo
in Hong Kong. Daniel Schirmer wrote in his book, Republic or
Empire that: “Sometime in March
(on the eve
of the Spanish-American War) Dewey sent Captain Wood of the
gunboat Petrel to confer with Aguinaldo about the
possibility of collaboration against Spain in the Philippines,
and the next month such conferences were continued. “On March 31, 1898, Dewey made his first written report to the Navy
Department … (and) he told authorities that there were five thousand
armed Filipino rebels waiting to assist the United States against Spain,
and that once Manila was blockaded, the Spaniards could be driven from
the Philippines by the insurgents or by United States forces.16 About
Consul Pratt, and not in any way related to his having reportedly run
away with Aguinaldo’s money as the latter later alleged, Filipino
historian Renato Constantino tells us that he was officially scolded and
later punished by the administration in Washington. Constantino writes
that “Pratt was censured for a speech he gave to the Filipino colony
in Singapore (where he was then posted). At that time, while the
American troops were still on their way, Aguinaldo was already laying
siege to the Spaniards in the walled city.” The Department of State
letter reprimanding Pratt said: “The address discloses an understanding on their part that the
ultimate object of our action is the independence of the Philippines.
Your address does not repel this implication.”
17 The
letter even censured Pratt for having called Aguinaldo “the man for
the occasion,” and for having said that “the arrangement between
Aguinaldo and Dewey had resulted so happily.”
Pratt was later separated from the consular service, the
historian further says. This
author cannot imagine a US consul daring to make sensitive diplomatic
moves solely on his own initiative, unless the U.S. government is ready
to make us believe now that its bureaucracy and chain of command were
then menaced by utter lack of discipline and inefficiency.
With the McKinley administration then getting into a “war
footing” at the advent of expansionism and preparing to tackle Spain,
such a lame excuse could not but be pathetically incredible. At
any rate, American official duplicity towards the overly trusting
Filipinos was still to continue in the succeeding days, weeks, months,
years… There
was still another item in the American bag of tricks that came before
the scripted Battle of Manila. This
involved an official tampering of the date of commencement of its
declared war against Spain. Technically,
it may have been legal, but going by the very logic of declaring wars in
the first place, it does not appear very honorable, to say the least. Not that it could have altered the results of the
Spanish-American War in any way. This
tampering of dates is very casually mentioned, with its tricky reason,
in an article by David Trask, titled “The Spanish-American War,”
uploaded in the website of the Hispanic Division of the US Library of
Congress. The relevant paragraph follows: “On 25 April Congress responded to McKinley’s request for armed
intervention. Spain had broken diplomatic relations on 23 April. The
American declaration of war was predated to 21 April to legitimize
certain military operations that had already taken place,
particularly a blockade of Havana. To emphasize that its sole motive at
the beginning of the struggle was Cuban independence, the U.S. Congress
passed a resolution, the Teller Amendment, that foreswore any intention
of annexing Cuba.”18
(Emphasis mine) The aggrieved party in this specific case of deception may have been more the U.S. citizens who would have had reason to expect their republican government to fully uphold and strictly implement their Constitution’s provisions on the principle of separation of powers as applied to declarations and actual acts of war. As it apparently turned out, Congress agreed to join a collusion of powers, accepting responsibility for an act of war that the executive had ordered and implemented before Congress could decide to cloak it with the blessing of legality by officially declaring the war as soon as it actually could. Mock
Battle and its Aftermath Commodore
Dewey had come to Hong Kong two months before the outbreak of the
Spanish-American War. Constantino
shares with us what author George F. Kennan wrote to explain why this
could not at all have been surprising, especially at hindsight: “We
know that Theodore Roosevelt, who was then the young Assistant Secretary
of the Navy, had long felt that (the Americans) ought to take the
Philippines; that he wangled Dewey’s appointment to the command of the
Asiatic Fleet; that both he and Dewey wanted war; and that he had some
sort of a prior understanding with Dewey to the effect that Dewey would
attack Manila, regardless of the circumstances of the origin or the
purpose of the war.19 Wikipedia
gives us a blow-by-blow account of the Battle of Manila Bay. Here are
some of the highlights:20
“The
Battle of Manila Bay took place on 1 May 1898, during the
Spanish-American War. The American Asiatic Squadron under Commodore
George Dewey engaged the Spanish Pacific Squadron under Admiral Patricio
Montojo y Pasarón and destroyed the Spanish squadron. The engagement
took place in Manila Bay, the Philippines, and was the first major
engagement of the Spanish-American War “Admiral
Patricio Montojo y Pasarón, who had been dispatched rapidly to the
Philippines, was equipped with a variety of obsolete vessels. Efforts to
fortify his position amounted to little. The corrupt Spanish colonial
bureaucracy may have worked against the effort, sending explosives meant
for mines to friendly construction companies. Reinforcements promised
from Madrid resulted in only two poorly armored scout cruisers. Montojo
compounded his difficulties by retreating from the range of Spanish
fortress guns—guns that might have evened the odds—and choosing to
anchor in a relatively shallow anchorage. His intent seems to have been
to preserve the families of the Spanish sailors in Manila from
bombardment, and to allow survivors of his fleet to swim to safety. The
harbor was protected by four batteries. “At daybreak on Sunday 1 May, George Dewey aboard the protected
cruiser USS Olympia led a small squadron of ships into
Manila Bay. Shortly after five a.m., the Spanish shore batteries and the
Spanish fleet opened fire. At 5:40 with the now famous phrase, ‘You
may fire when ready, Gridley,’ the Olympia’s captain was
instructed to begin the barrage that resulted in the destruction of the
Spanish flotilla.” “…The
eleven Spanish ships and five land batteries fought back for two and a
half hours. The American ships withdrew at 7:45 a.m. to redistribute
ammunition, then attacked again at 10:40. Most of the Spanish ships were
either destroyed or surrendered. The Spanish colors were struck in
surrender at 12:40 p.m. The results were decisive; Dewey won the battle
with only a single fatality among his crew: Francis B. Randall, Chief
Engineer on the McCulloch, from heart attack.” Accounts
on the Battle for Manila, the walled city, a little over 100 days later,
were also replete with details. But
most of these accounts do not tell us why this event has since come to
be widely known as a “mock battle,” a scripted one. This part of
David Trask’s aforecited article actually does: “Dewey hoped to avoid further hostilities at Manila. To this end he
engaged in shadowy negotiations with a new Spanish governor in Manila
and the Roman Catholic Bishop of the city. An agreement was
reached whereby there would be a brief engagement between the Spanish
and American forces followed immediately by surrender of the city, after
which the Americans were to prevent Aguinaldo’s troops from entering
Manila.”21
(Underscoring supplied.) Additional
details on the scripting process are given in the Wall of Heroes
website: “Inside the walled city of Manila, (the new Spanish Governor) General
Jaudenes listened to the sound of the naval gunfire. He wasn’t
concerned. He had already agreed with Admiral Dewey as to how the
scenario would play out. On his desk was a piece of paper, the
only printed document related to the unfolding events. It sketched
out a series of signal flags that, when seen flying from Admiral
Dewey’s ship, would indicate that it was time for the Spanish
commander to order his men to hoist the while sheet over the city that
would signify the final act in the mock battle for Manila. “From
August 8th to 12th, the opposing commanders had hammered out the
details. First, Jaudenes had requested a 48-hour delay in the
threatened bombardment in order to obtain permission from Madrid to
surrender the city. Granted the delay by Dewey, Madrid refused to
permit the surrender. His fate all but sealed, Jaudenes was still
more than willing to surrender but for two important details: “1.
It would be a disgraceful act for the Spanish commander to give up his
city without a fight. Such an act would be received with derision
and probably court martial upon his return to his homeland. “2.
The Spanish were still quite fearful of the consequences if the city
fell to Aguinaldo and his band of Filipino insurgents. “Resolution
of such matters was carefully crafted through the Belgium consul Edouard
Andre. In its final draft, the carefully choreographed sequence of
events called for the initial shelling of the fort at Malate, which
would be promptly abandoned by its defenders. As the Americans
then began their ground advance, Admiral Dewey would bring his ships
before the city and hoist the signal flags demanding surrender.
Upon seeing these, General Jaudenes would order the white flag raised,
and the Americans would enter. As had been the case in Cuba, the
word “surrender” was avoided to be replaced by the term
‘capitulation’. “The
capitulation of Manila would transfer control to the invading American
forces, which would then secure the city and deny entrance to the
insurgent forces under Aguinaldo. The brief, bloodless battle at
San Antonio de Abad would save face for the Spanish soldiers and their
commander, demonstrating that they had capitulated only after a
devastating attack.”22 (Emphasis in the original) Also
telltale on the American deception pattern is this account on dealings
with Aguinaldo, which Dewey (who had already been promoted to Admiral)
gave much later to the Senate Committee on the Philippines: “I knew what he was doing. Driving
the Spaniards in was saving our troops … Up to the time the Army came,
Aguinaldo did everything…requested.
He was always obedient, whatever I told him he did.
I saw him almost daily. I had not much to do with him after the
Army came.” 23 An article of Dr. Lilia H. Laurel published in the August 16, 1989
issue of the National
Midweek magazine quotes a
letter addressed to the American people written by Apolinario Mabini and
published in La Independencia on July 21, 1898. The
handicapped hero complained about the treatment they were subjected to
by US military officers, who were their supposed allies: “Always desirous of maintaining a good relationship with the
newcomers, Aguinaldo wrote the General (Merritt), protesting, in
friendly terms, the conduct observed towards the Filipinos. Merritt, by
way of a reply, asked for the withdrawal of the Philippine forces from
the towns (of Ermita, Paco, Malate and Pandacan), invoking the
conditions of the capitulation that had been drawn up with the
Spaniards. General Merritt sent Colonel Wildman as (unofficial) emissary
to say that ‘the general was furious with Aguinaldo for not having
placed himself under the order of the American generals, as stipulated
in the agreement.”
24 The
Americans’ design to maintain their hold on the Philippines started to
become very obvious. For
instance, when Dewey asked the White House to send him a reinforcement
force of 5,000 troops, President McKinley sent him three times that: “McKinley sent him a force of 15,085 enlisted men and 641 officers. The difference in the calculations of the two may easily be understood. Dewey recommended 5,000 troops as all that would be necessary to ‘retain possession of Manila and thus control the Philippines.’ He assumed that he could count on the friendship of the people. ‘I had in view simply taking possession of the city,’ De-wey informed the Senate Committee in 1902. Dewey’s avowed posi-tion was that the United States would remain master of the situation only until the end of the war. But McKinley had another purpose in sending three times the number of troops requested, for in his message to Congress, after describing the fall of Manila, he said, ‘By this the conquest of the Philippines…was formally sealed.” 25 More
Duplicity Constantino
shows other instances of American duplicity perpetrated against the
Filipinos as, for instance, “seen in Major General Wesley Merritt’s
handling of McKinley’s instructions on a number of administrative
matters that would come after the surrender of Manila.”
The historian illustrates: “Merritt issued a proclamation copying verbatim the instructions of
McKinley, including passages which assured the people that the United
States ‘has not come to wage war upon them…but to protect them in
their homes, in their employment and in their personal and religious
rights….’ But he
omitted that part of the instructions which stated ‘the powers of the
military occupant are absolute and supreme and operate immediately upon
the political condition of the inhabitants.’
Merritt (said he) had to do this because when he arrived, he
found that Aguinaldo had already ‘proclaimed an independent
government, Republican in form, with himself as President, and at the
time of my arrival in the Islands the entire edifice of executive and
legislative departments had been accomplished at least on paper’.” 26 Merritt was most careful so that the real intentions and plans of
his government would not be found out by the Filipinos.
Constantino gives another illustration: “Brigadier General Thomas Anderson who arrived ahead of Gen. Merritt
(felt he) also had to act within this framework of duplicity. When
Aguinaldo asked him about the intention of the Americans, Anderson told
Aguinaldo that ‘in 122 years, we had established no colonies.’ Aguinaldo then replied, ‘I have studied attentively the
Constitution of the United States and I find in it no authority for
colonies, and I have no fear.’
Anderson, commenting on this incident admitted, ‘It may seem
that my answer was evasive, but I was at the time trying to contract
with the Filipinos for horses, fuel and forage’.”27
Actually,
his response was not merely evasive because the effect it really sought
was to fool the overcredulous Aguinaldo.
The excuse given could not deny that it was in effect an outright
lie; it only sought to justify the lie, with fingers crossed, for the
appeasement of his compatriots. The
US government was consistently seeking to deceive the American citizenry
in a much bigger away. The historian quotes the sharply perceptive Judge
James H. Blount: “…a war of conquest to subjugate a remote people struggling to be free from the yoke of alien domination was sure to be more or less unpopular with many of the sovereign voters of a republic, and more dangerous therefore, like all unpopular wars, to the tenure of office of the party in power. So that in entering upon a war of conquest, a republic must ‘play politics,’ using the military arm of the government for the two-fold purpose of crushing opposition and proving that there is none.” 28 Aug.
13: Historic Date Between Centuries General
Merritt was suspicious of the previously mentioned deal about the
scripting of the Battle of Manila, but the Spanish side actually
complied with its commitments in the deal, specifically the part about
readily surrendering the walled capital city (Intramuros). Spain
complied not necessarily out of a sense of honor but more logically out
of its having been effectively intimidated by the US superior power as
effectively displayed in previous months.
Merritt had had big reasons to be suspicious.
One who is not trustworthy cannot be expected to be readily
trusting. Trask
informs us that “on 12 August, McKinley and (French ambassador to the
US Jules) Cambon signed a peace protocol that provided for Cuban
independence and the cession of Puerto Rico and an island in the
Marianas (Guam). It differed from the American offer of June only in
that it deferred action on the Philippines to a peace conference in
Paris.” 29 We have another source for the actual text of the third article of
that protocol: “The United States will occupy and hold the city, bay
and harbor of Manila, pending the conclusion of a Treaty of Paris, which
shall determine the control, disposition, and government of the
Philippines.”
30 The
signing of this document signaled two events of immense significance in
the history of effective US domination of the Philippines. These events
came the day after, and almost four full months thence. Right
the following day, on 13 August, the American troops moved through a
line of Filipino encirclement north of Manila, and the Spanish garrison
in Intramuros surrendered to Dewey without any resistance.
The guerrillas were completely denied access as per their script
of collusion, and the American troops occupied the city. All
American avowals of merely just intending to help drive out the Spanish
rule and help the cause of Filipino independence were unceremoniously
thrown out the window on that infamous day.
A nationalist poem, Kung Tuyo na ang Luha Mo, Aking Bayan
(When Your Tears Shall Have All Dried Up, My Country) written decades
later by labor leader Amado V. Hernandez showed reason for tearfully
mourning the snatching of the Filipino people’s hard-earned liberty on
that exact date.31 August
13 has since been marked as a “date between centuries.”
Specifically, it ended 333 years of Spanish rule, from 1565 which was
the year the Spanish adelantado Miguel Lopez de Legazpi
established the first Spanish colonial settlement in the island of Cebu
(Raja Lapu-Lapu had earlier postponed Spanish colonization of the
Philippines for 44 years by annihilating the Fernando Magallanes
expedition at the Battle of Mactan); and it started the US control of
Philippine society, by now spanning a century and a decade (“Four
score and thirty years…” in this writer’s opening parody). And still counting. The second event, or series of events, started off by the McKinley-Cambon protocol pertained to negotiations, signing and precarious ratification of the Treaty of Paris, where the Americans secured an “official receipt” to “legally own” the Filipinos and our homeland. Negotiating
and Signing the Treaty In
accordance with the August 12 protocol, commissioners from both the
United States and Spain were finally able to meet in Paris on October 1,
1898. They were tasked to produce a treaty that would bring a formal end
to the war after six months of hostilities. This was the reason why the
resulting document was set to be titled, “Treaty of Peace.” The
American peace commission consisted of William R. Day, Sen. Cushman K.
Davis, Sen. William P. Frye, Sen. George Gray, and the Honorable
Whitelaw Reid. The Spanish commission was headed by Don Eugenio Montero
Rios, the President of the Senate; Don Buenaventura de Abarzuza, senator
of the Kingdom and ex-minister of the Crown; Don Jose de Garnica, deputy
to the Cortes and associate justice of the Supreme Court. Don Wenceslao
Ramirez de Villa Urrutia, envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary at Brussels, and Don Rafael Cerero, General of Division.
Jules Cambon, a French diplomat, also negotiated on Spain’s behalf. The
American commissioners negotiated in a hostile atmosphere because all
Europe, except England, was sympathetic to the Spanish side. Although
the Conference discussed Cuba and debt questions, the major conflict
concerned the situation of the Philippines. Admiral Dewey’s victory
had come as a great surprise and it marked the entrance of the United
States into the Pacific. Spanish
commissioners argued that Manila had surrendered after the armistice and
therefore the Philippines could not be demanded as a war conquest, but
they eventually yielded because they had no other choice, and the U.S.
ultimately paid Spain 20 million dollars for possession of the
Philippines.32
The islands of Puerto Rico and Guam were also placed under
American control, and Spain relinquished its claim to Cuba. It
is instructive to read some of the cabled communications among Americans
who were stationed in three cities: Washington, D.C., which has been the
capital of the U.S. federal government; Manila, the capital city of the
erstwhile colonial government of Spain in the Philippines; and Paris,
the capital city of France which was the venue of the negotiations
between US and Spain. Here’s
an informative series of communications as carried in the Internet site
called the “Centennial Site” (designed by the MSC Communications
Technologies, and hosted by MSC Computer Training Center):33 Cabled from Manila (undated), Mr. Wilcox, in a report to Admiral Dewey: “They (the Filipinos, led by Gen. Aguinaldo) desire the protection of the United States at sea, but fear any interference on land... On one point they seem united, viz., that whatever our government (of the United States) may have done for them, it had not gained the right to annex (them).” Cabled from Washington (Sept 16, 1898): "Instructions to the Peace Commissioners [William Day (Ohio, Republican) ... Whitelaw Reid, Republican, ... three members of the US Senate: Cushman K. Davis, of Minnesota, William P. Frye, of Maine, Republicans, and George Gray, of Delaware, Democrat]: It is my earnest with that the United States in making peace should follow the same high rule of conduct which guided it in facing war. … The lustre and the moral strength attaching to a cause which can be confidently tested upon the considerate judgment of the world should not under illusion of the hour be dimmed by ulterior designs which might tempt us … into an adventurous departure on untried paths. By elaborate rhetorical gradations, the instructions finally got down to this: Incidental to our tenure in the Philippines is the commercial opportunity … The United States cannot accept less than the cession in full right and sovereignty of the island of Luzon." Cabled from Paris (October 1, 1898): The first meeting with the Spanish Commissioners took place at Paris, October 1st. “Spanish communication represents,” says Judge Day’s cablegram to the President, “that status quo has been altered and continues to be altered to the prejudice of Spain by Tagalo rebels, whom it describes as an auxiliary force to the regular American troops.” Cabled from Paris (October 7, 1898) On October 7th, the Commission telegraphed Washington that General Merritt attaches much weight to the opinion of the Belgian consul at Manila, M. Andre, and that “Consul says United States must take all or nothing”; that “if southern islands remained with Spain they would be in constant revolt and United States would have a second Cube”; that “Spanish government would not improve” and “would still protect monks in their extortion.” General Anderson in cor-respondence with Aguinaldo in June and July seemed to treat him and his forces as allies and native authorities, but subsequently changed his tone. Merritt and Dewey both kept clear of any compromising communications. Cabled from Paris (October 25, 1898) In the memorandum of their views telegraphed to Washington on October 25th, Messrs. Davis, Frye and Reid also say: Public opinion in Europe, including that of Rome, expects us to retain the whole Philippine Islands. The Government of the Unites States is unable to modify the proposal heretofore made for the cession of the entire archipelago of the Philippine Islands, but the American Commissioners are authorized to offer to Spain, in case the cession should be agreed to, the sum of $20,000,000. This alluring offer was accompanied with the stern announcement that “Upon the acceptance … of the proposals herein made … but not otherwise, it will be possible … to proceed to the consideration … of other matters. Also, the US Commissioners wired Washington: "If the Spanish Commissioners refuse our proposition, … nothing remains except to close the negotiations." Cabled from Washington: “Your proposed action approved.” Cabled
from Paris (December 10,1898) Mr. Day
to Mr. Hay: “Treaty
signed at 8:50 this evening.” The treaty was signed on December 10, 1898, on behalf of the President of the United States of America and of Her Majesty, the Queen Regent of Spain (in turn, in the name of “her august son," Don Alfonso XIII). Reactions to the Signed Treaty A
comprehensive opposition to the signing of that Treaty was immediately
expressed on behalf of the direct stakeholders, the Filipinos, by Felipe
Agoncillo, who had been sent by the Aguinaldo government but was ignored
completely by both the Spanish and the American diplomats and even by
the French who were at that time hosting the talks and the subsequent
signing. Agoncillo
said: “If the Spaniards have not
been able to transfer to the Americans the rights which they did not
possess; if the latter have not militarily conquered positions in the
Philippines; if the occupation of Manila was a resultant fact, prepared
by the Filipinos; if the international officials and representatives of
the Republic of the United States of America offered to recognize the
independence and sovereignty of the Philippines, solicited and accepted
their alliance, how can they now constitute themselves as arbiters of
the control, administration and future government of the Philippine
Islands? “If
in the Treaty of Paris there had simply been declared the withdrawal and
abandonment by the Spaniards of their domination – if they had such
– over Filipino territory, if America, on accepting peace, had signed
the Treaty, without prejudice to the rights of the Philippines, and with
a view to coming to a subsequent settlement with the existing Filipino
National Government, thus recognizing the sovereignty of the latter,
their alliance and the carrying out of their promises of honor to the
said Filipinos, no protest against their action would have been made.
But in view of the terms of the Article III of the Protocol, the
attitude of the American Com-missioners, and the imperative necessity of
safeguarding the national rights of my country, I take this protest, for
the before-mentioned reasons but with the proper legal reservations,
against the action taken and the resolutions passed by the Peace
Commissioners at Paris and in the Treaty signed by them.” 34 On
what basis could Agoncillio declare publicly (and officially on behalf
of the Aguinaldo government) that the Spaniards were transferring “the
rights that they did not possess”?
Even before the scripted Battle of Manila Bay could start, even
logically a part of the Spanish reason for such scripting, the Filipino
revolutionaries and the native peoples had overwhelming control over
most of the archipelago and had in fact laid siege on the walled capital
city. Constantino
quotes Otis, Anderson and Dewey, in that order: “For
three and one half months, the insurgents on land had kept Manila
tightly bottled.”
35 “We
had Manila and Cavite. The
rest of the island was held not by Spaniards but by Filipinos.” 36 “It
is a fact that (the insurgents) were in possession, they had gotten
pretty much the whole thing except Manila.”
37 And
UP-Manila’s Professor Benjamin Mangubat said in his blog, as
translated by the author from Filipino: “Actually,
at the time of (August 1898, before the US troops marched into the
walled capital), the Spaniards had only two places in the Philippines in
their control: Intramuros, which was the seat of the Spanish colonial
regime, and Baler, where they still had forces who had not yet
surrendered to the Filipinos ”38 Apolinario Mabini’s
letter addressed “To the People of the United States,” published in La
Independencia
on July 21, 1899, traced step- by-step American actions in the
Philippines during the first three months of US occupation. The abovequoted article of Dr. Lilia
Laurel in National Midweek describes how Mabini’s letter
pointed out that Admiral Dewey and other American military commanders
had initially expressed the friendship of their government and their
support of Philippine liberties. But
much later, advancing some reason or another, the Americans took over
areas already in the hands of the revolutionary army, declaring them
off-limits to Filipino soldiers and citizens alike.
For instance, pressured by General Wesley Merritt, Filipino
forces were practically pushed out of Ermita, Paco, Malate and Pandacan,
towns which had been wrested from the Spaniards at great cost in the
campaign to smash the Spaniards in Manila. Mabini concluded his letter thus: “The Filipino people are
fighting and will fight on in defense of their liberties and
independence, with the same tenacity and perseverance which they have
shown in their sufferings. They
are sustained by faith in the justice of its cause.
They know that if the Americans deny them justice there is a
Providence that punishes the crimes of individuals as well as peoples. “The great nation of
Washington and Lincoln should know that, no matter how great she is, she
cannot annihilate the aspirations of eight million souls who are fully
conscious of their strengths, honor and rights.
Blood does not choke; rather, it fertilizes great ideas and the
eternal principles…”39 By these very words, Mabini was echoing
the words written earlier by Jose Rizal in "The Philippines, Within
A Century" (part IV), which was published in La Solidaridad: “Very likely the Philippines will
defend with inexpressible valor the liberty secured at the price of so
much blood and sacrifice. …”40 In another letter, also shared with us
by Dr. Laurel, titled “The Mission of the Revolution," dated
September 6, 1899, Mabini shows the distinction between a “natural
right” and the right established by men or nations by arms: “We are fighting for a right
that God has granted us; the Americans are fighting for a right
established by men who have rebelled against God, trusting in the force
of their power, and blinded by their ambition. If America triumphs, she
will acquire the jus in re right in the Philippines and other
powers will make haste to recognize her as the absolute owner of the
former!” 41 Those who concluded that Filipinos were unfit for self-rule obviously did not get to know about the great minds of Rizal and Mabini, or of Emilio Jacinto who gave us the very quotable line, “The humanity of all is one,”42 or of Andres Bonifacio who brilliantly strategized the victorious revolutionary war against Spanish colonial forces, which did attain victory after two years, even though he had been killed almost halfway through that period upon orders given by Aguinaldo who had also ordered the Filipino forces to abandon the struggle after another half-year.43 US
Domestic Moves for Ratification
Having
the Treaty
of Paris
ratified was no mean feat for the Republican administration of President
McKinley, that had to confront a growing opposition led by the
Anti-Imperialist League and a complex maze of politicians in the Senate
who were breaking party ranks in forming their respective positions on
the issue. On the
homestretch, the President had to bring in the military as the wild but
hidden card. The
state of Massachusetts – with Faneuil Hall in Boston – was the
bailiwick of the Anti-Imperialist League, which carried the brunt of
efforts to oppose the annexation of the Philippines before and even
after the Senate’s ratification vote.44 The
senator from that state was Sen. George Frisbee Hoar. He delivered
speeches, which were among the sharpest critiques on McKinley’s policy
for annexation of the Philippines in pursuit of the Treaty of Paris.
Examples of his quotable quotes are: “The
downfall of the American Republic will date from the administration of
William McKinley.”45
(The
nation, having just abolished slavery,) is now being asked to accept the
principle “that it is right to conquer, buy and subject a whole nation
if we happen to deem it for their good. … (paraphrasing Abraham
Lincoln:) “No nation was ever created good enough to own another.”46 The
big dilemma faced by Hoar was that even as he was firmly against the
ratification of the treaty, he was the partymate of the President who
was rooting for ratification. He
sought to reconcile this by saying he just wanted to be a “good
Republican,” trying to save the party “from its own mistakes.”47 Basis
for this last mentioned attempt may logically be the official position
of the Republican Party, as described by the prospectus of the Springfield
Daily Republican: “The
Republican firmly believes
in the American principles of government and society. It does not doubt that through democracy are the people to
attain the largest measure of happiness and well being. … It is
opposed to imperialism and militarism, to the domination of wealth and
aristocracy. It sees in the
purchase and conquest of the Philippine islands new evidence of the
unceasing efforts of incorporated and syndicated wealth to conduct
national affairs at the expense of the great body of the people.”48 Although
he remained an opponent of the Treaty through to the end, his situation
effectively “clipped his wings” as an active campaigner as soon as
McKinley cracked the whip to shove his partymates into line. By that time, McKinley had already, allegedly,
been told by God to “take the Philippines,” after the former had
supposedly prayed fervently for guidance from the latter.
The President had declared to a group of visiting ministers: “The truth is I didn’t want the Philippines, and when they came to us as a gift from the gods, I did not know what to do with them. . . . I sought counsel from all sides — Democrats as well as Republicans — but got little help. “I thought first we would only take Manila; then Luzon, then other islands, perhaps, also. I walked the floor of the White House night after night until midnight; and I am not ashamed to tell you, gentlemen, that I went down on my knees and prayed Almighty God for light and guidance more than one night. And one night late it came to me this way — I don’t know how it was, but it came: “1) That we could not give them back to Spain — that would be cowardly and dishonorable. “2) That we could not turn them over to France or Germany, our commercial rivals in the Orient — that would be bad business and discreditable. “3) That we could not leave them to themselves — they were unfit for self-government — and they would soon have anarchy and misrule over there worse than Spain’s was; and “4) That there was nothing left for us to do but to take them all and to educate the Filipinos, and uplift and civilize and Christianize them, and by God’s grace do the very best we could by them, as our fellow men for whom Christ also died. And then I went to bed and went to sleep and slept soundly.” 49 Hoar’s
diametrical opposite in this regard was Democrat Sen. William Jennings
Bryan, who campaigned for the ratification of the Treaty with the
intention of using its predictably bloody aftermath to later destroy the
Republican Party. Actually, the Democrats had enough votes to block the
ratification, which would need two-thirds or 56 of the votes in the
84-member body. Early in the Senate debates, Democrat Sen. Arthur Gorman
could estimate with confidence that no more than four Democratic
senators would vote yes to the Treaty. But
party leader Bryan decided to vote for ratification and asked
fellow-Democrats to do likewise. Privately, he told fellow-senators that
the treaty should be passed, then if the Republican administration would
wage war to conquer the Philippines, they would be driven out of power.
Publicly, however, he declared that the Treaty was
about restoring peace.50 Not
all who opposed ratification did so for noble reasons.
For example, Sen. Gorman opposed it, warning of white-brown
inter-marriages that it would likely facilitate in big numbers. He said
assimilation of the Filipinos, a colored people, would “degrade” the
white Americans.51 Many
of the organizations that supported the stand of the Anti-Imperialist
League actually represented protectionist interests and not out of any
sympathy with the Filipinos’ hard-won quest for liberty.
They feared competition from Filipino goods in the domestic
market. This phenomenon was
an important part of the basis why the Anti-Imperialists were confident
that opposition to the Treaty would be growing with every
passing week. Such
growth was the reason why the AIL batted for postponement in the Senate
voting on the proposed Treaty. Among
those that joined the campaign to junk the Treaty were the
following: the paper-makers’ union of Holyoke, Massachusetts; a
cigar-makers’ local in Boston; the trades and labor congress of
Dubuque, Iowa; farmers in Georgia, Iowa, and Michigan; businessmen in
Los Angeles, California; and the Nebraska State Council of Catholic
Knights of America.52
There
was also an option floated by Sen. Bryan to ratify the treaty first and
then grant independence to the Filipinos later, the Boston league mailed
out to all members of both Houses of the US Congress a statement arguing
that it would only take a little over a third of the senators to defeat
the treaty but subsequent legislation to free the Philippines would take
a majority vote of each of the Houses and the approval of the President.53 (Because
the treaty was ratified after these debates, this was what actually
happened three decades and a half later with the enactment of the
Tydings-McDuffie Act, with the Philippines having been made to pass
through a ten-year protectorate – or “Commonwealth” – status.54) The
situation in the Philippines was getting complicated due to rebel
victory in driving out the Spanish forces from the city of Iloilo and
occupying and governing it well. The US forces were beaten to the draw
and could no longer use the excuse to take over to prevent lawlessness.
The shipload of US troops were ordered not to land their vessel
for fear of starting a skirmish that would surely be blamed on them by
impartial observers.55 McKinley
realized he could no longer afford to wait for the very uncomfortable
impasse to be broken. And so he decided to hurry up the Senate vote and
cracked the party whip and engaged in subtle and outright vote buying to
secure the number of votes he needed for ratification.56
The
clincher solution he saw was using the military card.
As he was very careful not to trigger an incident in Iloilo, he
was the opposite in Manila, giving orders to start the war with heavier
provocations. These
included: (1) commanding Gen. Arthur MacArthur to station artillery near
US troops in Pandacan and to order these troops to force out the
Filipino soldiers from their hitherto entrenched position there; (2)
issuing an announcement through the American members of the joint
commission to their Filipino counterparts that this body was not to meet
anymore; (3) giving Lt. John Hall and several regimental com-manders
orders to bring about a conflict with the Filipino officers as much as
possible; (4) giving orders to Col. John Stotsenberg to duplicate the
Pandacan maneuver in Santol; and (5) making the US Navy dismiss all its
Filipino employees on February 3, the day before the first shooting
incident, pre-scripted and all, was to take place.57 February
4 was the day that Gen. Otis countermanded instructions given months earlier to avoid conflict with the Filipinos.
He told his officers and troops to open fire on insurgent
“intruders.” That
afternoon, American troops were all put under arms. When evening fell,
Pvt. Willie Grayson and a friend named Miller were on sentry duty at
Santol. They were ordered to patrol ahead of the village in an
unoccupied area the Filipino troops claimed to control, and after
proceeding as ordered, they waited to see if there were any insurgents
in the vicinity.58 Grayson
later gave this account: “About
eight o’clock… something rose slowly up not twenty feet in front of
us. It was a Filipino. I
yelled ‘Halt!’… He immediately shouted ‘Halto!’ at me.
Well, I thought the best thing to do was to shoot him. He
dropped. … Then, two Filipinos sprang out of a gateway about fifteen
feet from us. I called
‘Halt!’ and Miller fired and dropped one.
I saw that another was left. Well, I think I got my second
Filipino that time. We
retreated to where our six other fellows were, and I said, ‘Line up,
fellows, the niggers are in here all through these yards.”59
(Grayson
later complained that the ‘dumb bullheadedness of the officers in
invading insurgent territory was responsible for making him fire those
shots.)
The
Filipino troops in the area returned fire.
General Arthur MacArthur later gave his account on what happened
next: “We
had a pre-arranged plan. Our tactical arrangements there were very
perfect, indeed. Everything
was connected by wire. …
and within an instant after at the outpost I received a message from
Stotsenberg… ‘The pipe line outpost has been fired on; and I am
moving out with my entire regiment.’ … When I got Col.
Stotsenberg’s report, I simply wired all commanders to carry out
pre-arranged plans, and the whole division was placed on the firing
line.”
60 Recoiling
from the US Army attack (supported by fire from Dewey’s ships) that
brought large casualty figures among the Filipino troops, Aguinaldo sent
a message to Otis saying the incident the previous night was an accident
that happened without his approval, and asking for a ceasefire and the
establishment of neutral areas between their respective troops.
Otis replied, in effect saying that the fighting, having begun,
must be brought to the grim end.61
. But
the Administration spread its own fictitious story and stuck to it: The
insurgents had “fired on (our) flag,” brought the conflict on, and
was responsible for it.62 After
these were reported to Washington, both President McKinley and Sen.
Lodge confidently expressed in separate conversations that they were
sure the events in Manila would “insure the ratification of the treaty
tomorrow.”63 They were both right. The military card, coupled with the consistent pattern of deception, did its job in the endgame of the campaign to ratify the treaty that they had signed almost two months before in Paris! Precarious
Vote Ratifies Pact A
last-ditch appeal to the Senate was made asking the senators to junk the
treaty. Signatories included former President Stephen Grover Cleaveland
with two non-consecutive earlier terms at the White House as 22nd
(1885-1889) and 24th (1893-1897)
chief executive, and Scottish-born American businessman and major
philanthropist Andrew Carnegie. Other signatories
included former Secretary of the Treasury John G. Carlisle, Harvard
University president Charles W. Eliot, American Federation of Labor
president Samuel Gompers, Moorfield Storey and others.
This appeal was written by Charles Francis Adams, assisted by Carl
Schurz.64 The
Treaty of Paris needed 56 votes, cast by two-thirds of the
84 senators, On February 6, 1899, it got 57.
The cause of imperialist expansionism got the ratification it had
sought, but with only one more vote to spare.
Considering
the twists and turns of the shifting stances of some Senators, with
their complex alliances of accident and convenience, crossing party
affiliations, so close to the moment of decision, it was a close call
even for the victors who had real reasons to get apprehensive.
Thus, the eleventh-hour voting and the ignition into a shooting
war the long-festering tensions between US and Filipino troops were
frantically resorted to, albeit with well-established patterns of
deception and bribery. And
the newly formed alliance between the expansionist big business and the
military eager to do its bidding won out. Author
Daniel Schirmer offers an incisive post-mortem in his book: “The
pressure generated by industry, the military, by partisan and personal
interests proved too great. The
atmosphere of racism and chauvinism was too pervasive.
The Massachusetts men who fought the treaty believed that, given
time, they could muster an overwhelming popular opposition, and the
success of their efforts gave support to this belief.
Whether such a movement could have been built or not was not
tested; the collapse of the fight against the treaty at its weak
political center removed that possibility. “In
the treaty crisis, if the views of the leading participants are taken
into account, both parties must be held responsible for its passage,
with the Republicans carrying the major burden.
Both Republicans and Democrats proved incapable of expressing the
popular opposition to the treaty, because both were incapable of
resisting the pressure of big business and its allied military
interests. The national
legislature, which had brought into being the union of industry and the
military, was in turn dominated by its creature; the child devoured the
parent in the reverse of the legend.
Not to be discounted, either, was the influence of William
McKinley. In the midst of
this decisive series of events, the President came forward to offer
sinuous leadership to the political and military machines, and the ends
desired by his supporters in industry and finance were achieved.
The treaty was passed, the war with the Philippines begun, and
the United States set on an imperial course.”65 It
turned out to be a very gloomy day for Filipino sovereignty and for all
its allies. And the war that was ignited to clinch that Senate vote was
to last the bigger part of the new decade that was then about to start.
And American domination of the Philippine peoples and their Islands has so far lasted – through three stages in as many forms – beyond the entire century that was then about to start, with a decade or so to spare! Brutal
War to Enforce the Sale Present
generations of the American people and the Filipino people know
practically nothing about the Filipino-American war, which the United
States started treacherously on February 4, 1899 to clinch the US
Senate’s vote to ratify the Treaty of Paris two days later.
Con-sidering the habit of the MacKinley administration of telling
lies to its own citizens, information about the extent and barbarity of
that war, which was supposed to have lasted only three years according
to American official history but actually lasted 16 years,66
information on it had to be consolidated and propagated through the
efforts of the Anti-Imperialist League and its fraternal organizations. But
even Filipinos know next to nothing about that highly
atrocious undeclared war, where we lost roughly a million of our
ancestors as direct and indirect casualties. This was because our
history was written according to the program of Civil Governor William
Howard Taft, and eventually latter-day people were simply made to forget
it. The Department of Education decided about a decade ago to downplay
it or remove it from the official syllabus for history subjects, and
during the climax parade in the mega-expensive official commemoration of
the Philippine Independence in June 1998, there were floats on all other
chapters of Philippine history except the Filipino-American War.
Five years before, this author wrote an article for the “Sense of History” section of Health Alert, the fortnightly publication of Health Action Information Network (HAIN) in the Philippines:67 The American people, at that time, were being fed with lies by their own government as far as its war of aggression in the Philippines was concerned. First, they pictured us as “tailless monkeys” virtually “living in the trees” as savages. (They even popularized a song about such “monkeys” having no tails in “Far Zamboanga,” which was later edited to have more decent lyrics.)68 Then, the American policymakers said the Filipinos were asking the United States for protection and guidance, probably using to the hilt that fly-in-the-ointment passage which turned General Aguinaldo’s declaration of independence into a proclamation of a protectorate. (Aguinaldo declared “independence” in June 1898 but qualified this to be “under the protection of the Mighty and Humane North American Nation.”69 "They
added, too, that there was practically no resistance here, save for some
small bands of bandits in the boondocks. All these, of course, were
filthy lies. And the lies were coupled with silence about brutal
atrocities being committed by the American troops against large sections
of the population, leading up to a Filipino (direct) casualty figure of
no less than 600,000. "In
January of 1899, the Filipinos established the very first republic in
the Asian continent, and their forces had effective control over
practically the entire archipelago, save for the walled capital city of
Manila (Intramuros) then already in the hands of the Americans. "(The
Americans’) control of Manila was not a mere contingency started with
concern for the safety of their defeated fellow Caucasians, the
Spaniards. The United States had her own designs on the Philippines as
its first trophy to herald its late-day entry into the exclusive club of
colonial powers. "When
the Treaty of Paris was submitted to the US Senate for
ratification, that body was not at all eager to give the document the
needed majority approval. Something had to be done to sway public
opinion decisively in favor of annexation of the Philippines in order to
make good McKinley’s crossed-fingers prediction: “While the treaty
has not yet been ratified, it is believed that it will be by the time of
the arrival at Manila of the commissioners.” Before the civilian
commissioners, therefore, that would take care of governance; they had
to send over in droves the reinforcements for their thinly spread
invasion forces. "The
strength of the Philippine revolutionary armed forces was enough to
defeat the Spaniards, but not enough for the sheer might of the
reinforced American invasion and occupation forces. "The
Philippine-American War was, therefore, a war of aggression, on the one
hand, and the continuation of a war of national liberation, on the
other. Toward that war’s end, no less than 600,000 Filipino lives had
been snuffed. It was the forcible end, the crushing, of the Philippine
Republic, which was established after the Philippine Revolution of 1896
had ended 333 years of Spanish rule. The
Philippine-American
War
was
officially
acknowledged by the US government only
as an “insurgency.” But
this was a blatant mislabeling, considering its actual duration, scope
of areas involved, size of the US troops deployed, and total cost
entailed in terms of budget and casualties.
It was, in fact, the “mother of all American wars” in terms
of historical chronology: the US military tactics of reconcentration
(“hamletting”) and of employing the “water cure” and other forms
of torture were tested in the islands for later mastery elsewhere; and
this was the first war of aggression waged by the US after its
expansionist economic platform emerged and gave rise to its imperialist
policy in foreign relations. (For more information including details, see Appendix 2-B.) back to top suggested next
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APPENDICES: App 2-A:
Treaty of Paris, 1898
'FOOTNOTES': 1Full text in Appendix 2-A. Source: Library of Congress <loc.gov/rr/hispanic/1898/subjects.html.> 2Howard Zinn,"The Empire and the People," History is a Weapon, <http://www.historyisaweapon.com/ defcon1/zinnempire12.html> 3Renato Constantino, "Origin of a Myth," Dissent and Counter- Consciousness, (Quezon City: Malaya Books), p. 72., quoting George Taylor, America in the New Pacific (New York: The Macmillan Company, 1942), 4Zinn, Ibid. 5John W. Foster, American Diplomacy in the Orient (Boston: Houghton, Mifflin an Company, 1903), pp. 401-402, as cited by Renato Constantino, Ibid., pp. 72-73. 6US Congressional Record, 56th Congress. Full text of this speech is available at <http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad.intrel /ajb72.htm> 7Wikiquote, <http://216.101. 58.17/hs/rschaller/Desktop/AP%20DBQ%20 Folder/1875-1900/7.0%20Expansionism.doc> 8Daniel Boone Schirmer, Republic or Empire (Cambridge: Schenkman Publishing Company, 1972), the entire book; on reciprocal relationship with Filipino nationalist movement, pp. 65-66. 9Zinn, Ibid. 10Ed Aurelio Reyes (quoting Dr. Ambeth Ocampo and Dr. Milagros Guerrero), Bonifacio: Siya Ba Ay Kilala Ko? (English Version; title translates as ‘Bonifacio: Do I Really Know Him?’) (Manila: Kamalaysayan, 2004), pp. 43-51. 11Prof. Dante L. Ambrosio, "Rebolusyong 1896: Isang Pambansang Rebolusyon," TAP Pamphlet Series by the Education Forum’s Teacher Assistance Program (Quezon City: Education Forum, 1994). 12Jose Rizal was exiled in the small town of Dapitan (now a city in Zamboanga del Norte). A detailed biography of the hero (José Barón Fernandez, José Rizál: Filipino Doctor and Patriot (Manila: Manuel L. Morato, 1980) describes the place as the "distant island of Mindanao, mostly terra incognita and dominated by Mohammedan datus, was the ideal place." p. 242. (boldface emphasis mine) 13Santiago V. Alvarez, as translated into English by Paula Carolina S. Malay, The Katipunan and the Revolution: Memoirs of a General (Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1992), pp. 82-119. 14According to historian Teodoro A. Agoncilio (History of the Filipino People, eighth edition, R. P. Garcia Publishing Co., Quezon City, 1990, p. 184), the political settlement was covered by a truce document signed by representatives of the Spanish colonial government and the Aguinaldo-led forces in Biyak na Bato, San Miguel, Bulacan on December 15, 1897. The truce document provided, among other things" (1) that Aguinaldo and his companions would go into voluntary exile outside the Philippines; (2) that Spanish Gov. Gen. Primo de Rivera would pay the sum of P800,000 to the rebels in three installments: (a) P400,000 to Aguinaldo upon his departure from Biyak na Bato, (b) P200,000 when the arms surrendered by the revolutionists exceeded 700, and (c) the remaining P200,000 when the Te Deum was sung and general amnesty was proclaimed by the governor; and (3) that Primo de Rivera would pay the additional sum of P900,000 to the families of the non-combatant Filipinos who suffered during the armed conflict. 15Prof. Bernard L.M. Karganilla, "Hobbled Sovereignty" (column item), Malaya national newspaper, June 15, 2007. Karganilla’s column item indicates as his source the True Version of the Philippine Revolution by Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy (the book published by Dodo Press in 2006 or the webpage <http://www.authorama.com/true-version -of-the-philippine-revolution.html>), but similar information may be derived from the following sources: paragraph 1, see under endnote number 15 below; paragraph 2, see under endnote number 16 below; paragraph 5, additional information in 55th Congress, (US) Senate Document No. 62, (Government Printing Office, Washington, 1899) Part 2, pp. 333-334; paragraph 8, corroborated by Paragraph 9 & 14; paragraph 10, see also endnote 26 on p. 65. 16Schirmer, Ibid., p. 68, citing Nathan Sargent, Admiral Dewey and the Manila Campaign (Naval Historical Foundation, 1947), p. 16; L. H. Healey and L. Kutner, The Admiral (Chicago & New York: Ziff-Davis publishing company, 1944), pp. 157-158, 17Constantino, Ibid., pp. 72-73, quoting US Senate Document 62, p. 356 as cited by James H. Blount, The American Occupation of the Philippines (New York and London: The Knickerbacker Press, 1912), p.13. 18David Trask, "The Spanish-American War," (part of the series, titled, The World of 1898: The Spanish-American War, Website of Library of Congress, <http://www.loc.gov/rr/hispanic/1898 /trask.html>. 19Constantino, Ibid., p. 73. quoting George F. Kennan, American Diplomacy (1900-1950) (Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 1953), p. 13. 20Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle _of_Manila_Bay 21David Trask, ibid. 22Wall of Heroes website, <home ofheroes.com/wallofhonor/spanish_am/ 18_treaty.html> 23Constantino, Ibid., p. 75. quoting US Senate Document 331, Pt 3, p. 2928 as cited by James H. Blount, The American Occupation of the Philippines (New York and London: The Knickerbacker Press, 1912) p. 20. 24Dr. Lilia H. Laurel, "The Legacy of Apolinario Mabini," National Midweek magazine, August 16, 1989, p. 13 25Constantino, Ibid., p. 75. 26Constantino, Ibid., p. 76. quoting US Senate Document 331, Pt 3, p. 2928 as cited by James H. Blount, The American Occupation of the Philippines (New York and London: The Knickerbacker Press, 1912) p. 67. 27Ibid., p. 76, citing Blount, Ibid., pp. 58-59 28Constantino, Ibid., p. 76, quoting Blount, p. 82 29David Trask, Ibid. 30Source: Centennial Site designed by Management Systems Consultants (MSC) Communi cations Technologies, Inc. Hosted by MSC Computer Training Center. Updated January 2, 1999. <http://ww w.msc.edu.ph/centennial/philam.html> 31Kung Tuyo Na ang Luha Mo, Aking Bayan, written by Amado V. Hernandez carries these stanzas: Lumuha ka, Aking Bayan, buong lungkot mong iluha, Ang kawawang kapalaran ng lupain mong kawawa, Ang bandilang sagisag mo’y lukob ng dayong bandila, Pati wikang minana mo’y busabos ng ibang wika. Ganito ring araw noon nang agawan ka ng laya, Labintatlo ng Agosto nang saklutin ang Maynila. (boldface mine)
Author’s freestyle translation: Weep, My Country, weep with deepest sorrow The pitiful plight of your pitiful land, With the flag symbolizing you slumped under a foreign flag, And even the language you inherited downtrodden by another tongue. It was on such day as this when liberty was snatched from your hand, It was on the Thirteenth Day of August when Manila was seized. Contemporary Filipinos have paired the recitation of this nationalist (anti-imperialist) poem with the singing of the nationalist (anti-imperialist) song Bayan Ko! But there have been some groups and individuals who have grossly devalued both poem and song by downplaying the nationalist spirit of these works of art to pertain only to tyranny and corruption on the part of local politicians. This hews closely to the US-propagated line of thinking – grossly ignorant and erroneous – that our sufferings as a nation after the proclamation of formal Philippine independence in July 1946 are purely caused by these local politicians and US-designed programs and policies have had nothing to do with such sufferings. 32Website of Library of Congress, <http://www.loc.gov/rr/hispanic/1898/ chronology.html#treaty>. 33Source: Centennial Site designed by MSC Communications Technologies, Inc. Hosted by MSC Computer Training Center. Updated January 2, 1999. http://www.msc.edu.ph/centennial/ philam.html 34Source: Wikkipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felipe_Agoncillo 35Constantino, Ibid., p. 78, quoting Annual Reports of the War Department, 1899, Vol. I, Pt. 4, p. 13. 36Constantino, Ibid., p. 79, quoting Blount, Ibid., p. 70 37Constantino, Ibid., p. 79, quoting Senate Document 331, 1902, p. 941, quoted in Blount, Ibid., p. 70 38Prof. Benjamin Mangubat, blogsite with URL: http://images.benjaminmangubat.multiply .com/attachment/0/SJesPwoKCEkAAG MUWwE1/lokohang_labanan_sa_manila. doc?nmid=108950741 39As quoted in Laurel, Ibid. 40Jose Rizal, "The Philippines Within A Century," La Solidaridad, 1889, as carried in Ed Aurelio C. Reyes, The Philippines, A Century Thence (An Open Letter to Rizal), (Manila: Kamalaysayan, 2007), p. 64. 41As quoted in Laurel, Ibid. 42Emilio Jacinto’s exact line in his essay, "Liwanag at Dilim" (Light and Darkness) goes this way: "Ang lahat ng tao’y magkakapantay sapagkat iisa ang pagkatao ng lahat." (All humans are equal because the humanity of all is one), translated by the author from Tagalog text in Virgilio S. Almario, Panitikan ng Rebolusyon(g 1896) (Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press, 1997), p. 169. 43Reyes, Bonifacio, quoting in various parts Dr. Milagros Guerrero, "Andres Bonifacio: Pangulo ng Haring Bayan" (unpublished monograph), and Dr. Zeus Salazar, Dante Ambrosio and Enrico Azicate, Agosto 29-30, 1896: Ang Pagsalakay ni Bonifacio sa Maynila (Manila: Miranda Book Store, 1994). 44Schirmer, Ibid. In the Philippines, the most well-known figure being associated to the Anti-Imperialist League is Samuel Clemens, more widely known as the novelist Mark Twain of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn fame. Although his fame was indeed well-deserved due to the sharpness of his pen serving well the anti-imperialist cause (in general and the cause of Philippine independence in particular), Schirmer’s book which traces the details of the AIL’s history from its birth to its demise, mentions Clemens only once – as among the prominent persons who were co-signatories to an AIL-prepared statement pertaining to the betrayed promise of guaranteeing Cuban independence. The long-term leaders of AIL were: former Massachusetts Gov. George S. Boutwell, president; Union Army Gen. Francis A. Osborn, treasurer; and Erwing Winslow, secretary; a long list of vice presidents that included steel magnate Andrew Carnegie and labor leader Samuel Gompers. All those who sent in their names to the Boston headquarters were to be enrolled as members, and membership meetings were to be set at least once a year. The key to the organization, however, from the very start, was an executive committee of about ten members who met twice a week and were responsible for the work. 45Ibid., p. 109. 46Ibid., p. 116. 47Ibid., p. 115, 48Ibid., p. 1, quoting Springfield Daily Republican, January 6, 1900 49Zinn, Ibid. 50 Schirmer, Ibid., p. 110, quoting R. F. Pettigrew, Imperial Washington (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr and Company, 1922), p. 270. 51Ibid., p. 119, citing the Boston Evening Transcript, February 6, 1899; and Review of Reviews, March 1899, p. 267. 52Ibid., p. 115, citing Springfield Daily Republican, January 10, 1899 53Ibid., p. 108. citing Springfield Daily Republican, December 21 & 24, 1898 54Agoncilio, Ibid., p. 416. 55Schirmer, Ibid., pp. 112-114, 125, citing the Boston Evening Transcript, January 3 and January 5, 1899; 56Ibid., p. 122-125. quoting Pettigrew, pp. 204-205. 57Ibid., pp. 127-128, quoting the Report of Major General E. S. Otis, 1899; Compilation of Philippine Insurgent Records (later retitled Philippine Revolutionary Records), pp. 42-43; Speech of Lieutenant Hall at Fanueil Hall, March 19, 1903, as printed in Mass Meetings of Protest (Boston: New England Anti-Imperialist League, 1903); 57th Congress, 1st sess., Senate Document No. 331, Part 2, Hearings on the Philippines, MacArthur’s Testimony, pp. 898-899; Philippine Insurgent Records (later retitled Philippine Revolutionary Records), pp. 42-43, Teodoro A. Agoncilio and Oscar M. Alfonso, A Short History of the Filipino People (Quezon City: University of the Philippines, 1960), p. 266. 58Ibid., pp. 128-129, quoting from Report of the War Department, 1899, pp. 462, 464. 59Ibid., p. 129, quoting from Charles Edward Russel, The Outlook for the Philippines (New York: The Century Co., 1922), p. 93. 60Ibid., p. 129, citing the 57th Congress, 1st Sess., Senate Document No. 331, Part 2, Senate Hearings on the Philippines, MacArthur’s Testimony, p. 900. 61Ibid., p. 130, quoting Boston Evening Transcript, February 11, May 8, 1899. 62Ibid., p. 132. 63Ibid., p. 130, citing Richard Brinsley Sheridan, The Filipino Martyrs (London and New York: J. Lane, 1900), p. 169. 64Ibid., p. 132-133, citing Springfield Daily Republican, February 6, 1899; diary of Charles Francis Adams, Jr., January 25, 28 & 31, 1899, Charles Francis Adams, Jr., Papers, MHS. 65Ibid., p. 133. 66The three stages: Invasion and "pacification" during the Filipino-American War (1899-1915); direct colonial subjugation after "pacification" before and during the "Commonwealth" period (1902-1942); and indirect colonial (semi-colonial) through policies, programs and operations implemented by a native government that also absorbs all blame on the effects of these policies ("independent republic," 1946-?). 67see http://www.tribo.org/history/american.html 68The original opening line, "Yo, the monkeys have no tails in Zamboo-anga" was later changed to "Don’t you go, don’t you go to far Zamboanga." 69The crucial sentence in the Acta de Independencia translates into English as: "And having as witness to the rectitude of our intentions the Supreme Judge of the Universe, and under the protection of the Mighty and Humane North-American nation, we do proclaim and declare solemnly in the name and by the authority of the people of all these Philippine islands…"
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