First of all, let us examine what the
word “dictator” really means. In ancient Rome, a “dictator” is a magistrate
with supreme authority, elected or appointed in times of emergency to deal with
grave problems or threats of national proportion. Looking at different standard
dictionaries, we could sum up the following definitions: “A stern ruler with
absolute power and authority;” “one who is decisive in his command, whose
pronouncements are meant to be taken as the final word;” “a leader who imposed
his thoughts, wills and visions upon his subordinates;” “an assertive,
strong-willed and unyielding leader;” “one who impose his orders with
authority;” “one whose commandments must be followed to the letter;” “one who
will defend his cause to the utmost limits available;” and the most basic is
“one who ‘dictates’.” It came from the Latin root word dictatus, which simply means “to speak (aloud).”
Lesson of
History |
The word isn’t bad at all. In fact, during
ancient times, being branded a “dictator” is an honor bestowed to the greatest
of men. If you look at world history, all the great leaders of the world at one
time or another were called a “dictator.” From Alexander the Great, and Julius
Caesar, to Mao Zedong and Fidel Castro. Even Abraham Lincoln was called
“dictator” by his political opponents.
History also proved that great deeds
were accomplished through authoritarian leadership. The Pyramids, the Great
Wall of China, triumphs in war, independence of many nations, etc.
So, you see, the word isn’t bad at
all! I would rather have a dictator as a leader than a yellow-bellied
sycophant.
Taking the above premise, let us start
looking back in time and
reminisce the legacy left behind by President Ferdinand Edralin Marcos (1917-1989).
Marcos with Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino, when they were still the best of friends. |
MARCOS, THE REVOLUTIONARY
The “Tenant
Emancipation Decree” (September 26, 1972). |
Can Marcos be considered a
revolutionary? Before many eyebrows start flying, let’s profile the man through
his writings and principles. In his book The
Democratic Revolution in the Philippines (1979), he wrote: “The Democratic
Revolution is a rededication to the historical aspirations of the Filipino
people, but it makes demands not only on the political authority itself but on
the very foundation of that authority: the people,” and “The fundamental reason
for building a new society involves the outstanding fact of our age: the
rebellion of the poor. This is a rebellion over which the might of government
can have no avail, for the poor are, in many ways, the people for which
government exist.”
It gets more intense in the succeeding book, An Ideology for Filipinos (1980): “What this (democratic) revolution requires is a political leadership that finds reason to institute radical reforms and, more important, has the courage to act on behalf of the people, and thus against the (oppressing) oligarchy, including its power brokers in the ranks of the intellectual elite.” He summed it up with his rallying cry: “Of what good is democracy if it is not for the poor?!”
It gets more intense in the succeeding book, An Ideology for Filipinos (1980): “What this (democratic) revolution requires is a political leadership that finds reason to institute radical reforms and, more important, has the courage to act on behalf of the people, and thus against the (oppressing) oligarchy, including its power brokers in the ranks of the intellectual elite.” He summed it up with his rallying cry: “Of what good is democracy if it is not for the poor?!”
Among the poorest poor and the most
exploited in the Philippines are the peasant farmers. Land reform was the
priority program of the Marcos presidency. But the fact is that before Martial
Law was declared, the Philippine Congress was occupied mostly by landlords,
oligarchs owning huge landed estates, and feudal vassals, and any and all attempts
to pursue a genuine land reform program will not even reach first reading. Marcos
had enough of this: “Our people have known enough of exploitation. It is time
that our people shared equitably in the fruits of their labor and their land.”
On September 26, 1972, just five days
after declaring Martial Law, Marcos decreed the entire country a land-reform
area. A month later, he enacted the “Tenant Emancipation Decree.” It was put on
paper with his own handwriting: “Decreeing the emancipation of tenant farmers
from the bondage of the soil, transferring to them the ownership of the land
they till, and providing the instruments and mechanism thereafter....” Marcos
wrote it with his own hand because he felt it was both the pioneering and milestone
program of his “New Society,” and to show his sincerity. For he knew then: “If
land reform fails, then the entire program of the New Society fail.”
Man
behind the “New Society” salutes |
INDEPENDENT FOREIGN POLICY
President Rodrigo Duterte is being recently lambasted
by rightist and oligarchic elements for having an independent foreign policy.
That is, a foreign policy not solely, mendicantly, dependent on the U.S. He is,
however, not the first president to do so. In 1975, then First Lady Imelda Marcos
went to Cuba. She learned from Fidel Castro (1926-2016) that “after 30 years, any lease
agreement between sovereign nations concerning land occupancy becomes
permanent, and may only be abrogated by mutual consent.” This was based on
Cuba’s experience regarding the Guantanamo Naval Base. That is how the base
inside Cuba became US property. Since sovereignty was absolute within the
premises of the said base, and the lease agreement cannot be unilaterally
terminated. Upon knowing this, she immediately told President Marcos knowing
fully its parallel consequence on Clark Air Base and Subic Naval Base.
The US military bases in the
Philippines were established through the Parity Agreement in 1947, which also
started the so-called “mendicant foreign policy.” Interesting to note that it
was President Manuel Roxas (1892-1948) who initiated this policy. Claro M. Recto (1890-1960) and Jose P.
Laurel (1891-1959) opposed it. President Roxas even made a public speech of loyalty
(according to Recto, more like subserviency or sycophancy), “kissing the
American anus,” at the Kelly Theater on April 15, 1948.
After the abolition of the 1935
Constitution, and the ratification of the 1973 constitution, subsequent amendments
and provisions thereafter was made and the military bases became renegotiable
every five years. This made it possible for the Philippine Senate under Jovito
Salonga (1920-2016) to vote for the removal of the bases in 1991. President Cory Aquino (1933-2009) was
for the status quo; she doesn’t want
her benefactor to leave. In reality, it is Marcos that we should thank, for the
removal of the US military bases. Senator Salonga, for his part, paid a dear
price for disobeying President Aquino. He was voted out as Senate President and
his financial backer in the business community withdrew their support for his
presidential bid.
Aside from this, current brood of students
of activism should also know that it was during the Martial Law era that Claro
M. Recto’s dream of cutting the chain of “mendicant foreign policy” became a
reality. On April 1972, President Marcos initiated the establishment of
diplomatic relations with socialist countries of Asia and Europe, which led to
progressive trade relations and cultural exchange programs. This in turn marked
the end of the Philippines’ period of mendicant policy in foreign affairs and
the beginning of a new era of self-reliance. Recalling history, Marcos went to
China in June 1975, where Chairman Mao Zedong (1893-1976)
shook his hand and told him “You
must lead the Third World.” The following year, he visited Moscow and
established diplomatic ties with Russia.
President
Marcos and Premier Chou Enlai signed the communiqué opening diplomatic ties with
China |
We
owe it all to Recto’s dream and Marcos’ act of defiance against the US.
Perhaps, the foremost reason, more than the allege charges of abuses he
committed, why he was stabbed in the back by “Uncle Sam” and ousted from
office.
This
leaflet was circulated by rightist groups in an attempt to destroy the Marcos
image. So what if the Marcoses befriend the Communists? That’s what Independent Foreign Policy is! |
“A
leader without vision and direction is like a cabbage without leaves..... But I
see in you a visionary, a man with purpose..... Go, you must lead the Third
World!” – Chairman Mao Zedong’s statement to President Marcos upon meeting with
him in his state visit in China (1975).
Warm
handshake from Mao Zedong greets President Marcos in China, June 1975, where the Chairman told him: “You must lead the Third World!” |
President
Marcos writes his autograph during the champ’s courtesy call |
DISSECTING THE ARGUMENTS
In looking back at the legacy of
President Ferdinand E. Marcos, let us sieve through the debates between the
anti-Marcos and the Loyalists. Let us dissect the arguments to three main
premises: The state of the Philippine economy during Marcos’ time, and the
presuppositions “Is Marcos a thief?” and “Is Marcos a human rights abuser?”
Anti-Marcos proponents would argue
that the Philippines was the “sick man of Asia” during the Martial Law era.
Looking back at history and World Bank records, however, says otherwise. The
“sick man of Asia” connotation perhaps better pertained to the Philippines that
Marcos inherited from President Diosdado Macapagal (1910-1997). Based on World Bank data,
the Philippines’ Annual Gross Domestic Product grew from 5.27 billion dollars
in 1964 to 37.14 billion dollars in 1982, and Philippine GDP per capita more
than quadrupled from 175.9 dollars in 1964 to 741.8 dollars in 1982, the second
highest in Philippine history. Though it fell to 568.8 dollars in 1985. This
despite many compounding factors, including extremely high global interest
rates, severe global economic recession, and significant increase in global oil
price, which affected all indebted countries in Latin America, Europe, Asia, and
the Philippines was not exempted. All in all notwithstanding the 1984-1985
recession, GDP per capita grew at an annual rate of 5.8 percent. Indeed,
according to the U.S. based Heritage Foundation, the Philippines enjoyed its
best economic development between 1972 and 1979. The economy grew despite two
severe global oil crises in 1973 and 1979. World Bank data also show that Philippine
Agriculture, crops (rice, corn, coconut, sugar), livestock and poultry, and
fisheries grew at an average rate of 6.8, 3.1 and 4.5 percent, respectively
from 1970 to 1980. During the Marcos’ Green Revolution, the annual rice
production in the Philippines increased from 3.68 to 7.72 million tons in two
decades and made the Philippines a rice exporter for the first time in the 20th
century. Mathematics doesn’t lie. No other president before or after Marcos was
able to achieve this.
The anti-Marcos accused the former
president of stealing tens of billions of dollar from the government coffers
during his rule. The Loyalists would say that nothing is conclusively proven up
to now regarding that matter. The reality of which no factual or physical
evidence has been presented in any court except for intangible allegations. In
fact, most of the cases filed against the Marcoses both here and abroad were
already dismissed. Marcos himself was quoted as saying: “I have committed many
sins in my life. But stealing money from the government, from the people, is
not one of them.” How do we go about checking this?
Again let’s do the Math, or the
logical estimates, at least. How much money is there really in the Philippine
coffers during the Marcos administration? If we include the local and foreign
funds, donations and debts, how much money was there available for Marcos? Now,
let’s go to government expenditures, how much money do you think his government
spent with all the infrastructures built during his time? Five of the eight
major dams and 17 hydroelectric and geothermal power plants still fully
functional today were constructed during the Marcos era. By 1983, the
Philippines became the second largest producer of geothermal power in the world
with the commissioning of the Tongonan 1 and Palinpinon 1 plants (It is worth
mentioning that because of the focus of the Marcos government on renewable
energy sources, the country’s dependency on hydrocarbon fuel was at its lowest
from the late 1970s to the early 1980s.). Aside from this, more than 90 percent
of the bridges, more than 70 percent of the roads and highways, over 40 percent
of the state colleges and universities still existing today throughout the
country were built by the Marcos government. Not to mention the Light Railway
Transit (LRT) system, sea and air ports, irrigation and flood control projects,
water supply and drainage facilities, the Kidney, Heart and Lung Centers,
thousands of public markets, hospital and health facilities, arts and cultural
buildings, etc. Marcos also spearheaded the development of 11 heavy
industrialization projects including steel, petrochemical, cement, pulp and
paper mill, and copper smelter.
Historians will one day ask: What
would the Philippine Archipelago be without the Pan-Philippine Highway? What
would Luzon be without the Candaba Viaduct, the North Luzon Expressway and the
South Luzon Expressway? What would Visayas be without the San Juanico Bridge?
What would Mindanao be without the Atugan Bridge?
San Juanico Bridge, the longest bridge in Southeast Asia when it was built (1973) |
In the latest El Niño occurrence, the
entire archipelago suffered from drought and water shortage. The supply of
water for irrigation of Bulacan and Rizal were cut-off just to maintain a
reduced supply of drinking water for Metro Manila. Imagine if Angat, Ipo and La
Mesa dams were not constructed during Marcos time. We would be exporting water
from China, perhaps. On the other extreme, imagine if Magat and Pantabangan
dams were not constructed. Northeastern and Central Luzon would turn into giant
lakes during typhoon season. Imagine if the flood control system of Metro
Manila was not rehabilitated during Marcos time. The inundation, destruction
and damage after Typhoon Ondoy and the 2010 habagat
onslaught would be more than tenfold. By the way, the Marcos government master
plan of the flood control system for Metro Manila and surrounding suburbs was
scrapped and construction discontinued during President Cory Aquino’s regime,
allegedly because “it was a Marcos project.” No alternative plan was ever set
in place. The same fate happened with the mothballed Bataan Nuclear Power
Plant, which could have prevented the energy crisis of the 1990s and impending
energy crisis to come.
The 1986 revolt that ousted Marcos
happened at EDSA. But did you know that EDSA, the highway we know today, was
paved and concretized by the Marcos government? How much do you think all the
aforementioned projects cost? Add the social services, the salaries of
government workforce (civilian, police and military), and the miscellaneous
expenses of the national government. I wonder, was there anything left to
steal? The bigger wonder is the possibility that Marcos didn’t steal a centavo
but, on the contrary, forked out billions to finance and complete his
administration’s massive infrastructure projects. The biggest wonder is where
did he get the money?
Economist-journalist and long-time
critic of Marcos, Hilarion “Larry” Henares, once made a ponderful comment about
the alleged ill-gotten wealth of the Marcoses. That even if you summed-up all
the money in the Philippine treasury from Aguinaldo to Marcos, there is no such
amount. So, again, where did Marcos get the money? Interestingly, even the late
former Senator Jovito Salonga, in his many years of endeavoring to solve this
mystery, came up blank.
Marcos’ book The Democratic Revolution in the Philippines (1979) |
Enrique Zobel (1927-2004), founder of Makati
Business Club and former chairman and president of Ayala Corporation, may have
an answer. In his sworn statement before
he died, he estimated Marcos’ wealth to be around 100 billion dollars, and said
his riches were not ill-gotten but came from the gold bullions obtained from part
of the treasures
looted by Japanese General Tomoyuki Yamashita (1885-1946) during World War II,
which is known as Yamashita’s gold or Yamashita’s treasure. Marcelino Tagle, former director of Caritas Manila
and 1967 Ten Outstanding Young Man awardee, corroborated Zobel’s statements. In
the 2003 book Gold Warriors:
America’s Secret Recovery of Yamashita’s Gold by
Sterling Seagrave (1937-2017), this claim is again
elaborated. Though the book was full of conspiracy theories, half-truths,
speculations and impossibilities, certain intriguing incidents and events were
described vividly within its pages. Moreover, a Rizalista, Tatlong Persona chronicle revealed that the source of
Marcos’ wealth was from gold hoards taken at several Yamashita treasure sites,
at Fort Santiago (Manila), in Norzagaray (Bulacan), in Teresa (Rizal), in
Isabela (where the deepest section of the Magat Dam now lies), to name a few. Furthermore,
the “Yamashita’s Treasure” was a combination of gold hoards from Asia and that
of the Hitler gold hoards taken from Africa and Europe smuggled to Bandung,
Indonesia, estimated to be around 1.3 trillion dollars as of the middle of
1980s.” Supposed to be there were nine major “golden buddha” sites and 172
minor sites were the Japanese buried the amassed treasures. Aside from these, “four
ships full of gold were sank in Philippine waters after the U.S. dropped the
atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.” Whatever the truth behind the
Yamashita’s treasures is another story in itself
By the way, in his book, Neither Trumpets Nor Drums, former
Vice-President Salvador Laurel (1928-2004) revealed that in 1989, President Marcos, on his last
breath, offered to give 90 percent of his wealth in exchange for allowing him
to return to the Philippines and be buried besides her mother when he died. VP
Laurel agreed to act as go-between, but Cory Aquino, because of her vindictive
character, refused to even talk to her vice-president. Cory denied Laurel just
3 minutes of her time saying she was very busy, while she allowed an hour of
chit-chat with visiting actor Tom Cruise. “Cory’s refusal,” according to
Laurel, was “her biggest mistake.” Laurel further noted that “we could have
paid off our foreign debt.” Remember that our foreign debt in 1989 was more
than 30 billion dollars. Did Marcos have that much wealth? Laurel believed so. But
Marcos certainly didn’t steal it. As mentioned earlier, the Philippine
government treasury didn’t have that much money even if you include foreign
borrowings and donations.
To the third premise, the allegation
of human rights abuses, Marcos defenders would argue that he was not directly
involved. Most of the cases happened during the time when he was already
perceived to be at ill-health. He was not the one signing the arrest warrants
nor ordering the alleged torture, abduction or killing, and he was not at his
full faculty during the time. According to Amnesty International, most of the
human rights abuses emanated from the Philippine Constabulary and the
Philippine Army controlled by then General Fidel V. Ramos and Defence Minister
Juan Ponce Enrile. While this may be true, the fault, however, still falls on
command responsibility.
The alleged victims were said to
number more than 120,000. That many? One might want to check the list. Were
they all happened during Marcos’ time? I’m very sure this list will shrink
considerably upon close scrutiny. Every administration has a share of its
gruesome acts of human rights abuses. Has everyone forgotten the Mendiola
Massacre (January 22, 1987), when soldiers and Malacañang PSG opened fire at demonstrating peasant killing 19 of them.? How about the Lupao Massacre (February 10, 1987) where soldiers burned and looted homes of suspected NPA sympathizers killing 17 and maiming 8 more? How come no one, no command responsibility prosecution was made
accountable for this grave killing of peasants? Then there's the Hacienda Luisita Massacre, Maguidanao Massacre, Atimonan Massacre, Talipao Massacre, Mamasapano Massacre?
As we remember Marcos’ undoing, we
should also recall his one last act of statesmanship. At the height of the EDSA
Revolt, General Fabian Ver (1920-1998) was coaxing President Marcos to launch an all-out
offensive against Ramos and Enrile, but he refused because many civilians will
be caught in the crossfire. That part was seen on television, but not once was
it replayed. Had Marcos agreed to Ver’s plan, the scenario would be like the Tiananmen
Square carnage in China. Thousands would have perished. Colonel Irwin Ver, then
head of Presidential Security Command (PSC), in a Rappler’s interview recalling his last days at Malacañang,
remembered Marcos ordering him for “strategic withdrawal to Ilocos.” When he
apprised the president that they still have the capability to defend the palace
for a long time, the latter responded: “I don’t want us to be shooting at our
own people. We must resolve this peacefully.” In the young Ver’s own account:
“Here’s my president who many thought was a monster, his back forced against
the wall, and though armed with tremendous firepower at his disposal, would not
fight his way out, but clear in his mind that he would rather avoid it. At the
point when the only option left was to defend the seat of presidency, he chose
to leave. He would not fire back at those who were ready to shoot him down. At
that moment, I felt deep in my heart that I have served the right
commander-in-chief.” Marcos’ last act of ceding power rather than see the
shedding of a Filipino’s blood is a legacy in itself.
Incidentally, some miswritten books and
Internet blogs should be corrected: Marcos didn’t flee to Hawaii. He wanted to
go to Paoay, Ilocos Norte, but he was “kidnapped” to Andersen Air Force Base in
Guam, before being taken to Hawaii, on the adamant insistence of Cory Aquino to
U.S. Ambassador Stephen Bosworth (1929-2016) that Marcos should be exiled outside of the
Philippines immediately. There are documents, tapes and records to this effect.
Ferdinand Marcos and his family after winning the 1965 election. |
“History will judge my father (Ferdinand E. Marcos) properly.” – Senator Bongbong Marcos, in an interview by Kara David in the TV program Powerhouse.
President Marcos and his son Bongbong, 1960s. |
Marcos family in the Malacañang ground. |
LONG LIVE THE FILIPINO PEOPLE!