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PIMENTEL WARNS OF SECURITY IMPLICATIONS OF FILIPINO MERCENARIES IN IRAQ
Senate Minority Leader Aquilino Pimentel Jr. (PDP-Laban) today expressed
concern over the security implications of having Filipino mercenaries
fighting on the side of American troops in the war in Iraq especially in
view of indications that their presence there has the secret consent of the
Philippine government.
Pimentel said the reported deployment of about 3,000 Filipinos tasked with
securing American diplomatic officials and assisting US combat troops in
Iraq could not have been possible without the knowledge and clearance of
Manila.
“Our countrymen are being recruited to fight the Iraq war as proxies for the
Americans. That makes them mercenaries - reminiscent of the French foreign
legion that fought the French wars in Africa as proxies of the latter,” he
said.
The minority leader noted that the recruits are hired by prominent American
job firms and trained in Subic before being sent to Iraq. He also asked why
travel visas of the recruits are not marked “not valid for Iraq” despite the
supposedly strict government ban on the deployment of workers to that
strife-torn country.
“The problem that the government faces in this regard is that it feigns
utter powerlessness to stop it because it tends to look at the recruitment
as a business proposition. Those who are recruited are being paid ‘good
money’ which, in the government’s capitalist orientation, would be justified
because the mercenaries prefer to be recruited for war rather than continue
with their lives of joblessness.” Pimentel said.
The recruits are reportedly paid a minimum of $2,000 a month.
Warning of a possible security backlash on the country, Pimentel said: “The
additional problem is that these mercenaries might make the country and our
embassies and trade missions vulnerable to counter-attack by those being
attacked by the mercenaries in Iraq.”
He recalled that the Abu Sayyaf leaders in Mindanao were mercenaries and
proxies for the US in the war against the Soviet troops in Afghanistan some
years back. But after the Soviet troops were driven out of Afghanistan, the
Abu Sayyaf mercenaries “turned their war proclivities against our own people
when they came home.”
“History might repeat itself and worsen the law an order situation in the
country unless the government provides a decisive solution to the problem of
our young men being recruited as mercenaries and proxies for the US in the
war in Iraq,” Pimentel said. And that can only take the form of decent job
opportunities in the country. The Arroyo government, however, has no
coherent solution to the problem. Hence, the recruits will go to Iraq, the
risks will be there for them and the country. We can only pray that the God
who has protected us all these years will continue to do so despite our
recklessness.
Date: June 25, 2006
Ref: Omeng / (02) 5526731
http://www.nenepimentel.org |
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