Saturday, September 28, 2024

Balangiga 1901: Did American fumble the bag?

Balangiga 1901: Did America fumble the bag? was also published by The Manila Times. Photo credit: Manila Times cartoon 25 Sep 2024.


On Saturday, 28 September 2024, the province of Eastern Samar will commemorate the 123rd anniversary of Balangiga Encounter Day. Balangiga is one of the 22 component towns of the province (Borongan, the provincial capital, is a city). Republic Act No. 6692 immortalizes the significance of the celebration and has proclaimed September 28 as a special non-working holiday in the whole province of Eastern Samar.

The celebration aims to honor the valor and patriotism shown by the people of Balangiga in an uprising against American aggression. Hopefully it may also serve as a guiding light and a beacon of hope for a generation of Filipinos in need of another streak of heroism from their midst.

The Balangiga Encounter Day can be better appreciated with the twin backdrop of the last few years of the Spanish colonial rule in the Philippines as well as the Philippine-American war that raged from 1899 to 1902.

The Spanish colonial occupation started in 1521 when Portuguese Ferdinand Magellan, sailing for the King of Spain, reached the shores of Homonhon Island, which is also part of Eastern Samar. For more than four centuries, Spain controlled and exercised sovereignty over the archipelago that in 1542 another Spanish explorer Ruy López de Villalobos had named “Philippines” after Prince Phillip (who later became King Phillip II of Spain).

It took a while, a long while, but Filipinos, like all peoples and races, had longed to be free. Self-educated Andres Bonifacio co-organized the Katipunan with like-minded Filipinos who believed an armed rebellion against Spain was inevitable. From a resistance movement, the Katipunan eventually became a shadow revolutionary government. Its membership expanded rapidly, with smaller groups established in other parts of Luzon, as well as a few others in the Visayas and Mindanao. When an uprising did happen, starting sometime in August 1896 when the Katipuneros tore their cedula in Caloocan in what would be called “Cry of Pugad Lawin,” or “Cry of Balintawak,” the march for freedom had crossed its Rubicon.

The revolutionaries succeeded in many of the local battles, especially in the province of Cavite where Emilio Aguinaldo showed his military and organizational skills. In 1897, the revolution lost some of its steam, at least temporarily, when partisan conflicts between Aguinaldo’s Magdalo forces and Bonifacio’s Magdiwang troopers led to the latter’s trial for treason, among other trumped-up charges, before a tribunal sanctioned by Aguinaldo. Bonifacio was eventually found guilty and executed. Before his death, Bonifacio (obviously the more radical of the two) also accused Aguinaldo of treason for trying to forge a peace agreement with the Spanish authorities.

In December 1897, Aguinaldo signed the Pact of Biak-na-Bato to end the armed conflict with Spain. Aside from the cessation of hostilities, the peace agreement required Aguinaldo to dissolve his revolutionary government and for Spain to indemnify the revolutionaries in the amount of close to a million Mexican pesos. Aguinaldo and several revolutionary officials went on a voluntary exile to Hong Kong where they nevertheless continued to reorganize the revolutionary government.

The sinking of USS Maine in Cuba (caused by an internal explosion which the US government blamed on Spanish forces) ignited the Spanish-American war in April 1898. Cuba was itself in the middle of a struggle to free itself from the colonial rule of Spain, and the US, helping the cause of Cuba, went into a war against Spain that spilled over across the globe, reaching Spanish territories that included the Philippines.

The enemy of the enemy was a friend. In May 1898, Commodore George Dewey of the US Navy Asiatic Squadron fished Aguinaldo from Hong Kong and sailed for Manila to help the Filipinos crush the remnants of Spanish military forces in the Philippines. Aguinaldo declared Philippine independence a month later in Kawit, Cavite, his hometown, capping centuries of struggle for consensus among Filipinos divided on the means by which to achieve self-rule and the molding of a national identity. Dewey’s troops were among those who witnessed the unfurling of the Philippine flag and public singing of “Lupang Hinirang” (the Philippine National Anthem).

But the deception was yet to unravel. On 13 August 1898, the US and Spain sparred in what came to be known as the mock battle of Manila. Although there were a few casualties (sh*t happened, to borrow the words of then Philippine National Police Chief, now Senator, Ronald De La Rosa, ruing the death of an infant while waging then President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs) it was staged to save Spain from the embarrassment of its surrender to the Filipinos and to preempt Aguinaldo and his men from taking control of the colony’s premier city. A few deaths from the ranks of Spanish forces were attributed to Filipinos who thought the Spaniards were indeed battling the Americans. 

Eight months later, in December 1898, the US and Spain signed the Treaty of Paris to end their armed conflict with zero participation by any Philippine representative during the negotiations. The treaty ushered in the rise of the US as a global player and supplanted Spain as the world’s imperial power. The peace agreement required Spain to relinquish its title and sovereign claim over territories such as the islands of Puerto Rico, Guam, West Indies and the Philippines. The discussion on what to do with the Philippines was contentious. Spain hesitated to part the entire archipelago to the incoming colonizer, but eventually relented when the US offered twenty million dollars to sweeten the deal.

Voting 57-27, the US Senate barely passed the required two-thirds vote to ratify a treaty. Senator Albert Beveridge, who voted in favor of the treaty and one of the loudest American voices calling for the annexation of the Philippines, opened one of his 1900 speeches on the floor of the senate with these words:

“MR. PRESIDENT, the times call for candor. The Philippines are ours forever, "territory belonging to the United States," as the Constitution calls them. And just beyond the Philippines are China's illimitable markets. We will not retreat from either. We will not repudiate our duty in the archipelago. We will not abandon our opportunity in the Orient…”

Emilio Aguinaldo was clueless about the Treaty of Paris. He did not know that Spain sold his country to the US like a piece of real estate property. When he did know the whole scheme, the grand imperialist shebang, he had no option but to wage another war. 

Here then was a riveting sight of Aguinaldo fighting the Spaniards one day and the Americans on the next day. This was getting tougher and tougher for him and his valiant men. Superior enemy resources forced Aguinaldo to mount a guerilla war from the fringes against the Americans. Unfortunately for him and the cause of resistance against foreign invaders, the Americans, with the help of Filipino collaborators, tracked him down in March 1901 in Isabela, leading to his capture. A month later, the first president of the Philippine republic took his oath of allegiance to the new colonial master.

And yet, despite Aguinaldo’s arrest, pockets of rebellion persisted in other parts of the country, notably in Samar Island (which Congress in 1965 divided into three provinces—Northern Samar, Samar, and Eastern Samar) and in Mindanao, where the Moro rebellion raged until 1913.

Although minimal in proportion to Filipino losses, the protracted war continued to claim the lives of American soldiers (with estimates of over 4,200 Americans and over 20,000 Filipinos having died in combat).  

The US could not accept belligerence, especially when the American press was giving equal space to anti-annexation sentiments. To quote Beveridge, the champion orator, again:

This war is like all other wars. It needs to be finished before it is stopped. I am prepared to vote either to make our work thorough or even now to abandon it. A lasting peace can be secured only by overwhelming forces in ceaseless action until universal and absolutely final defeat is inflicted on the enemy. To halt before every armed force, every guerrilla band, opposing us is dispersed or exterminated will prolong hostilities and leave alive the seeds of perpetual insurrection.

In August 1901, the American government sent Company C of the 9th U.S. Infantry Regiment to Balangiga as part of a strategy to consolidate its military positions throughout the Philippines. The Americans employed carrot and stick approaches to win the loyalty of their subjects. But the Samareños were hard to please. In fact, they soon resented their being hosts to what turned out to be overbearing guests. A month later, on 28 September 1901, hundreds of able-bodied men of Balangiga and neighboring towns, armed with bolos and a few locally made muskets, swarmed the Americans in a surprise early morning attack. Thirty-six of 74 Americans were killed on the spot, 8 more died days later from the wounds they suffered. This was, according to some historical accounts, the "worst defeat of United States Army soldiers since the Battle of the Little Bighorn in 1876."

The US Army’s response to the uprising was brutal. American General Jacob H. Smith directed a “six-day killing and burning” spree in Balangiga and neighboring towns that killed some 2,000 civilians on top of over 200 houses that were razed to the ground.

The Americans also carted away three church bells in Balangiga as war mementos. The US kept these relics in its possession until 2018, way much longer than the antagonists had mended their relations, evolving from foe to friend. During World War II, when in 1941 Japan attacked British and US territories in Asia and the Pacific that included the Philippines, Filipino soldiers fought side-by-side with Americans against the new aggressors.

In 1951, five years after the Philippines gained its independence from the US, both countries signed a Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) that required one to support the other in the event a third party militarily attacks either of them. The Philippines was in good shape, at least in economic terms, during much of the time that it enjoyed the initial years of its being an independent and sovereign state. Until its political leaders lost their way, committing their country and people to questionable debts that hardly serve the interest of the public.

If Beveridge were alive today, he must be in for the shock of his life to see how his 1900 vision had played out. Instead of America exploiting the limitless China market, the Asian economy has grown as large as that of his own country. It has now become almost impossible for American companies to compete with their Chinese counter parts on a global scale. Eight of the ten richest individuals in the Philippines and most ASEAN-member countries are either Chinese or of Chinese descent.

In terms of both economic and military expansionism, Beveridge’s America fumbled it. The MDT has not even prevented China from using military and paramilitary means to grab pieces of the territories within the Philippines’ Exclusive Economic Zone. Of course, much of the Philippine problem lies within its government—because, sadly, gone are the heroism and patriotic bent exemplified by Bonifacio, Aguinaldo, and the people of Balangiga in 1901.  

Equally responsible for the economic and military decline of the Philippines, in relation to its neighbors, are the voters who keep sending clowns, quislings, and all sorts of misfits to high elective positions. What Beveridge said in 1900 resonates until today:

The most enlightened among them [Filipinos] declare that self-government will succeed because the employers of labor will compel their employees to vote as their employer wills and that this will insure intelligent voting. I was assured that we could depend upon good men always being in office because the officials who constitute the government will nominate their successors.

Let me quickly add that in today’s electoral landscape, political dynasties which often also double as the employers—meaning, the wealthy overlords—are instrumental in shaping how the voting will go.

Beveridge saw through the stuff that Filipinos were made of.

As a race, their general ability is not excellent... in all solid and useful education they are, as a people, dull and stupid. In showy things, like carving and painting or embroidery or music, they have apparent aptitude, but even this is superficial and never thorough… the common people in their stupidity are like their caribou bulls. They will quit work without notice and amuse themselves until the money they have earned is spent. They are like children playing at men's work.

His own race and his descendants are equally bums, of course, if measured from how he saw the world during his time:

“The power that rules the Pacific… is the power that rules the world. And, with the Philippines, that power is and will forever be the American Republic… Where shall we turn for consumers of our surplus? Geography answers the question. China is our natural customer.”

The way to reaping economic dividends through the hegemony that Beveridge dreamed of just detoured from America to China. And it looks like it will stay that way for a long while.