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Aquino's Philippines: The Storm to Come
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13122 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
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11 / 1987 |
4,551 Words |
| Author
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Kirsten Amundsen Kirsten Amundsen is a political scientist who has written
about international affairs both in the American and European
media. She is presently a visiting scholar at the Hoover
Institution. |
Since the completion of this report, rapid-fire developments in the Philippines strongly suggest that the "storm" referred to in the title may already have hit the islands. Revolutionary violence has intensified, an attempted military coup led by Col. Grigorio Honasan, a hero of the "People Power Revolution" failed, and an unprecedented shake-up in President Aquino's cabinet followed.
The chaos created by these events was quickly exploited by the communist insurgents of the New People's Army. New offensives were launched. Ambushes of military convoys have become more frequent. For the first time, strategic bridges were blown up, cutting several provinces off from normal contact with the capital.
Stories in the American media, for the most part, have failed to focus on the source of the unfolding calamity and to clearly identify the imminent threat to the vulnerable new democracy. This analysis attempts to do just that.
It can fairly be said that of all leaders of Asia in contemporary times, none has received more favorable press and enthusiastic public reception in the United States than President Corazon Aquino. Understandably so, most would contend. Something like a political miracle appeared in the making in the Philippines when a bloodless mass uprising swept aside a corrupt and feeble dictator. The highly appealing new president, widow of a martyred Filipino leader, swiftly took charge with solemn and credible pledges of democracy and national renewal for the Philippines.
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