The late Manila Mayor Arsenio Lacson said it right: "I believe in calling a spade a damn dirty shovel."
No sooner did President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo set free those detainees than they posed for photographers with their clenched fists raised on high, defiantly and threateningly. This reiterated, more eloquently than words, that they are unrepentant and determined to return to the struggle. Well hear from them soon enough, and we pray it isnt through bullets, sabotage, and other forms of violence. Whats more, they immediately started demanding that the government release their "comrades" still in jail. Translation: Give us reinforcements.
To be fair to President GMA, the idea of setting loose jailed Communists and other Leftwing radicals was inherited by her from former President Joseph E. Estrada, who initiated the offer of amnesty in a desperate last-ditch effort to curry favor among the Leftists in his struggle to survive the impeachment process. La Gloria, for her part, was surely pressured by the Leftwing and cause-oriented groups who had participated so loudly at EDSA Dos (so you see, the Erap ploy had not mollified them nor won their hearts). President Arroyo is, obviously, still saying her "thank-you" to just about everybody. But beware of letting those Red Guards back into our midst. The military and Philippine National Police exerted great effort, utilized all their intelligence skills, and some of them sacrificed their lives to corner and arrest those Communists and radical troublemakers. Now, our soldiers and policemen will have to brace themselves, I fear, for a wave of retaliation.
Be that as it may, Popoy was given a grand burial in a procession which snaked across parts of Metro Manila. His coffin was paraded under a hammer-and-sickle flag, the symbol of Communist struggle. What was the most chilling sight were the Red Guards who marched alongside as his pall bearers and escort. They were garbed in red, with their faces masked, just as the terrorists of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) or the Palestinian suicide squads of Hamas or the Shiite Hezbollah guerrillas do when burying one of their dead in order to disguise their own identities.
The Communists and the New Peoples Army are, indeed, on the march in our country. Where they used to hide, NPA guerrillas now walk in the open, in some towns of Pampanga, and in the Bicol region. This is disquieting. If President GMA shows any more signs of weakness or appeasement, theyll begin to believe they have the government on the ropes.
This is the time to demonstrate firmness, not a limp policy of weakness and temporizing.
However, its early days yet. The clash of contending ambitions and the maneuvers to seize the AFP plum of supreme command have opened many wounds and they are still bleeding. There continues to be a seething current of unrest within our military.
As for Rear Admiral Guillermo Wong, whose brave statements and revelations have exposed the deep-seated culture of corruption and "conversion" (ghost deliveries) in our armed forces not just in the Marines, mind you theres no way his military career could have been saved. He spoke out in such an honest and courageous manner that he made many enemies in the AFP establishment. For having breached the seal of omerta, Wong became a martyr to the cause of reform and the warriors code of integrity and honor. We salute him. The report we got is that hell be named an Ambassador. But to where?
I dont believe Wong sought the "honor" of being named a diplomat, although thats a fitting reward for a soldier home from the "wars." The more significant reward for his valor would have been for the Commander-in-Chief, President Arroyo, to have set in inexorable motion a full-dress investigation into corruption in the AFP and, if you ask me, also in the PNP.
Will placing an "ambassadors sash" around the shoulders of ex-Admiral Wong be the end of it? His gesture should not be in vain. But it will be rendered futile if the entire smelly affair is sanctimoniously swept under the rug.