Bottling the military genie
May 28, 2002 | 12:00am
The exposure of military men to civilian functions and politicians in the last three decades stripped the mystic of civilian rule and military subordination. Too many civilian officials and political figures left indelible impressions of ineptitude, opportunism and corruption among military men interacting with them in the martial law years and beyond. For many in the military, familiarity with civilian authorities bred mostly contempt.
In the face of much publicized nationwide perceptions of governmental weakness, inefficiency and general indecisiveness, many military men could now think the unthinkable: why continue to support this soft constitutional order, why continue to obey feckless civilian authorities who are often hostile to the military who secure them? Why not take over and take charge?
There is no way now to abort these subversive thoughts. The many years of martial law and most of the years following Marcos fall conspire in birthing such ideas. (In the past decade and a half, many military men exercised themselves as political creatures and most of them did not choose to become senators and congressmen.) The problem now is how to keep ideas of military intervention from reaching full term, from being nurtured so well by current political and economic realities that they are finally delivered as a successful military coup.
Obviously, the best response of a civilian government to any military challenge is to improve the level and quality of government performance. This strategy undercuts military adventurism in two ways. First, it provides the military with an alternative view of civilian government as being concerned and reasonably effective; contrary views then are more easily defused as being objectively wrong and mostly politically motivated. Second, it builds up the governments democratic base and thus makes it unlikely for military plotters to succeed in overthrowing the civilian authorities.
Where government performance is difficult to improve for whatever reason, myopic authorities might try to manage the military by buying it off or dividing it so no faction is able to launch a successful bid for power. These strategies do buy the authorities time, but they are counterproductive in the long run. Marcos tried to buy off the military by allowing his loyalists to develop illegitimate, lucrative interests within and outside the military. The strategy backfired precisely because it depended on limited favoritism, on building up a small class of privileged military men at the expense of the majority within the military, those who were marginalized and embittered by Marcos mercenary approach.
Some politicians might be considering the divide-and-rule option at present. Key military personalities, service branches and other focuses of small-group loyalties within the military appear to be targets of political probes which disrupts unity within the military. The tragic consequence of this divisive option is to demoralize members of an institution whose strength flows from its being a highly unified body. Without unity, institutional resolve does not develop among military men. The military might as well be abolished as nothing destabilizes constitutional orders more than a fractious armed forces.
Another approach has to be tried, one which acknowledges the shortcomings of civilian government in the past and offers a credible program of effective government for the near future. The approach needs to explore the general framework of democratic political systems and the specific context of a democratizing Philippines. The constitutionally explicit roles of the military must be identified and fully discussed as the issue of democratic constitutionalism is explored with men in uniform.
Civilian authorities have to clarify and make use of two traits which thinking military men probably have: patriotism and decisiveness. The operationalization of these concepts must demand such virtues of military men ahead of the civilian authorities. The tactical objective here is to sufficiently moderate the militarys aggressive demands on the civilian authorities by encouraging the military to undertake its own serious institutional assessment; in the process, the civilian authorities are able to buy some time to prove themselves equal to the task of governance. The strategic end is to get the military used to thinking primarily of its institutional tasks (i.e. military professionalization and modernization) within the broader context of constitutional democratization and national development.
Patriotism and decisiveness must be presented to military men as being served by an unwavering determination to prioritize institutional and national integrity over ones personal integrity. An officer who refuses to be on the take but will not inform on or help prosecute wayward peers might have personal integrity but he serves no more than a limited, personally-gratifying objective. A nation and its institutions are not served by those whose loyalties exclude institutional focus for whatever reason. Constitutionalism fortifies civilian authority and those in the military have to learn that personal bonds as well as agency loyalty may subvert the superior institutional focus the nation-state and its civilian government.
Even when civilian authorities are demonstrably deficient in patriotism or decisiveness, military men should not be encouraged to undertake role comparisons that tempt them to march into politics and assume the role of ultimate guardians for the nation. On the other hand, every effort must be exerted to help them appreciate the dangerous nature and costly consequences of military politicization. For those who successfully resist their temptations, military professionalization within a foreseeable future must be offered in all seriousness. Military careers that are largely insulated from political interventions must be made possible. Professional pride, status advancement and material compensation have to be much improved for those in the military; otherwise, the oft-touted dignification of a military career is reduced to so much rhetoric.
Integral to this strategy, a resolute, continuous and transparent military house-cleaning must be put in place. Equally vital would be a credible initiative towards military modernization, a sine qua non for those who would professionalize the countrys military. The first move seeks to persuade military men that those who would build up military constitutionalism are serious about their objectives of clean and effective governance; the second tries to assure AFP members that they will not be forced back into medieval soldiering as they had been most of the last 100 years but will indeed be in keeping with modern times.
Other strategies for bottling the military genie can be identified. (For instance, a program for summarily dealing with any member of the military participating in the planning, organizing and/or execution of a coup may be drawn up by the legislature and enforced either judicially or extrajudicially.) However, those delineated here comprise the minimum programs for any attempt at military constitutionalism to be successful. Civilian authorities and politicians who treat these programs as less than urgent or emasculate them in any way obviously put the countrys fragile democratic order at great risk.
In the face of much publicized nationwide perceptions of governmental weakness, inefficiency and general indecisiveness, many military men could now think the unthinkable: why continue to support this soft constitutional order, why continue to obey feckless civilian authorities who are often hostile to the military who secure them? Why not take over and take charge?
There is no way now to abort these subversive thoughts. The many years of martial law and most of the years following Marcos fall conspire in birthing such ideas. (In the past decade and a half, many military men exercised themselves as political creatures and most of them did not choose to become senators and congressmen.) The problem now is how to keep ideas of military intervention from reaching full term, from being nurtured so well by current political and economic realities that they are finally delivered as a successful military coup.
Obviously, the best response of a civilian government to any military challenge is to improve the level and quality of government performance. This strategy undercuts military adventurism in two ways. First, it provides the military with an alternative view of civilian government as being concerned and reasonably effective; contrary views then are more easily defused as being objectively wrong and mostly politically motivated. Second, it builds up the governments democratic base and thus makes it unlikely for military plotters to succeed in overthrowing the civilian authorities.
Where government performance is difficult to improve for whatever reason, myopic authorities might try to manage the military by buying it off or dividing it so no faction is able to launch a successful bid for power. These strategies do buy the authorities time, but they are counterproductive in the long run. Marcos tried to buy off the military by allowing his loyalists to develop illegitimate, lucrative interests within and outside the military. The strategy backfired precisely because it depended on limited favoritism, on building up a small class of privileged military men at the expense of the majority within the military, those who were marginalized and embittered by Marcos mercenary approach.
Some politicians might be considering the divide-and-rule option at present. Key military personalities, service branches and other focuses of small-group loyalties within the military appear to be targets of political probes which disrupts unity within the military. The tragic consequence of this divisive option is to demoralize members of an institution whose strength flows from its being a highly unified body. Without unity, institutional resolve does not develop among military men. The military might as well be abolished as nothing destabilizes constitutional orders more than a fractious armed forces.
Another approach has to be tried, one which acknowledges the shortcomings of civilian government in the past and offers a credible program of effective government for the near future. The approach needs to explore the general framework of democratic political systems and the specific context of a democratizing Philippines. The constitutionally explicit roles of the military must be identified and fully discussed as the issue of democratic constitutionalism is explored with men in uniform.
Civilian authorities have to clarify and make use of two traits which thinking military men probably have: patriotism and decisiveness. The operationalization of these concepts must demand such virtues of military men ahead of the civilian authorities. The tactical objective here is to sufficiently moderate the militarys aggressive demands on the civilian authorities by encouraging the military to undertake its own serious institutional assessment; in the process, the civilian authorities are able to buy some time to prove themselves equal to the task of governance. The strategic end is to get the military used to thinking primarily of its institutional tasks (i.e. military professionalization and modernization) within the broader context of constitutional democratization and national development.
Patriotism and decisiveness must be presented to military men as being served by an unwavering determination to prioritize institutional and national integrity over ones personal integrity. An officer who refuses to be on the take but will not inform on or help prosecute wayward peers might have personal integrity but he serves no more than a limited, personally-gratifying objective. A nation and its institutions are not served by those whose loyalties exclude institutional focus for whatever reason. Constitutionalism fortifies civilian authority and those in the military have to learn that personal bonds as well as agency loyalty may subvert the superior institutional focus the nation-state and its civilian government.
Even when civilian authorities are demonstrably deficient in patriotism or decisiveness, military men should not be encouraged to undertake role comparisons that tempt them to march into politics and assume the role of ultimate guardians for the nation. On the other hand, every effort must be exerted to help them appreciate the dangerous nature and costly consequences of military politicization. For those who successfully resist their temptations, military professionalization within a foreseeable future must be offered in all seriousness. Military careers that are largely insulated from political interventions must be made possible. Professional pride, status advancement and material compensation have to be much improved for those in the military; otherwise, the oft-touted dignification of a military career is reduced to so much rhetoric.
Integral to this strategy, a resolute, continuous and transparent military house-cleaning must be put in place. Equally vital would be a credible initiative towards military modernization, a sine qua non for those who would professionalize the countrys military. The first move seeks to persuade military men that those who would build up military constitutionalism are serious about their objectives of clean and effective governance; the second tries to assure AFP members that they will not be forced back into medieval soldiering as they had been most of the last 100 years but will indeed be in keeping with modern times.
Other strategies for bottling the military genie can be identified. (For instance, a program for summarily dealing with any member of the military participating in the planning, organizing and/or execution of a coup may be drawn up by the legislature and enforced either judicially or extrajudicially.) However, those delineated here comprise the minimum programs for any attempt at military constitutionalism to be successful. Civilian authorities and politicians who treat these programs as less than urgent or emasculate them in any way obviously put the countrys fragile democratic order at great risk.
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