EDITORIAL The AFP should finish the job
February 24, 2003 | 12:00am
His corpse has been found and turned over to relatives, so the death of Abu Sayyaf commander Mujib Susukan is officially confirmed. During the hostage crisis that started in the Malaysian island resort of Sipadan and moved to Sulu, the leering Susukan was often seen beside Ghalib "Commander Robot" Andang, happily meeting the press, demanding millions of dollars in exchange for their mostly foreign hostages. Now Susukan is dead and the Philippine military is after Andang as well as whats left of the original Abu Sayyaf band that fled Basilan during the six-month Balikatan war games last year.
It was said often enough that there would have been no need to call in the Americans to fight our home-grown terrorists if the Armed Forces of the Philippines had done its job well. But there was a second hostage crisis that was taking too long to resolve. Aldam Tilao the notorious Abu Sabaya was thumbing his nose at authorities. Abu Sayyaf kidnappers were decapitating captives and dragging more hostages including two Americans across the jungles of Basilan. In the eyes of the public, the AFP bungled that hostage crisis big time, from the raid on Dos Palmas in Palawan to the Abu Sayyafs escape from a hospital compound in Basilan. Filipinos seemed almost relieved about the prospect of the rescue operations being turned over to American soldiers.
So the US troops arrived, an Ame-rican hostage was rescued but another was lost together with a Filipino nurse. Sabaya was peppered with bullets and the Abu Sayyaf fled Basilan. Some guerrillas moved to Zamboanga, but most regrouped in Sulu, teaming up with Andangs group.
This time the Americans are supposed to help wipe out whats left of the Abu Sayyaf. If theres no one left to wipe out, there wont be this controversy about combat duty for American troops. There may even be no need to deploy them in Sulu; they can confine themselves to actual training exercises in Zamboanga. The AFP received enough counter-terrorism training in Basilan. Can it do the job alone in Sulu?
It was said often enough that there would have been no need to call in the Americans to fight our home-grown terrorists if the Armed Forces of the Philippines had done its job well. But there was a second hostage crisis that was taking too long to resolve. Aldam Tilao the notorious Abu Sabaya was thumbing his nose at authorities. Abu Sayyaf kidnappers were decapitating captives and dragging more hostages including two Americans across the jungles of Basilan. In the eyes of the public, the AFP bungled that hostage crisis big time, from the raid on Dos Palmas in Palawan to the Abu Sayyafs escape from a hospital compound in Basilan. Filipinos seemed almost relieved about the prospect of the rescue operations being turned over to American soldiers.
So the US troops arrived, an Ame-rican hostage was rescued but another was lost together with a Filipino nurse. Sabaya was peppered with bullets and the Abu Sayyaf fled Basilan. Some guerrillas moved to Zamboanga, but most regrouped in Sulu, teaming up with Andangs group.
This time the Americans are supposed to help wipe out whats left of the Abu Sayyaf. If theres no one left to wipe out, there wont be this controversy about combat duty for American troops. There may even be no need to deploy them in Sulu; they can confine themselves to actual training exercises in Zamboanga. The AFP received enough counter-terrorism training in Basilan. Can it do the job alone in Sulu?
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