Philippines-US Relations
Philippines-US Relations
- Patricio N. AbinalesPatricio N. AbinalesAsian Studies Program, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Summary
An enduring resilience characterizes Philippine–American relationship for several reasons. For one, there is an unusual colonial relationship wherein the United States took control of the Philippines from the Spanish and then shared power with an emergent Filipino elite, introduced suffrage, implemented public education, and promised eventual national independence. A shared experience fighting the Japanese in World War II and defeating a postwar communist rebellion further cemented the “special relationship” between the two countries. The United States took advantage of this partnership to compel the Philippines to sign an economic and military treaty that favored American businesses and the military, respectively. Filipino leaders not only accepted the realities of this strategic game and exploited every opening to assert national interests but also benefitted from American largesse. Under the dictatorship of President Ferdinand Marcos, this mutual cadging was at its most brazen. As a result, the military alliance suffered when the Philippines terminated the agreement, and the United States considerably reduced its support to the country. But the estrangement did not last long, and both countries rekindled the “special relationship” in response to the U.S. “Global War on Terror” and, of late, Chinese military aggression in the West Philippine Sea.
Keywords
- colonialism
- anti-colonialism
- public school system and English
- special relationship
- anticommunism
- mutual defense treaty
- economic parity ties
- economic nationalism
- Ferdinand Marcos
- martial law
- human rights
- U.S. military bases
- military politicization
- democratization
- Islamic terrorism and the U.S. War on Terror
- USAID
- Balikatan exercises
Subjects
- Foreign Relations and Foreign Policy
- Political History