On October 18, 2003, U.S. President George W. Bush landed in Manila as part of
a six-nation Asian tour. The presidential airplane, Air Force One, was shepherded
into Philippine airspace by F-15 fighter jets due to security concerns over
a possible terrorist attack. Bush's speech to the Philippine Congress was delayed
by what one reporter described as “undulating throngs of protestors that lined
his motorcade route past shantytowns and rows of shacks.” Outside the Philippine
House of Representatives, several thousand more demonstrators greeted Bush,
and several Philippine legislators staged a walkout during his 20-minute address.
In that speech, Bush credited the United States for transforming the Philippines
into a democracy. “America is proud of its part in the great story of the Filipino
people,” said Bush. “Together our soldiers liberated the Philippines from colonial
rule.” He drew an analogy between the United States' attempt to create democracy
in the Philippines and its effort to create a democratic Middle East through
the invasion and occupation of Iraq. “Democracy always has skeptics,” the president
said. “Some say the culture of the Middle East will not sustain the institutions
of democracy. The same doubts were once expressed about the culture of Asia.
These doubts were proven wrong nearly six decades ago, when the Republic of
the Philippines became the first democratic nation in Asia.”
As many Philippine commentators remarked afterward, Bush's rendition of Philippine-American
history bore little relation to fact. True, the U.S. Navy ousted Spain from
the Philippines in the Spanish-American War of 1898. But instead of creating
a Philippine democracy, the McKinley administration, its confidence inflated
by victory in that “splendid little war,” annexed the country and installed
a...