Was Ninoy’s death a US operation?
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 The Aquino children’s repudiation of the reopening of the Ninoy Aquino slay inquiry, under the pretext of “having already forgiven the perpetrators,” is facile and unacceptable. The Filipino people are entitled to know the truth in their continuing conduct of history; and the unclosed chapter is unfair to Ferdinand Marcos et al. who were long condemned as the masterminds through insinuations by the Aquino family and the Establishment media. Take Billy Esposo’s  logic, written in 2007: “…The responsibility falls squarely on the  Marcos regime… The compelling reason for ordering the Aquino  assassination was to remove the all-too-real threat of Aquino rallying  the opposition…” That same facile logic about the 1971 Plaza Miranda  bombing — which has been proven absolutely false to waylay the nation —  created chaos and almost absolved the real perpetrator, Jose Ma. Sison. Esposo,  echoing the logic of all those still simplistically blaming Marcos or  those around him, argues: “The power dynamics of the Marcos era was such  that the Aquino assassination could only have been undertaken with the  go-signal of Marcos or someone who could act on his behalf in ordering  the military to undertake the elaborate operation.” But  could Marcos have forced the US not to renew the visa of Ninoy Aquino  and his family? And why exactly didn’t the US extend the visas of the  Aquinos, since there were countless humanitarian grounds to grant this,  particularly the alleged threat of physical harm to his family in the  event they returned to Manila? Could Marcos have arranged the acceptance  of the obviously faked passport of Ninoy (under the name “Marcial  Bonifacio”) through the British in Hong Kong and the Taiwanese  authorities? Could he have imposed upon these governments to let a fake  passport holder slip through? Ken Kashiwahara,  Ninoy’s Japanese-American brother-in-law, writing his firsthand account  in 1983 of that last plane leg at the Chiang Kai Shek International  Airport before arriving in Manila (republished by The New York Times  last week), said: “Ninoy had no problems going through immigration as  Marcial Bonifacio… but as soon as he left the counter, the two  ‘security’ men escorted him around the corner. I panicked. ‘This is it,’  I muttered. ‘He’s been discovered.’ I hurried through the immigration,  rounded the corner and there was Ninoy, grinning. ‘That was the Taiwan  garrison commander,’ he said, ‘and he just wanted to make sure I got  through O.K. Can you imagine? A general?’” The  point I am driving at should be clear by now: There has always been a  power that could supercede Marcos and any other president to this day.  (Erap tried to insist on his way and got ousted, too.) The  official investigation of Ninoy’s assassination stops at Sgt. Pablo  Martinez, the identified gunman. But after decades of incarceration and  religious guidance from Msgr. Robert Olaguer, assigned by the late  Cardinal Sin to minister to the spiritual needs of the 10 soldiers  implicated in the assassination, Sgt. Martinez decided to come out with  his personal knowledge of who the mastermind was. On November 2007, Gloria Arroyo pardoned the convicted Ninoy Aquino killers on humanitarian grounds. And as the Aquino siblings denounced this decision, Msgr. Robert Olaguer came up to defend the soldiers to insist on their innocence. Meanwhile, Esposo, in his aforementioned 2007 article, came to Danding’s defense saying, “What rules out Danding Cojuangco from being the mastermind is the fact that (he) was only in the money game during that time but was nowhere in the line of succession. He neither had the title to vie for it nor had command of the legions to be able to grab it...” Years  after the fall of Marcos that began with the Ninoy Aquino  assassination, many US State Department bigwigs, among them former State  Secretary George Schultz and then ambassador to Indonesia Paul  Wolfowitz, have come out to claim credit for the former leader’s ouster.  They’ve stated this either in their memoirs or in various speeches  which I have accessed by patiently searching on the Net. The  fall of Marcos caused a reversal of his nation-building programs; then  restored and reinvigorated the power of the old privileged elite;  demolished trade protection; and accelerated privatization and  deregulation, which all led to the greatest transfer of wealth from the  Philippine state’s coffers (and the people’s pockets) to global  transnational corporations and their local partners.  From then on, the  sinister program to obliterate the existence of a sovereign Philippine  Republic has all but ended with finality. (Tune in  to Sulo ng Pilipino, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. on  1098AM; watch Politics (and Economics) Today, Tuesday, 8 p.m. to 9  p.m., with replay at 11 p.m. on Global News Network, Destiny Cable  Channel 21 about “Ninoy’s Death: A False Flag Operation?”; visit our  blogs, http://newkatipunero.blogspot.com and  http://hermantiulaurel.blogspot.com) | 
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(Reprinted with permission from Mr. Herman Tiu-Laurel)
Source: The Daily Tribune
URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100823com4.html

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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