Chapter 14
Chapter 14
Chapter 14
The Commonwealth of the Philippines was the political designation of the Philippines from 1935 to 1946 when the country was a commonwealth with the United States. Before this, the Philippines had been a U.S. territory. The creation of the Commonwealth was envisioned under the TydingsMcDuffie Act, as a ten-year transitional government in preparation for full Philippine independence and sovereignty, which was scheduled for 1946.
Chap 14, pg 1
What is a commonwealth? One dictionary defines it as A group of sovereign states and their dependencies associated by their own choice and linked with common objectives and interests. This suggests that a commonwealth relationship is voluntary. But the PhilippineAmerican Commonwealth was obviously not based on a voluntary history: a bloody war of domination which killed hundreds of thousands of Filipinos had been required to forge a bond between the Philippines and the United States.
In 1934 Manuel Quezon triumphantly returned to Manila and engineered ratification of the Tydings-McDuffie Act by the Philippine Assembly.
The completed constitution was overwhelmingly approved by plebiscite in March 1935, and then signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Chap 14, pg 2
National elections for the Commonwealth were held in October 1935. Candidates for President included former president Emilio Aguinaldo, Iglesia Filipina Indepediente leader Gregorio Aglipay, and Manuel Quezon. Quezon and Osmea, reconciled after their disagreements over the independence act, ran on a Coalition Party ticket and were elected president and vice president, respectively.
Commonwealth Inauguration
On November 15, 1935 the new Philippine Commonwealth was inaugurated at the legislative building in Manila.
The new government established nation-building policies in preparation for independence. These included national defense, economic development, continued Filipinization of the government, reforms in education, improvement of transport, industrialization, and the colonization of Mindanao.
Stuck in Poverty
Although the Philippine economy was growing, wealth was divided very unequally: landlords grew rich at the expense of peasant farmers who found were unable to repay loans for seed or lease money made by the landlords. Productivity remained low as peasants tilled land owned by absentee landlords or by the Church, who demanded 50 or even 70 percent of the crop as rent and payment for seed. By 1941, 80 percent of Luzon farmers were hopelessly indebted to their landlords. The absence of social reforms caused resentment amongst the poor and encouraged anti-government insurgencies.
Chap 14, pg 3
One of the biggest concerns at this time was the threat apparently posed by Japan, the Philippines neighbor to the north. Japan had become increasingly aggressive since invading Manchuria in 1931.
In 1937, President Quezon reportedly told an American reporter If I did not believe that the Philippines could defend itself, I would commit suicide. Vowing to stand by the United States, he affirmed that The cause for which America would fight is our cause. He also pondered delaying Philippine independence to guarantee U.S. protection of the Commonwealth.
Chap 14, pg 4
In 1937 Japan started a full-scale war against China. As war clouds gathered over the rest of Asia, Quezon grew increasingly worried that the Philippines would be unable to defend itself in case of Japanese attack. He traveled to Japan in 1938, reportedly to seek an arrangement with the Japanese Government: if the Philippines quickly achieved independence and declared itself neutral in any future conflict, would this guarantee that the Japanese would not invade the islands? The Japanese government refused to offer such a guarantee.
Quezon returned to the Philippines and began making moves to demonstrate Philippine neutrality: * He requested Philippine independence in 1940, six years ahead of schedule. * He limited MacArthurs control of the armed forces and even MacArthurs access to his own (Quezons) office. * He cut the military budget, closed training camps and reduced arms purchases. * He reportedly told a crowd that the Philippines could not be defended even if every last Filipino were armed with modern weapons.
Japanese Plans
Japanese strategic planning during this period had several goals: *Victory over China which would offer resources and a large labor force for Japans growing industrial machine; *Invasions of French Indochina, the Dutch East Indies, and British Malaya. *Attacking the Philippines and Guam so as to lure the United States fleet across the Pacific to defend its colonies; then, destroy the American fleet in a decisive battle.
Chap 14, pg 5
The United States was very concerned about the growing threat of war. In July 1941, U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt ordered the following: Banning of sales of American commodities, especially oil, to Japan, and freezing of all Japanese assets within the USA; Creation of the U.S. Army Forces in the Far East (USAFFE) command; Absorption of the Philippine Army into the new command; General Douglas MacArthur to command the new force.
In the second half of 1941, fresh American soldiers arrived in Manila to beef up the small U.S. garrison. There were military parades in Manila to give the impression the Philippines was prepared for war. But the military equipment that arrived in the Philippines from the US was mostly old and decrepit: rifles from World War I, obsolete mortars and howitzers, a small amount of ammunition, and only a few modern airplanes. MacArthur complained that he had received too little, too late.
On September 1, General MacArthur ordered the full mobilization of the Philippine Army. Ten Filipino reserve divisions were called into the service of the United States Army. However the battalions were not organized by December 1941. In spite of propaganda photos which showed well-armed troops, the Philippines was poorly prepared for a Japanese invasion.