Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Martial Law: It’s Also A War Inside the Basketball Court


The Battle for Marawi continues with the AFP bombing enemy locations and slowly closing in on the last few remaining fighters.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/923894/maute-group-terrorism-marawi-islamic-state-mindanao-conflict
From the air, a P3 Orion guided bomber planes as they dropped explosives on the remaining battle zone measuring about a square kilometer, where some 70-80 gunmen were holed up, while helicopters also fired rockets towards it.
70 - 80 gunmen?  That's not the estimate the AFP gave at the beginning of the week.
http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2017/08/15/1729349/maute-fighters-marawi-down-40-says-afp
Members of the Maute group holed up in Marawi City are down to about 20 to 40 gunmen, the military said yesterday as government troops continue to close in on the remaining strongholds of the terrorists. 
Armed Forces spokesman Brig. Gen. Restituto Padilla said the remaining Maute terrorists continue to pose a threat since they are still holding hostages in two barangays.  
“Based on the ground commander’s estimate, their number has decreased to less than 40. So maybe their forces have been reduced to between 20 and 40. The force is getting smaller,” Padilla said in a press briefing yesterday in Malacañang.
The AFP does not know how many Maute members are still in Marawi.  The estimates in both of these articles runs from 80 to 20.  That's a large enough spread to verify that the AFP is simply making a guess.

The AFP has a serious intelligence crisis.

http://archive.is/I9udy
The AFP remains one of the region’s weakest militaries despite some improvements, and Marawi has been an uphill battle for it because of various factors including the fact that it is a densely populated city with dense, forested terrain outside of it, and the reality that the allegiances between various insurgent groups and foreign fighters can be much looser than the headlines often suggest. 
During his remarks over the weekend, Lorenzana touched on this point again. He noted that one of the lessons of the Marawi crisis was that the Philippines needed to improve its intelligence capabilities. In addition to welcoming Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s directive to boost intelligence funds available for the government, he also pointed to other efforts either underway or being mulled, such as improving urban warfare training and increasing reserve forces to back up regular units in the Philippine military.
The AFP needs more training and more equipment and a government that will not turn a blind eye to the activities of terrorists.  Never, ever forget that Duterte admitted he knew about the arms flowing into Marawi and did nothing about it because of the peace process with the MNLF and that Calida and Bato both admitted the government had prior knowledge of the Marawi attack lacking only a date.  It's not that the AFP is completely devoid of intelligence.  The problem is that the government has a tendency to dismiss the intelligence that it gathers and that is given to it by foreign agencies. When foreign embassies issue warnings based on their intelligence the Philippines pridefully scorns and dismisses these moves and ignores the information. This is what happened in Bohol in April 2017 and as a result people ended up dying.
http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2017/07/27/1722033/dnd-admits-lack-intel-validation-marawi-siege
Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana admitted that there was a lack of validation on the government side regarding intelligence reports on the siege in Marawi City. 
"The time of blaming somebody or pointing somebody is past that, ito na nga nangyari. We can no longer bring back the lives of those 110 people killed, 900 wounded," Lorenzana said.
Actually fingers must be pointed and blame must be doled out to the appropriate authorities. That would be Año, Lorenzana, and Duterte. Without a thorough investigation into this lack of intelligence, which was really a turning a blind eye since the government knew what was happening, nothing will change. Lorenzana wants to sweep this all under the rug because he knows he will be forced to shoulder much of the blame. The public must know who knew what, when they knew it, and why nothing was done about it. There must be an inquiry before the Senate.

As the airstrikes continue in Marawi
http://www.msn.com/en-ph/news/national/military-says-airstrikes-in-marawi-needed-for-‘impenetrable-barriers’/ar-AAqcdwM
local Muslim clerics call for them to stop completely.

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/923549/marawi-city-ulama-airstrikes-western-mindanao-command
Muslim scholars and religious leaders are calling for a stop to airstrikes in Marawi City, which they said have caused damage to lives and properties. 
“That while we support this action and other programs of the government for peace and development, we are earnestly requesting the President of the Philippines to find other ways to purge out of Marawi the extremists rather than the aerial bombings which have caused is continuously causing damage to lives and property,” the members of an Ulama conference said in a statement. 
The group also condemned the violent extremism in Mindanao 
The group also agreed to ask President Duterte “to fill up existing national offices intended for Muslims which remain vacant although there are qualified Muslims who can truly perform the functions of said offices like: the Presiding Justice and two Associate Justices of the Shari’ah Appellate Court, and the Jurisconsult in Islamic Law and Jurisprudence. The Ulama also appeal for the appointment of a Muslim Justice of the Supreme Court.”
The AFP is causing damage to properties and lives while trying to liberate the city from Islamic terrorists? Who's fault is this? Don't lay the blame solely on the Maute Group. If these clerics really did condemn violent extremism then they would have been helping put an end to it by speaking out against the terrorist groups in Mindanao. But the fact is all the Islamic terrorist groups in Mindanao (Abu Sayyaf, MILF, BIFF, MNLF, Maute, etc.) receive both moral and financial support from the local Muslim population.  They would not be able to operate otherwise.

This collusion among the Muslims is exactly why Muslims are being profiled in Mindanao. The terror problem in Mindanao is 100% a Muslim problem. Not a Filipino problem. Not a Christian problem. A Muslim problem.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/muslims-being-profiled-martial-law-philippines-president-rodrigo-duterte-a7903761.html
Muslims on the island of Mindanao in the Philippines are being profiled by President Rodrigo Duterte’s security forces as the government battles pockets of Islamist militants that have pledged allegiance to Isis. 
“We have to profile the Muslim areas,” said police superintendent Roy Ga of Iligan City in the north of the island. 
“This conflict in Marawi, unfortunately, it is being committed by Muslims, so we have to make sure there are no sympathisers with the terrorists in this area.”
What good would appointing a Muslim to the Supreme Court do?  The law is blind right? So it should not matter if there is a Muslim on the bench. But it does matter because sadly law is interpreted ideologically and not by the letter.  We see this in countries like the USA where the left and the right vie for their own appointees who ideologically shape the court and its decisions. What is it that these clerics are hoping a Muslim justice would do for them? Uphold the constitutionality of the proposed BBL even if it is not constitutional? 

These Muslims clerics who view non-Muslims as kafir (infidels who may be deceived, plotted against, hated, enslaved, mocked, tortured and worse) and employ the tactic of lying such as taqiyya (gaining the trust of non-believers in order to draw out their vulnerability and defeat them) are not to be trusted. They are more concerned about preserving the buildings than in ridding the city of terrorists.

And not just buildings but also priceless cultural treasures.

http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/269579/armm-weeps-loss-cultural-heritage-properties-marawi/
Adding to the residents’ and the regional government’s fear is the massive loss of priceless pusaka (heirloom) objects such as baur (storage chest), brass ware, langkit (malong), which form part of the city’s rich cultural heritage. 
She added that while the damaged structures could be rebuilt, the documents that Muslims considered sacred could no longer be brought back. 
She said that whatever was lost culturally would be even more than the initial P20 billion pegged by the national government for the rehabilitation of Marawi, “because our cultural heritage is more than that amount—it is priceless.”
Is it ironic that priceless objects relating to their cultural heritage are being destroyed by Muslims who are practicing the most integral aspect of Islamic culture, violence? Since 630 AD when Muhammed conquered Mecca violence and bloodshed have been a fundamental part of Islamic culture. The message of Muhammed has always been spread by the sword. Today it is spread by the machine gun. Weep all they want the blame lies squarely on these Muslims who tolerate terrorists in their midst.

For all their concern about property damage the Muslim leaders of the area can rest assure Duterte wants to rebuild quickly and immediately.

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/923665/with-marawi-fighting-still-on-duterte-wants-rehab-rushed
With the fighting in Marawi City expected to be over soon, President Duterte has directed government agencies preparing the rehabilitation plans for the war-ravaged city to pick up the pace to ensure these would be ready for implementation.
Mr. Duterte told the officials that once the fighting between government forces and pro-Islamic State (IS) extremists was over, the recovery efforts for Marawi would be a purely “civilian endeavor,” according to a Malacañang statement.
Civilians play a crucial role in the battle against ISIS and the other Islamic terrorist groups. Civilians will be rebuilding the city and even now civilians assist in the fight against Islamic terrorism. The battle against terror cannot be won without the assistance of common men and loyal patriots.

http://www.rappler.com/sports/by-sport/basketball/gilas-pilipinas/179038-marawi-crisis-gilas-give-filipinos-cheer-southeast-asian-games-2017
"We always keep that in our minds. We’re also soldiers in a different battlefield. This is our small way of serving the people of the Philippines," said Kiefer Ravena, who is set to play his fourth straight SEA Games and looking to cop a record fourth gold medal at the biennial meet. 
"Our real soldiers are into a warzone or into a battlefield where you see guns, bombs, people dying. With basketball it’s also a war inside the basketball court. As a basketball country, we want to unite the country even for a few hours every time we play. For two hours, everybody’s one as Filipinos."
Such a stupid and asinine comparison of basketball players with soldiers and the basketball court as a war zone or battlefield which intends to honour the sacrifices of the military while actually trivialising  and mocking them deserves no comment as it speaks for itself.  

Sunday, August 20, 2017

Philippines Government Asks Public to Help Pay for Medical Bills of Terrorist Group MILF

http://www.philstar.com/nation/2017/08/19/1730671/funds-sought-wounded-milf-guerillas-who-fought-biff
Officials are urging the public to help in the medical needs of Moro guerillas injured in their effort to neutralize violent extremists in Maguindanao province. 
More than a dozen guerillas of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front had been wounded in encounters with a third faction in the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters since late July. 
Socrates Piñol, member of the North Cotabato provincial board, said on Saturday that he will propose a resolution, subject to approval by his colleagues, recommending to the government the allocation of fund for the treatment of the injured guerillas. 
He said he will sponsor the drafting of the resolution during the session next week of the provincial board. 
"(In the) meantime, kind-hearted people may provide help. It is for us all, the Muslims, Christians and the Lumads, that the MILF is helping the government prevent the spread of these militants," Piñol said. 
It was the MILF's seventh encounter with the BIFF since it started operating against Abdulmalik three weeks ago in support of President Rodrigo Duterte's anti-terror campaign. 
"It is good to give them recognition by way of helping them and the families of those killed in their campaign against ISIS-inspired militants," Besana said on Saturday.

WOW!  There is so much wrong with this article it's hard to know where to begin let alone contain oneself at how outrageous it all is.  The government is literally asking the public to help pay for the medical bills of the terrorist group MILF.  And let's be clear, the MILF is a terrorist organisation not a band of guerillas.

They have engaged in terror across the country since they split away from the MNLF in 1977.

Their very first attack was in 1986 when they tossed a grenade into a packed church during a wedding.

https://www.upi.com/Archives/1986/09/08/Grenade-attack-during-wedding-kills-10/6429526536000/

In 2003 more Christians were murdered when the MILF brazenly attacked the city of M'Lang.

http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/muslim-rebels-kill-filipino-christians-ahead-peace-talks

The MILF is an Islamic organisation and operates as such. Contrary to Piñon that the MILF Is fighting "for us all, the Muslims, Christians and the Lumads" "the MILF is helping the government prevent the spread of these militants" the MILF is a militant group itself seeking an independent Islamic State. So what if they are fighting with the BIFF?  Who cares if one terrorist group is fighting the other?  They both remain terrorist groups! How can the MILF be operating "in support of President Rodrigo Duterte's anti-terror campaign" by fighting the BIFF when the MILF is part of the terror which Duterte is against? It's absolute nonsense.

Are we supposed to forget the SAF 44 whom the MILF unapologetically murdered in it's pursuit of an Islamic State in Mindanao via the BBL?
http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2015/03/25/1437257/milf-justifies-saf-44-slay
There is no justification for the MILF killing these men. It is exactly the same as saying drugs dealers shooting and killing PNP officers who raid their homes are justified because it is self-defence!

If the MILF and the BIFF want to kill each other then let them. They are both insidious and evil organisations who only seek to kill and destroy in the name of establishing an Islamic State in Mindanao which Duterte is all too happy to give them.  The government of the Philippines is supremely naïve if it thinks establishing the BBL will bring peace to the region and not instead establish a base from which ISIS and other terrorist groups can work, train, and grow unmolested and away from prying eyes.

Only a traitor would ask the public to or seek government allocation of funds for paying the medical bills of the MILF or any other terrorist organisation which routinely kills and attacks civilians, police, and the military and poses an imminent threat to the stability and safety of the nation.

Saturday, August 19, 2017

Scenes From Life In Filipinoville


In Stockton California a Filipino was at a supermarket.  He burped and that set off a flurry of rage from two lesbians who told him to "Go back to Filipinoville."  

This post will showcase "Scenes from life in Filipinoville." This might be the first in a series.  

Welcome to Filipinoville. 








Friday, August 18, 2017

Globe Telecom Follies

For two years now I have been using Globe landline and WiFi services. Mostly it's been pretty smooth sailing.  Not a lot of dropped time or slow service.

But it did not start out that way.

When they first installed the WiFi it was extremely slow. Several calls to customer service got nowhere.  It was always the same old thing.  Turn off the router.  Count to ten. Turn it back on. Do a speed test and tell us the results. Tales of how they are upgrading service or working on the towers and that's the reason everything is slow. Technicians came by more than a few times and they were left scratching their heads.

Finally, after so many calls, the head technician was sent over to investigate.  He took out his tools and ran all his tests.  Same results.  So then he goes outside and takes a look at the antenna and he just about goes apopoletic.

The root cause of all the trouble was that the original installers did not install the antenna correctly.  


They installed it on the side of the house!

He called them up and ordered them over but they pleaded it was lunch time and that they would eat first and also that they needed to find a ladder long enough to reach the roof.  The excuse they gave for not properly installing the antenna was that they did not have a long enough ladder.  

The head technician was not hearing it and he threatened to call them out on it to management if they did not come over right away and properly reinstall the antenna.

So they did.


And there hasn't been any problems with the Wi-Fi since.

Do you know what this means?  It means that every single time the representatives from Globe were giving out wrong and faulty information. Working on the towers?  Turn the router on and off?  It was all bunk!  Even the technicians who came over at first to investigate but did not care to look at where the antenna was placed were spouting nonsense. One time Globe said we could get an extra 50GB a month for free.  So we signed up for it and when the new month rolled around we used up all our data very quickly. We called them asking what happened because now we have 50GB of data. Turns out we did not have 50GB because that program is not offered in our area! So why did they even offer it to us if it's not available?

I don't even understand why installing the antenna on the side of the house was causing problems.  Shouldn't the device still be able to pick up signals? Is the Globe Wi-Fi singnal so weak that the antenna must be on the roof?  I can use my cellphone inside the house with no problems and without having to climb up on the roof to get reception. What's up with that?

Thursday, August 17, 2017

32 in One Day!

Oh boy! They killed 32!

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/923117/bulacan-drug-bust-war-on-drugs-president-rodrigo-duterte-anti-illegal-drugs-pnp
Thirty-two drug suspects were killed and 109 were arrested in Bulacan from the police’s anti-drug operations conducted in a span of 24 hours.
That is a much better kill count than the Brave Little Tailor who, sadly, only killed 7 with one blow.

Sorry Brave Little Tailor but Duterte has got you beat
With the Duterte administration running a Mickey Mouse operation where corruption still abounds and terrorists still compile weapons and openly attack the army and police and the peso keeps falling and where Duterte has finally admitted defeat in the drug war it's only fitting that Mickey's record has been beaten.

If you can't control the problem:
then it's best to simply kill the problem.
"Makapatay lang tayo ng mag (we just kill) another 32 everyday then maybe we can reduce the --- what ails this country. 
"So I will be able to solve the problem. Patayin ko lang ‘yan lahat (I just kill it all)." 
http://pcoo.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/SPEECH-OF-PRESIDENT-RODRIGO-ROA-DUTERTE-DURING-THE-19TH-FOUNDING-ANNIVERSARY-OF-THE-VOLUNTEERS-AGAINST-CRIME-AND-CORRUPTION.pdf

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Evolution of A Failed Campaign Promise

The most famous campaign promise made by Duterte was that he would end crime and drugs and corruption within 3 to 6 months of being elected.  How has that worked out?

January 17, 2016

I can do it!

http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2016/01/17/1543436/duterte-kill-me-if-i-dont-resolve-crimes-6-months

April 14, 2016

Here's the plan.
http://www.rappler.com/nation/politics/elections/2016/129520-rodrigo-duterte-anti-crime-plan

September 18, 2016

Just a little more time please. Six more months?
http://www.rappler.com/nation/politics/elections/2016/129520-rodrigo-duterte-anti-crime-plan

January 31, 2017

Actually I need 5 more years.
http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2017/01/31/1667619/duterte-extends-drug-war-until-2022

August 9, 2017

Sorry, Po. I can't do it after all.


I will never be able to do it. It's just not possible. The Philippines has a long coastline to watch over and thousands of islands to guard make it difficult to prevent the entry of illegal drugs.
http://cnnphilippines.com/news/2017/08/12/Duterte-war-on-drugs-cant-control-drug-problem.html

http://www.msn.com/en-ph/news/national/duterte-prepares-filipinos-for-his-failure-solon-says/ar-AAq8gkB
President Rodrigo Duterte's admission that the government cannot control the drug menace in the country is his way of preparing the Filipinos for his failure, an opposition lawmaker said on Tuesday. 
"When the President said it would take more than six years to solve the drug problem, he's preparing the people of his failure, because that is an admission of failure that he could not solve the drug problem within his term," Albay Representative Edcel Lagman told reporters at a press conference.
And that is how Duterte's most famous campaign promise, the one responsible for his winning the election, got flushed down the toilet.  

Did anyone really think he was going to end drugs and crime and corruption within 3 to 6 months of becoming President? Does anyone really need to be prepared for his failure when his methods were wrought with so much madness and he ignored the advice of everyone?

P.S.

Lest anyone think this is truly an admission of defeat and failure please think again.
Presidential Spokesperson Ernesto Abella said Duterte’s statement that he could not eliminate the drug problem within his term was only meant to show the “depth, enormity and the complexity” of the drug situation which cannot be solved overnight. 
“The President’s remarks that the Philippines cannot control the drug problem underscore its depth, enormity and the complexity. PRRD’s statement further points out that the drug situation in the Philippines is a problem that cannot be solved overnight,” Abella said. 
“The anti-drug campaign must thus, continue to be unrelenting and unremitting while getting everyone’s full support and cooperation,” he added.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/922881/house-of-representatives-president-rodrigo-duterte-war-on-drugs-edcel-lagman-gary-alejano-malacanang-ernesto-abella-martin-andanar
It can't be done but it must continue and it must be unrelenting and unremitting and more bodies must hit the floor. It's either hell of jail for drug suspects.

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Martial Law: Not an Actual Foreign Invasion

This week began with the revelation that "the Pentagon is considering a plan that allows the U.S. military to conduct airstrikes on ISIS in the Philippines."
http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/u-s-may-begin-airstrikes-against-isis-philippines-n790271
The authority to strike ISIS targets as part of collective self-defense could be granted as part of an official military operation that may be named as early as Tuesday, said the officials. The strikes would likely be conducted by armed drones. 
If approved, the U.S. military would be able to conduct strikes against ISIS targets in the Philippines that could be a threat to allies in the region, which would include the Philippine forces battling ISIS on the ground in the country's southern islands.  
But Pentagon spokesperson Lt. Col. Christopher B. Logan told NBC News Tuesday that "The Philippines have not requested nor is the U.S. planning drone strikes in the Philippines."  
Another U.S. official said that the authorization for collective self-defense was more about intelligence sharing than offensive U.S. strikes.  
“Collective self-defense doesn’t necessarily mean airstrikes,” the official said. 
For example, if the U.S. sees a threat to the Philippine military, it could provide that intelligence to them to protect themselves.  
The official would not rule out that the U.S. would be able to launch the strike themselves. The official also would not say whether the additional drones the U.S. is considering sending would be armed or not. 
Great.  Just what the USA needs.  Another unconstitutional, undeclared war against an undefined enemy: terrorism.  Of course the Pentagon won't confirm or deny or rule out anything. Does any journalist think the Pentagon will be revealing what plans it has coming? 

The USA continues, as it has for many years now, to provide military aid to the Philippines.  This includes providing equipment and sharing intelligence.  Despite Duterte's assertions claiming that he had no idea the Americans were providing any assistance in Marawi he seems to have no problem with allowing it to continue even to go so far as to laughably call himself the "humble friend" of U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-tillerson-asia-philippines-idUSKBN1AN1X7
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte called himself a "humble friend" of the United States on Monday, taking a break from his notorious hostility towards Washington to grant a warm reception to visiting U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.  
Duterte's often profanity-laden tirades against the United States has become his trademark during his year-old presidency, but he appeared happy to meet Tillerson, who was in Manila to attend a regional security meeting dominated by North Korea's missile tests, and maritime squabbles.  
"I am happy to see you ... and you have come at a time when the world is not so good, especially in the Korean peninsula, and of course, the ever nagging problem of South China Sea," Duterte told Tillerson at the presidential palace.  
"I know you're worried there, because you also have domestic problems ... We are friends. We are allies," said Duterte.  
"I am your humble friend in Southeast Asia," he said.
Truly one can say of Duterte that he has prepared a face for every face he meets.  To the Filipinos he is anti-US and he demands they return the Balangiga Bells and get out of the country.  But when he actually meets with the US Secretary of State he is now a "humble friend."  What's this about "the ever nagging problem of the South China Sea?" China will not be pleased to hear that assessment. Aren't the Philippines planning to jointly drill for oil with China in the South China Sea?

The Philippine government has denied that the US will begin airstrikes against terrorists.
http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2017/08/08/1726709/philippines-disputes-reported-us-airstrikes-plan
NBC news reported that two US defense officials divulged plans of the Pentagon to have American troops granted the authority to strike, likely through armed drones, ISIS-inspired militants in Marawi as part of an official military operation. 
Año said, however, that the Mutual Defense Treaty with the United States does not allow such a measure. 
"Direct military actions are only allowed during actual foreign invasion by another state actor. Hence, such a proposition has to undergo a process and an agreement must be reached that should have the approval of both the highest officials of our nations," the DND said Tuesday in a statement.
Now isn't that something. Here we have an admission that what is happening in Marawi is not an actual foreign invasion. But foreign invasion is one of the excuses the Duterte administration used to justify marital law.
http://www.interaksyon.com/grounds-for-martial-law-solgen-cites-foreign-invasion-by-terrorists/
Solicitor General Jose Calida on Friday cited an “invasion by foreign terrorists” of Mindanao as among the major justifications for President Rodrigo Duterte’s declaration of martial law over the whole southern island. 
“What’s happening in Mindanao is no longer a rebellion of Filipino citizens” but “has transmogrified into an invasion by foreign terrorists who heeded the clarion call of the ISIS to go to the Philippines if they find difficulty in going to Iraq or Syria,” Calida said.
So is it a foreign invasion or not?  Can ISIS be declared a state actor or not?  Apparently it's yes and no with these guys. Yes it's a foreign invasion but no its not an actual foreign invasion by another state actor. What is the difference? How can there be a legitimate foreign invasion unless another state actor is involved? Do all the thousands of foreigners living in the Philippines constitute a foreign invasion? Will the media pick up on this contradiction between what Año is saying now and what Calida said then? Highly doubtful. Investigative journalism does not seem to be a specialty or concern within the Philippines media.

Ultimately the Supreme Court ruled in favour of martial law on grounds of rebellion and not foreign invasion.  But the damage has been done.  Foreign invasion is now a part of the narrative pushed not only by the Duterte administration but also by its staunch defenders such as Antonio P. Contreras.
With well-documented intelligence reports confirming that Isnilon Hapilon was the anointed emir tasked to turn Lanao into a wilayat, or a province of the Daesh or the Islamic State, what was also established was the onset of an invasion by a foreign terrorist force implanting itself in our territory.
http://www.manilatimes.net/enemies-of-the-republic/331972/
Thus, what is now going on in Marawi is no longer just rebellion. It has also already acquired the character of an invasion.
http://www.manilatimes.net/specters-horror-terrorism-rebellion-invasion/334133/
Whether or not the US will expand it's drone war to the Philippines they will definitely continue to provide support to the AFP.
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/159561/pentagon-may-boost-support-philippine-counter-ops-official
Russia has still not provided any assistance whatsoever.  But no matter because with or without aid or troops from foreign nations the AFP can do it.

They don't need the USA to meddle in their affairs.  By all means continue to send equipment but let the AFP handle the fighting. They can do the airstrikes.
http://www.philstar.com/nation/2017/08/07/1726289/airstrikes-continue-vs-maute-held-positions-marawi
They can patrol the waters.
http://www.msn.com/en-ph/news/national/marawi-troops-doubly-guarding-lake-area-vs-enemy-reinforcement/ar-AApTWOG
They can recover enemy munitions and vehicles.
http://www.philstar.com/nation/2017/08/09/1727130/troops-recover-armored-van-used-maute-militants
And good for the AFP.  They keep fighting the good fight and now it is the last days of battle which lie before them.
http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2017/08/10/1727354/afp-enters-critical-stage-marawi-offensive
The battle for Marawi has entered the final, critcal phase, according to the military. 
Capt. Jo-Ann Petinglay, spokesperson for the Western Mindanao Command (Westmincom), said eight soldiers have been killed since Aug. 2 as the final phase of military operations to flush out Maute militants began.
As the AFP inch closer and closer to victory it could be that they will face their toughest challenge yet: hostages strapped with IEDs.
http://www.philstar.com/nation/2017/08/13/1728512/mautes-plan-strap-ieds-captives-former-hostages-say
According to Marjalino, the Maute plan to strap the IEDs to their hostages if government forces manage to encircle their positions.
With victory fast closing in plans are being laid to rebuild Marawi. Even now in the midst of the war classes at Mindanao State University - Marawi are set to resume.
http://www.philstar.com/nation/2017/08/08/1726667/preparations-continue-resumption-classes-msu-marawi
The Mindanao State University is the symbol and life of Marawi City. This is the bastion of knowledge and we will have to open classes the soonest," Petinglay quoted Galvez as saying. 
"It is really a challenge in these trying times, in the thick of the battle in the eastern side of Marawi, it is a challenge to open the MSU, especially that it is one of the targets of the terrorists," he said.  
“But we have to test the waters and come up with means to bring back the life of Marawi through the opening of this revered institution,” Galvez said. 
“Education is the best antidote to terrorism. If we suspend classes and disallow children from going to school, then terrorism has already won," Galvez said.
Forget about the danger opening the school poses since it is a target.  Think about the symbolism! Yes the symbolism.  That seems to be so much more important than actual safety.  Residents of Marawi are still living in refugee camps, the city is still under siege, and these fools think opening the University is so important because of the symbolism.

"Education is the best antidote to terrorism!?" Hardly!
http://www.foxbusiness.com/features/2015/12/09/study-shows-technical-college-degrees-make-ideal-terrorists.html
New analysis from the British Council, based on British intelligence dossiers and academic research, finds that college degrees in technical areas like engineering create the perfect Islamic terrorist, “intelligent and curious, but unquestioning of authority” since they require “precisely the passive acceptance of right and wrong, and the faithful reproduction of knowledge learned by rote that jihadism seems also to require,” versus the critical examination and debate liberal arts degrees that could stop the creation of future jihadis.  
Analysis from Oxford University also shows a large number of Islamic terrorists are highly educated professionals, and do not come from the ranks of the uneducated poor, as analysts and Administration officials, including Secretary of State John Kerry, have asserted. “Many Islamic radicals are not economically dispossessed, are often better educated than their peers, and quite a few went to university,” Oxford says. 
Terrorist leaders recruit from the educated ranks of their local populations, recruits who had gravitated towards technical subjects, like engineering degrees, versus religious or political courses, according to the British Council, Oxford University and the University of Durham in the U.K.
A university education in the Philippines is not worth much and now that state universities will be free it will be worth nothing.  Speaking of which Duterte was warned by his economic advisors to not sign the bill granting free tuition to state universities into law because there was no way to fund it.  Now they have to find a way to fund it which means more strain on the budget and possibly funds that could be used to rebuild Marawi will necessarily be diverted.  Billions have already been spent on the battle alone.

Already the estimated costs of rebuilding Marawi are at P20B. And that is sight unseen. Now a committee has been formed to calculate the actual costs of rebuilding Marawi.
http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2017/08/11/1727747/panel-formed-assess-marawi-rehab
“The special committee will assess and investigate the extent of damage to property, infrastructure and facilities, such as roads, bridges, schools, hospitals, building and other structures in Marawi,” the resolution read.  
“It will also study the estimated cost of construction and rehabilitation of the damaged properties, infrastructure and facilities or other matters that may be necessary for the rehabilitation of Marawi City,” it added.

And to think all this destruction could have been averted if the government had not turned a blind eye to all the weapons pouring into Marawi.

Speaking for the first time in public after a 5-day hiatus, Duterte, during his visit to troops at the 4th Infantry Division Command Post in Butuan City, said the government “took for granted” the entry of firearms into Marawi due to hopes of a peace deal with communist rebels.
http://news.abs-cbn.com/news/06/17/17/duterte-marawi-crisis-not-a-failure-of-intelligence
The government knew about the weapons coming into Marawi and turned a blind eye thereby allowing this fiasco to occur. When will the media or the Senate create a special committee to investigate that?