2000 Philippine campaign against the Moro Islamic Liberation Front

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2000 Philippine campaign against the Moro Islamic Liberation Front
Part of the Moro conflict
Ph locator armm.png
The 2000 Philippine campaign against the Moro Islamic Liberation Front predominantly took place in areas within the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.
DateMarch 21, 2000 – July 9, 2000 (3 months, 2 weeks and 4 days)
Location 7°13′00″N124°15′00″E / 7.216667°N 124.25°E / 7.216667; 124.25
Result Philippine government victory
Belligerents
Flag of the Philippines.svg  Philippines
Supported by:
Flag of the United States.svg  United States
Flag of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front.svg Moro Islamic Liberation Front
Commanders and leaders
  • Flag of the Philippines.svg Joseph Estrada
    (President)
  • Flag of the Philippines.svg Gen. Angelo Reyes
    (Armed Forces chief)
  • Flag of the Philippines.svg Lt.Gen. Diomedio Villanueva
    (Army chief)
  • Flag of the Philippines.svg Lt. Gen. Benjamin Defensor
    (Air Force chief)
  • Flag of the Philippines.svg V. Adm. Elonor Padre
    (Navy chief)
Units involved

Flag of the Armed Forces of the Philippines.svg Armed Forces of the Philippines


Flag of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front.svg Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces (BIAF)
Strength
15,690 infantry [1]
Casualties and losses
120 killed [1] 1,082 killed [1]
425 civilian casualties [1]
755,000 [1] – 1 million [3] civilians displaced

The 2000 Philippine campaign against the Moro Islamic Liberation Front was a military campaign conducted by the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) against a Muslim secessionist group that took place during the presidency of Joseph Estrada in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao in the Philippines. The campaign was waged "to weaken the Moro Islamic Liberation Front's capability to undermine the territorial integrity of the Philippines and inflict harm on both government personnel and civilians". [1]

Contents

Background

The Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), a faction of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) which broke away in 1977, had signed a ceasefire agreement and begun talks with the Philippine government in 1997 after the MNLF affirmed the 1996 Final Peace Agreement. The MILF, however, ultimately rejected the 1996 Final Peace Agreement as inadequate, reiterating a demand for a "Bangsamoro Islamic State", and not just simple political autonomy. [4]

The MILF continued recruiting additional members, increasing its armaments and fortifying its camps. It also began assuming territories of its own within the Philippine Republic and took on the role of government in control of these territories. The MILF taxed the residents of these areas and an armed wing, which it called the Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces, secured the perimeter of its camps. [1] Prior to April 2000, the MILF had been allowed to operate approximately 50 camps that were off limits to government soldiers. When the MILF finally broke off peace talks, the Armed Forces of the Philippines, the Philippine Army in particular, began attacking and destroying these camps one after the other. [5]

The administration of Philippine President Joseph Estrada advocated a hardline stance against the MILF, directing the Armed Forces of the Philippines to "go all out" against the MILF on March 21, 2000, after the secessionist group invaded the town of Kauswagan, Lanao del Norte and took hundreds of residents hostage. [6]

Military operations

The AFP modified its primary internal security operation plan, Balangai, shifting attention from the communist insurgency to the Muslim secessionists. The AFP Southern Command, responsible for the areas in which the MILF operated, prepared contingency plan Sovereign Shield. [1]

Eight military operations were prepared and implemented as the campaign progressed. These were:

Preliminary operations

Operation Valiancy

The 6th Infantry Division of the Philippine Army moved against the MILF forces in the Talayan-Shariff Aguak-Datu Piang area in Maguindanao and captured Camp Omar, its third largest camp located there. Camp Omar served as the headquarters of the 206th BIAF brigade under Ameril Umbra Kato and defended by 500 guerrillas. Camp Jabal Uhob, another MILF camp was also captured during the operation, which took two days.

Operation Audacity

Philippine Army units moved to free the Carmen-Banilasan complex in the province of Cotabato from MILF presence and deny their freedom of movement in the area. The operation met its objective.

Operations in response to occupation of towns and seizure of roadways

Operation Sovereign

The MILF launched attacks on the coastal areas of Lanao del Norte in the middle of March 2000. They blocked the Cagayan de Oro-Iligan-Kapatagan national highway and forces under the 303rd BIAF brigade under the command of Abdullah Makapaar occupied the municipal halls of Kauswagan and Munai towns. This action by the MILF prompted President Joseph Estrada to "throw the full might of the armed forces on these terrorists". [1]

The Philippine Army's 4th Infantry Division moved to capture the MILF's Camp Bilal in Munai. Other MILF satellite camps were also captured in the operation which took 45 days.

Operation Dominance

The MILF established checkpoints on the Narciso Ramos Highway in Kauswagan, Lanao del Norte and began collecting "toll fees" from those using the roadway. In response the AFP launched operations Dominance and Freeway with the objective of reasserting government control over the highway and free it from MILF control. The 6th Infantry Division was met by a 1000 MILF men contingent which defended from bunkers lining the highway. This came to be known as the Battle of Matanog.

Operation Freeway

This operation was the complement of Operation Dominance with the same objectives.

Operations aimed at capture of Camp Abubakar

Operation Grand Sweeper

Operation Grand Sweeper was aimed at capturing the MILF satellite camps exerting control over the towns along Lake Lanao.

Operation Supreme

Operation Supreme's objective was the capture of the MILF's second-largest base, Camp Busrah, which was defended by an 800-man MILF unit. The camp was eventually found abandoned when government troops made their final assault.

Operation Terminal Velocity

Operation Terminal Velocity's objective was the capture of Camp Abubakar, the largest MILF base and seat of its Shariah-based government.

Aftermath

Operation Terminal Velocity, the final phase of the military campaign to reassert Philippine sovereignty over the areas occupied by the MILF, proved successful after Camp Abubakar, the "center of gravity" [1] of the MILF organization, was captured in early July 2000. Then-President Joseph Estrada himself visited the captured Muslim rebel camp and raised the Philippine flag there, "in assertion of sovereignty". He brought truckloads of lechon and beer for the government troops, [7] earning criticism from both devout Muslims and Catholic clerics for his insensitivity. [8]

The campaign may have been successful from a military viewpoint, however, various authors have pointed out that the bulk of the MILF's manpower survived the clashes with the government forces and later began to re-establish camps and recruit more members; the MILF "lived to fight another day". [9] Furthermore, the concentration of government military assets towards the Mindanao area siphoned off manpower and equipment from the Luzon and Visayas island groups, providing the communist rebellion an opportunity to assert itself. [10] [11]

Estrada later ordered that criminal charges against MILF leaders accused of bombings and massacres be withdrawn in an attempt to lure them back to the negotiating table. [2] An impeachment trial against Estrada on charges of bribery was initiated in November 2000 but was aborted in January 2001 when the impeachment court voted not to open an envelope purportedly containing evidence incriminating the President, setting in motion the Second EDSA Revolution.

The 2000 Mindanao campaign against the Moro Islamic Liberation Front cost the Philippine government Php 6 billion, [12] approximately US$126 million at the September 2016 exchange rate.

See also

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References

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