Philippines–United States relations
Philippines |
United States |
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Diplomatic mission | |
Philippine Embassy, Washington, D.C. | United States Embassy, Manila |
Envoy | |
Ambassador Jose Manuel Romualdez | Ambassador MaryKay Carlson |
Philippines–United States relations (Filipino: Ugnayang Pilipinas at Estados Unidos) are the bilateral and diplomatic relations of the Republic of the Philippines and the United States of America. The relationship has been historically strong, described by some as a "special relationship"[1][2] as a consequence of the Philippines' American colonial period between 1898 and 1946. Former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte, however, was supportive of a foreign policy less dependent on the United States, favoring one that prioritized closer relations with China and Russia,[3] despite the Philippines and the U.S. having a mutual defense treaty dating from 1951 to the present. In 2014, the countries signed an enhanced defense cooperation agreement that began its first phase of implementation in 2019.
The Philippines is one of America's oldest Asian partners and a strategically major non-NATO ally.[citation needed] The United States was consistently ranked as one of the Philippines' favorite nations in the world—90% of Filipinos viewed the U.S. and 91% viewed Americans favorably in 2002;[4][5] 90% viewed U.S. influence positively in 2011;[6] 85% viewed the U.S. and Americans favorably in 2013;[7] 92% viewed the U.S. favorably in 2015;[8] and 94% had confidence in then-U.S. president Barack Obama[9]—making the Philippines one of the most pro-American countries in the world.[10]
This article discusses Philippine–American relations after Philippine independence from the United States in 1946, while the article History of the Philippines (1898–1946) describes the history of the Philippines during American colonial rule.
History
[edit]The Republic of the Philippines and the United States of America have a long and storied history with each other. Firstly, Filipinos are the oldest Asian ethnic group in the Americas. Filipino sailors were the first Asians in North America.[11] The first documented presence of Filipinos in what is now the United States dates back to October 1587 around Morro Bay, California.[12] The first permanent settlement of Filipinos was in Louisiana in 1763;[13] the settlers there were called "Manilamen", and they served in the Battle of New Orleans during the closing stages of the War of 1812, supporting the Americans against the British Empire. The American state of Texas, due to it being a former Spanish territory, was even once called "New Philippines", so named since the Spanish wanted to replicate the prosperity they achieved in the Philippines in that territory in the Americas.[14] The 1898 Philippine Revolution against Spain was inspired by the French and American revolutions. The United States eventually purchased the Philippines from Spain in the Treaty of Paris, and afterwards the Americans invaded and destroyed the First Philippine Republic in the Philippine–American War.
The United States federal government nearly considered selling Mindanao to the German Empire in 1910.[15]
Except for the brief interruption of the Japanese occupation between 1942 and 1945, the United States ruled the Philippines from 1898 to 1946, after which, the Philippines was granted independence after being devastated by the Second World War.[citation needed]
The US supported the dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos.[16]
Pivot to China during the Duterte administration
[edit]After President Rodrigo Duterte formally assumed the office on June 30, 2016, US–Philippine relations began to sour. A drift between Duterte and then-US President Barack Obama began when Obama expressed his concern over human rights issues on Duterte's "War on Criminality and Drugs". According to a statement issued by the White House, Obama commended the country for its "vibrant democracy", but also highlighted "enduring values" that underpinned their "longstanding ties", including "shared commitments to democracy, human rights and rule of law".[17] This intervention and President Duterte's choice of words while speaking about President Obama during a press conference, where he infamously called him "a son of a whore" resulted in a canceled meeting between the two leaders during the 2016 ASEAN summit held in Laos.[18]
A few weeks later, Duterte suggested American special forces cease their operations in Mindanao and leave.[19] He cited the killings of Muslim Filipinos during a U.S. pacification campaign in the early 1900s, which he said were at the root of the long restiveness by minority Muslims in the largely Catholic nation's south.[20] During an official visit to Vietnam on September 28, 2016, he explicitly expressed his desire to end the Philippines' joint military exercises with the United States. Duterte announced the upcoming scheduled war games would be the last under his term, while adding that he would continue to uphold the Philippines' treaties with the U.S.[21]
As of October 2016[update], despite Duterte's shift of foreign policy towards China and away from the U.S., Filipinos still held low approval and trust in China relative to the U.S.[22] On former president Fidel Ramos' resignation as special envoy to China, he stated that he didn't like Duterte's treatment of Obama.[23]
Duterte later said following the 2016 U.S. presidential election that he would stop quarrels with the U.S. following President Donald Trump's victory.[24] Trump had planned to continue to aid the country during his presidency.[25][needs update]
According to a report by Reuters, the United States ran the #ChinaAngVirus disinformation campaign to discredit the Sinovac Chinese COVID-19 vaccine, including using fake social media accounts to spread the disinformation that it contained pork-derived ingredients and was therefore haram under Islamic law.[26] The campaign primarily targeted people in the Philippines and used a social media hashtag for "China is the virus" in Tagalog.[26] The campaign ran from 2020 to mid-2021.[26] The primary contractor for the U.S. military on the project was General Dynamics IT, which received $493 million for its role.[26]
Relations during the Marcos Jr. administration
[edit]Bongbong Marcos, president since June 2022, appears to be attempting to normalize relations with the United States in part due to China's geostrategic rise and the need to cooperate on the economy.[27] However, the Biden administration has said human rights will come first in America's dealings with the Philippines, responding to concerns with Marcos' and Duterte's human rights records.[28]
In August 2022, Marcos met with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken.[29][30] He met with U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff in November.[31]
Marcos and U.S. President Joe Biden met face-to-face on the sidelines of the 2022 United Nations General Assembly on September 23. During Marcos's working visit to the United States on September 18–24, top financial officials secured investment pledges of $4 billion and 100,000 jobs for the Philippines. Biden pledged to help the Philippines with energy and food security,[32][28] reiterating that message during the 40th and 41st ASEAN Summits in Cambodia during the week of November 9–13, 2022.[33][34]
In February 2023, Marcos briefly met with Biden's Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin to finalize an agreement to add U.S.-accessible Philippine military bases to the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement.[35][36]
On April 11, 2024, Marcos along with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida met with Biden in Washington, D.C., for a trilateral summit. President Marcos Jr. stated that the summit would include discussions on an agreement to maintain security and freedom of navigation in the South China Sea. He further emphasized that the summit was mainly aimed at boosting economic ties between the three allies.[37]
In August 2024, the Biden administration announced an additional $500 million of military aid to the Philippines, further bolstering the defense alliance between the two nations and in light of the Philippines grappling with aggressive actions by Chinese ships in the South China Sea.[38]
Military agreements
[edit]Bases era (1947–91)
[edit]A 1947 Military Bases Agreement[39] gave the United States a 99-year lease on a number of Philippine military and naval bases in which U.S. authorities had virtual territorial rights.[40] In August 1951, a mutual defense treaty (MDT) was signed between representatives of the Philippines and the United States. The overall accord contained eight articles and dictated that both nations would support each other if either the Philippines or the United States were to be attacked by an external party. An amendment to the bases agreement in 1966 reduced its 99-year term to 25 years.[41] In 1979, after two years of negotiation, the bases agreement was renewed with some amendments.[42]
Pursuant to the bases agreement, the United States maintained and operated major facilities at Clark Air Base until November 1991,[43] and at Subic Bay Naval Complex and several small subsidiary installations in the Philippines until November 1992. In July 1991, negotiators from the two countries reached an agreement on a draft treaty providing for the clean-up and turnover of Clark Air Base to the Philippine government in 1992, and for the lease of Subic Bay Naval Base by the U.S. for ten years.[44] By 1991, operations at Clark had already been scaled back as the Cold War ended, with the last combat aircraft leaving in 1990 before the base was heavily damaged by the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo.[45]
On September 16, 1991, the Philippine Senate rejected renewal of the bases agreement by a slim margin.[41] A vote resulted in 11 senators in favor of extending the treaty, and 12 senators in favor of suppressing it. The Anti-Bases Coalition, founded by senators Jose W. Diokno and Lorenzo Tañada, led the call to end American military presence in the country. At the time of the vote, the retired senator Tañada stood up on his wheelchair to rapturous applause shouting, "Mabuhay!" or "Long live the Philippines".[46]
Voted to extend | Voted against extending |
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Despite further efforts to salvage the situation, the two sides could not reach an agreement. As a result, the Philippine Government informed the U.S. on December 6, 1991, that it would have one year to complete withdrawal. That withdrawal went smoothly and was completed ahead of schedule, with the last U.S. forces departing on November 24, 1992. On departure, the U.S. Government turned over assets worth more than $1.3 billion to the Philippines, including an airport and ship-repair facility. Agencies formed by the Philippine Government converted the former military bases for civilian commercial use, with Subic Bay serving as a flagship for that effort.
Visiting Forces Agreement
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (June 2024) |
The post-U.S. bases era saw U.S.–Philippine relations improve and broaden, with a prominent focus on economic and commercial ties while maintaining the importance of the security dimension.[citation needed] U.S. investment continued to play an important role in the Philippine economy,[citation needed] while a strong security relationship rested on the Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) of 1951. In February 1998, U.S. and Philippine negotiators concluded the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA), paving the way for increased military cooperation under the MDT. The agreement was approved by the Philippine Senate in May 1999 and entered into force on June 1, 1999.[47]
Under the VFA, the U.S. conducted ship visits to Philippine ports and resumed large combined military exercises with Philippine forces.[citation needed] Key events in the bilateral relationship included the July 4, 1996, declaration by President Ramos of Philippine-American Friendship Day in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of Philippine independence.[48] Ramos visited the U.S. in April 1998, and then-President Estrada visited in July 2000. President Arroyo met with President Bush in an official working visit in November 2001 and made a state visit in Washington on May 19, 2003.[49] President Bush made a state visit to the Philippines on October 18, 2003, during which he addressed a joint session of the Philippine Congress—the first American President to do so since Dwight D. Eisenhower.[50]
President Arroyo repeatedly stressed the close friendship between the Philippines and the U.S. and her desire to expand bilateral ties further.[citation needed] Both governments tried to revitalize and strengthen their partnership by working toward greater security, prosperity, and service to Filipinos and Americans alike.[citation needed] Inaugurated into office on the same day as President Bush, President Arroyo lent strong support to the Global War on Terrorism.[51] In October 2003, the U.S. designated the Philippines as a major non-NATO ally.[52] That same month, the Philippines joined the select group of countries to have ratified all 12 UN counterterrorism conventions.[citation needed]
On February 7, 2020, President Rodrigo Duterte officially ordered the termination of the VFA as a response to an accumulation of a series of "disrespectful acts" by a few US senators directed against the sovereignty of the Republic of the Philippines.[53] On February 11, 2020, the Philippine government officially notified the U.S. that it would be terminating the VFA.[54] In response, Secretary of Defense Mark Esper called the move "unfortunate". President Trump said "I don't really mind if they would like to do that", as he claimed, "it will save a lot of money".[55] Duterte would later backtrack and suspended the process of termination in June and November 2020 before officially restoring the agreement in June 2021.[56]
Annual military exercises
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (June 2024) |
The annual Balikatan ("shoulder-to-shoulder") bilateral military exercises contribute directly to the Philippine armed forces' efforts to root out Abu Sayyaf and Jemaah Islamiyah terrorists and bring development to formerly terrorist-plagued areas, notably Basilan and Jolo.[citation needed] They include not only combined military training but also civil-military affairs and humanitarian projects.[citation needed]
The International Military Education and Training (IMET) program is the largest in the Pacific and the third-largest in the world, and a Mutual Logistics Support Agreement (MLSA) was signed in November 2002.[citation needed] Similarly, law enforcement cooperation have reached new levels: U.S. and Philippine agencies have cooperated to bring charges against numerous terrorists, to implement the countries' extradition treaty, and to train thousands of Filipino law enforcement officers.[citation needed] There is a Senior Law Enforcement Advisor helping the Philippine National Police with its Transformation Program.[citation needed]
USAID programs support the Philippines' war on poverty as well as the government's reform agenda in critical areas, including anti-money laundering, rule of law, tax collection, and trade and investment.[citation needed] Other USAID programs have bolstered the government's efforts to heal divisions in Philippine society through a focus on conflict resolution, livelihood enhancement for former combatants, and economic development in Mindanao and the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, which are among the poorest areas in the country.[citation needed] Meanwhile, important programs continue in modern family planning, infectious disease control, environmental protection, rural electrification, and provision of basic services—as well as PL 480 food aid programs and others—which together totaled $211.3 million.[citation needed] In 2006, the Millennium Challenge Corporation granted $21 million to the Philippines for a threshold program addressing corruption in revenue administration.[citation needed]
Nearly 400,000 Americans visit the Philippines each year.[citation needed] Providing government services to U.S. and other citizens, therefore, constitutes an important aspect of the bilateral relationship. Those services include veterans' affairs, social security, and consular operations. Benefits to Filipinos from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the Social Security Administration totaled $297,389,415 in 2006.[citation needed] Many people-to-people programs exist between the U.S. and the Philippines, including Fulbright, International Visitors, and Aquino Fellowship exchange programs, as well as the U.S. Peace Corps.[citation needed]
Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement
[edit]The Agreement on Enhanced Defense Cooperation (EDCA), a framework agreement that raises the scope of the 1951 MDT, was signed on April 28, 2014.
The Preamble to the EDCA refers to the obligations of the Philippines and the United States, under both the Charter of the United Nations and the MDT, to settle international disputes by peaceful means, not to endanger international peace and security, and to refrain from the threat or use of force "in any manner inconsistent with the purposes of the United Nations".
Importantly, the Preamble notes that both parties "share an understanding for the United States not to establish a permanent military presence or base in the territory of the Philippines". The Preamble later concludes, "all United States access to and use of facilities and areas will be at the invitation of the Philippines and with full respect for the Philippines Constitution and Philippine laws".[57]
Trade and investment
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (June 2024) |
The 1946 Bell Trade Act and its replacement, the 1955 Laurel–Langley Agreement (which expired in 1974), linked the two countries closely together economically in the first decades of independence.[58]
Two-way U.S. merchandise trade with the Philippines amounted to $17.3 billion in 2006 (U.S. Department of Commerce data).[citation needed] According to Philippine Government data, 16% of the Philippines' imports in 2006 came from the U.S., and about 18% of its exports were bound for America.[citation needed] The Philippines ranks as the 26th-largest export market and the 30th-largest supplier of the United States.[citation needed] Key exports to the U.S. are semiconductor devices and computer peripherals, automobile parts, electric machinery, textiles and garments, wheat and animal feeds, and coconut oil.[citation needed] In addition to other goods, the Philippines imports raw and semi-processed materials for the manufacture of semiconductors, electronics and electrical machinery, transport equipment, and cereals and cereal preparations.[citation needed]
The U.S. traditionally has been the Philippines' largest foreign investor, with about $6.6 billion in estimated investment as of end-2005 (U.S. Department of Commerce data).[citation needed] Since the late 1980s, the Philippines has committed itself to reforms that encourage foreign investment as a basis for economic development, subject to certain guidelines and restrictions in specified areas.[citation needed] Under President Ramos, the Philippines expanded reforms, opening the power generation and telecommunications sectors to foreign investment, as well as securing ratification of the Uruguay Round agreement and membership in the World Trade Organization.[citation needed] As noted earlier, President Arroyo's administration has generally continued such reforms despite opposition from vested interests and "nationalist" blocs.[citation needed] A major obstacle has been and will continue to be constitutional restrictions on, among others, foreign ownership of land and public utilities, which limits maximum ownership to 40%.[citation needed]
Over the last two decades, the relatively closed Philippine economy has been opened significantly by foreign exchange deregulation, foreign investment and banking liberalization, tariff and market barrier reduction, and foreign entry into the retail trade sector.[citation needed] The Electric Power Industry Reform Act of 2001 opened opportunities for U.S. firms to participate in the power industry in the Philippines.[citation needed] Information and communications technologies, backroom operations such as call centers, and regional facilities or shared-service centers were probably likewise leading investment opportunities.[citation needed]
During the visit by President Benigno Aquino III to Washington DC, on July 7, 2012, the US–Philippine Society was launched. This non-profit independent organization is tasked with generating awareness about the Philippines in the US. The last board meeting was conducted by the society on January 24, 2013.[59]
In its 2013 Special 301 Report, the Office of the United States Trade Representatives wrote "The United States looks to the Philippines to take important steps to address piracy over the internet, in particular with respect to notorious online markets".[60] It is speculated that pressure from the United States contributed to the complaint filed by Philippine Association of the Record Industry against the torrent website KickassTorrents, resulting in its seizure by Philippine authorities on June 13, 2013.[61]
In April 2022, U.S. private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management, together with Dutch shipbuilder consortium Agila, bought out the HHIC Philippines facilities at Redondo Peninsula near the Subic Bay Naval Base in Zambales.[62][63][64] Accordingly, the shipyard was renamed as the Agila Subic Multi-Use Facilities.[65] The Philippine Navy began leasing the shipyard's northern section in May 2022.[66] American defense contractor Vectrus also moved in.[67][68][69]
That same year, the Biden administration pledged to increase cooperation with the Philippines on renewable energy and food prices, and the Marcos Jr. administration secured pledges of 100,000 jobs and $4 billion in American private sector investments.[28] U.S. government officials headed by Vice President Kamala Harris pledged increased aid and investment opportunities to the Philippines on renewable energy, critical minerals supply, women's rights and education, public health and immunology, SpaceX Starlink broadband, and, in the first agreement of its kind, nuclear power planning and American nuclear tech sales.[70]
Diplomatic missions
[edit]The U.S. maintains an embassy in Manila and a consulate in Cebu. The American Business Center, which houses the Foreign Commercial Service and the Foreign Agricultural Service, is located in Makati. The Philippine government maintains an embassy in Washington, D.C. as well as several consulates throughout the United States.
Security
[edit]U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt M. Campbell had said in January 2011 that the United States will help boost the capacity of the Philippines to patrol their own waters, including the Spratly Islands.[71]
The 1951 mutual-defense treaty was reaffirmed with the November 2011 Manila Declaration.[72][73] United States Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Jonathan Greenert suggested that LCS or surveillance aircraft may be deployed to the Philippines;[74] the Philippines is considering the proposal.[75] These "rotational deployments" will help replace some of the American presence in the area that was given up when the permanent American bases in the Philippines were closed under President Bush.[76]
In 2012 the Philippines and the United States conducted joint military exercises.[77] As of 2012, a U.S. military contingent of 600, including Navy Seals and Seabees are stationed "indefinitely" in the Southern Philippines, in a declared non-combatant role to assist the Armed Forces of the Philippines in operations against the al-Quaida-linked Abu Sayyaf terrorist group primarily on the island of Basilan in western Mindanao and the Sulu islands, in particular Jolo, a long-time stronghold of Abu Sayyaf.[78]
The Scarborough Shoal standoff with China and the ongoing Spratly Islands dispute has caused the Philippines to consider stronger military ties with the United States. In 2012, a senior Philippine defense official said that as long as they have prior clearance from the Philippine government, American troops, warships, and aircraft could once again use their former naval and air facilities of Subic Bay Naval Base and Clark Air Base.[79] In 2013, Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario clarified that, due to constitutional constraints, establishment of a U.S. military facility could only be allowed if it would be under the control of the Philippine military.[80] The deal will reportedly include shared access to Philippines military but not civilian facilities.[81]
During a 2013 visit to the Philippines, Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said that the main security issues that the U.S. was working with the Philippines were maritime domain awareness, building up the capacities of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, and counter terrorism.[82]
In April 2014, a ten-year pact called the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA)[83] was signed between U.S. President Barack Obama and Philippine President Benigno Aquino III, allowing the United States to increase its military presence in the Philippines.[84][85][86][87] Five bases were opened to U.S. troops beginning in 2016.[88]
In 2017, the Joint US Military Assistance Group (JUSMAG) handed over weapons to the Philippine Marine Corps, including 300 M4 carbines, 200 Glock 21 pistols, 4 M134D Gatling-style machine guns, and 100 M203 grenade launchers, according to a statement made by the U.S. embassy in Manila on June 5. The JUSMAG also delivered 25 new Combat Rubber Raiding Craft with outboard motors to PMC headquarters in Taguig, where PMC commandant Major General Emmanuel Salamat formally accepted delivery of the weapons during a transfer ceremony on June 5. The equipment was delivered amidst the Marawi crisis.[89]
In February 2019, then-U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo affirmed his country's commitments under the 1951 Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) during a meeting with counterparts in the Philippines. Pompeo in a speech added, "as the South China Sea is part of the Pacific, any armed attack on Philippine forces, aircraft or public vessels will trigger mutual defense obligations".[90] The U.S. assured that they will "back the Philippines" if confrontation between the Philippines and China occurs in the South China Sea.[91] The move came after years of American reluctance to affirm commitments, which led to numerous Filipino politicians to push for review of the 68-year-old security pact between the Philippines and the U.S. The Filipino foreign affairs secretary welcomed the U.S. commitment, adding that there is "no need to review" the pact anymore.[92][93][90][91]
In 2023, the Biden administration, represented by Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, and the Marcos administration finalized an agreement to allow the American military access to four additional Philippine military bases under EDCA.[35][36] However, the governors of Isabela and Cagayan—which together host three of the bases—expressed dismay at the agreement, stating they did not want their provinces to pay too much for the infrastructure improvements or become potential targets of Chinese nuclear attack.[94]
See also
[edit]- Americans in the Philippines
- CIA activities in the Philippines
- Coup attempt of 1989
- Filipino Americans
- Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act
- Mutual Defense Treaty (United States–Philippines)
- Philippine Division
- Reserve Officers' Training Corps (Philippines)
- Reserve Officers' Training Corps (United States)
- Payne–Aldrich Tariff Act
Notes
[edit]References
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Further reading
[edit]- Brands, H.W. Bound to Empire: The United States and the Philippines (Oxford UP, 1992), a major scholarly survey
- Brody, David. Visualizing American empire: Orientalism and imperialism in the Philippines\ (University of Chicago Press, 2010) online.
- Capozzola, Christopher. Bound by War: How the United States and the Philippines Built America's First Pacific Century (2020) online; also see online scholarly review of this book
- Cullather, Nick (1994). Illusions of influence: the political economy of United States-Philippines relations, 1942–1960. Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-2280-3.
- De Castro, Renato Cruz. "Territorial Disputes, Realpolitik, and Alliance Transformation: The Case of Twenty-first Century Philippine-US Security Relations." Issues & Studies 49.1 (2013).
- De Castro, Renato Cruz. "Weakness and gambits in Philippine foreign policy in the twenty-first century." Pacific Affairs 83.4 (2010): 697–717. online; covers 2001–2010
- Golay, Frank H., ed.. Face of Empire: United States-Philippine Relations, 1898-1946 (Prentice Hall, 1966)
- Hawkins, Michael C. Making Moros: imperial historicism and American military rule in the Philippines' Muslim South (Northern Illinois University Press, 2012) online.
- Hong, Jane. "Manila Prepares for Independence: Filipina/o Campaigns for US Citizenship and the Reorienting of American Ethnic Histories." Journal of American Ethnic History 38.1 (2018): 5-33.
- Kih, Jiyun. "Capability building and alliance cohesion: comparing the US-Japan and US-Philippines alliances." Australian Journal of International Affairs 74.4 (2020): 355–376.
- Kramer, Paul A. The blood of government: Race, empire, the United States, and the Philippines (Univ of North Carolina Press, 2006) online.
- Lasquety-Reyes, Jeremiah A. "American Education in the Philippines and Filipino Values." Southeast Asian Education in Modern History (Routledge, 2018) pp. 194–209.
- Laurie, Clayton D. "The Philippine Scouts: America’s Colonial Army, 1899-1913." Philippine Studies 37#2 (1989), pp. 174–91. online
- McCoy, Alfred W. Policing America’s empire: The United States, the Philippines, and the rise of the surveillance state (Univ of Wisconsin Press, 2009) online.
- McKenna, Rebecca Tinio. American imperial pastoral: The architecture of US colonialism in the Philippines (University of Chicago Press, 2019).
- May, Glenn Anthony. "The Unfathomable Other: Historical Studies of US–Philippine Relations." in Pacific Passage: The Study of American-East Asian Relations on the Eve of the Twenty-First Century (1996): 279-312' in-depth summary of scholarly studies and historiography.
- Nagano, Yoshiko. State and Finance in the Philippines, 1898-1941: The Mismanagement of an American Colony (NUS Press, 2015) online.
- Paik, Susan J., Shirlie Mae Mamaril Choe, and Matthew A. Witenstein. "Filipinos in the US: Historical, social, and educational experiences." Social and Education History 5.2 (2016): 133–160. online
- Steinbock-Pratt, Sarah. Educating the Empire: American Teachers and Contested Colonization in the Philippines (2019) online
- Yeo, Andrew. "Challenging US military presence in the Philippines." South Atlantic Quarterly 111.4 (2012): 857–864; focus on 1991 expulsion. https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-1724237
External links
[edit]This article incorporates public domain material from U.S. Bilateral Relations Fact Sheets. United States Department of State.
- Philippines (1946). Treaty of General Relations and Protocol with the Republic of the Philippines: Message from the President of the United States Transmitting the Treaty of General Relations and Protocol Between the United States of America and the Republic of the Philippines, Signed at Manila on July 4, 1946. U.S. Government Printing Office.
- History recognition, diplomatic and consular relations : Philippines, Office of the Historian, U.S. Department of State.