Rene Jarque: A Filipino of Courage and
Conviction
Rene Jarque’s legacy to
the struggle to bring about an armed forces that will truly serve the
interests of the people and the country is surely enshrined in the hearts
and minds of the patriotic men and women in uniform. Indeed, he has
served his people and his country well and we are all very proud of him.
By Carol Pagaduan-Araullo
Streetwise
Posted by Bulatlat
Former army captain
and West Pointer Rene Jarque, eloquent and outspoken advocate of reforms
in the military establishment, is dead at age 40. In his abbreviated
life, Rene had metamorphosed from being a young, idealistic officer
aiming to follow the footsteps of his father, General Raymundo Jarque, in
a distinguished military career, to that of a crusader, seeking an end to
the scandalously corrupt, shamefully inept and intolerably abusive armed
forces which he had been a part of and gotten to know and understand well.
It is one of the
ironies of life that Rene Jarque’s path and mine should cross in a rather
unique and non-adversarial context. I first met Rene in 1995 as he
dutifully accompanied his father, General Jarque who, after having
defected to the New People’s Army, came down from the hills of Negros to
face the criminal charges leveled against him by feuding landowners and
then Public Prosecutor Aniano Desierto. I was part of a party of lawyers
and activists that met the General and provided him moral, legal and
political support as he faced an uncertain and risky future.
I must admit a
measure of wariness when I met this army officer; my activist instincts
told me that despite his natural sympathy to his father’s plight, it could
not be assumed that he had become open, much less sympathetic, to the Left
as well. Our conversations were light but guarded; he struck me as an
intelligent, soft-spoken, respectful and non-confrontational person but I
reminded myself that I was talking to a dedicated and loyal military
officer.
I would hear about
his military career suffering in the years to come; he had been quietly
placed in the freezer. Perhaps it had something to do with his father’s
spectacular defection to “The Enemy” that had indelibly marked Rene as a
non-conformist and potential troublemaker. Certainly, his critical views
about corruption, lack of professionalism and mismanagement in the AFP
that he wrote about unabashedly in military publications sealed his fate.
It came to the point that copies of a military journal that he edited, was
embargoed and set to the torch because it contained an article exposing
corruption in the military and calling for reforms.
After Rene had
prematurely been forced to retire from the military in 1998 and had
started a new career as a business executive, I ran into him again and
learned that his passion for advocating wide-ranging reforms in the
military had not waned. Thereafter he would be tapped as a resource
person by the Bagong Alyansang Makabayan, In Peace- Mindanao and other
progressive groups especially after the so-called “Oakwood Mutiny” in July
2003 to explain what was going on in the military.
In November 2003,
Rene helped convene the Action Against Corruption and Tyranny Now or ACT
NOW!, an alliance of personages and groups that was appalled at the
corruption during the incumbency of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and
vowed to animate a citizens’ movement against government misrule, abuse
and corruption.
Upon the initiative
of Rene, the newly-formed anti-corruption network wrote an open letter to
the officers and men of the AFP calling on them to put a stop to the
practice of “conversion”, literally converting public funds into private
monies by a series of criminal acts that involved the collusion of
military officials and private supply contractors and appropriating said
funds to enrich themselves. This was long before the scandal over the
billions of money allegedly siphoned off by General Carlos Garcia and his
cohorts using the strategic office of the military comptroller. Rene had
hoped it would send even a small ripple of appeal to the remaining decent
elements in the military establishment.
He also brought up a
proposal to hold small forums inviting enlisted servicemen and not just
officers “to serve as an outlet for soldier's grievances besides the PMAAA
and the AGFO” and to provide a venue for the men in uniform to meet with
leaders of cause-oriented groups and exchange views. He had hoped such
efforts would help lift the veil of misconception and prejudice that
beclouded the mindset of each side.
I learned that Rene
had resigned from his executive position in a Manila-based firm and had
accepted instead a job that required him to be based for the most part in
the Indonesian capital of Jakarta. In the time that he was back home, we
had an opportunity to speak at the same forum on corruption in the
military in the wake of the case of Gen. Carlos Garcia and other
implicated officers. We also attended the first hearing of the military
tribunal trying Gen. Garcia’s case. I could feel the questioning looks of
military men as they saw me enter the courtroom with the famous or
notorious Captain Rene Jarque, depending on one’s point of view.
In February of this
year, ACT NOW! invited Rene to deliver a paper on corruption in the
military at a National Study Conference on Corruption held at the
University of the Philippines. He graciously agreed and since he was
abroad at the time, he was hooked up via long distance to answer questions
raised during the open forum. Bishop Julio Labayen was at the conference
and asked Rene how he explained the phenomenon of reform-minded officers
in the AFP as dramatically revealed in the recent “Oakwood Mutiny”.
Rene’s insights impressed the good bishop who remarked that he was hopeful
for change in the AFP with advocates such as Rene persisting in his
awareness raising efforts.
Captain Rene Jarque
certainly belongs to a distinguished breed of Filipinos because he had the
courage of his convictions, a moral courage displayed in the risky but
principled choices that he made that affected adversely “success” in his
chosen career and even his personal fortunes. Moreover, he persisted in
his crusade while he could have quietly faded away from the controversial
limelight when he was effectively forced to resign from the institution he
loved and served to the best of his ability and with his integrity
intact. He was able to maintain his links and command the respect of his
peers and other active and retired military officers precisely because,
even when they disagreed with his views, they could not doubt his moral
integrity, intellectual honesty and willingness to make the necessary
sacrifice to advance his convictions.
Rene was a rare kind
of intellectual: he was a critical thinker who could not be satisfied with
what has been ingrained in him but was open to the truths that he learned
as he matured, from his experiences as a young officer fighting a
counter-insurgency war in the hinterlands of Isabela province to his stint
as a staff officer with a promising career in the AFP headquarters to his
“downfall” as a maverick soldier railing against an institution that had
gone terribly awry.
Rene was broadminded
enough to respect the views of those in the revolutionary movement whose
ideology and politics were diametrically opposed to what he had been
molded to believe but whose basic values and concrete practice he had
grown to admire.
Captain Rene Jarque
remained a soldier at heart which is why he never gave up writing and
talking about what he felt was wrong in the military. He also never gave
up on the decent people he knew remained in the AFP.
In the last essay that he wrote, “What’s
with the Armed Forces?” dated 25 July, he came up with some very radical
proposals:
“There is indeed a dilemma. Military
intervention can restore order but… if the intervention is by the
generals, no real change in politics and society will happen. In fact, it
could be worse if a military or military-controlled government takes over…
If the young officers intervene without the blessing of the chain of
command, it will be a bloody confrontation with the “pro-government”
forces. I think the best combination for a military intervention, if ever
it happens or when it becomes “final solution” or “fait accompli”, would
be the younger generation of the Officer Corps supported by broad popular
support, including the progressive elements of the left. Perhaps then, we
can expect real change in government.”
Rene Jarque’s legacy to the struggle to
bring about an armed forces that will truly serve the interests of the
people and the country is surely enshrined in the hearts and minds of the
patriotic men and women in uniform. Indeed, he has served his people and
his country well and we are all very proud of him.#
*Published in Business
World, 26-27 August 2005
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