On this day in 1899, the US started what became known as the “first Vietnam” when it began colonizing the Philippines. During the “Philippine-American War”, up to 1.4 million Filipinos were massacred. 🧵
30,000 brave Filipino guerillas organized by the revolutionary society called the Katipunan had only just gotten rid of Spanish colonizers in 1896, after 300 years of colonial rule.
The US meanwhile had also been busy fighting the Spanish, not for freedom, but to take over Spanish colonies in Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippines.
Instead of surrendering to the Filipinos, Spain agreed to sell its colony to the US for $20 million under an agreement called the Treaty of Paris. But the US government failed to secure the backing of Congress for the Treaty and so declared war on the Philippines on February 4.
With Congress’ backing for the Treaty looking unlikely, the US government declared war on the Philippines on the false pretext that Filipinos had fired shots at US troops who were now occupying Manila.
US troops piled up the thousands of Filipino bodies lining the streets and made fortifications of them. Meanwhile, the Katipunan who had until now been busy fighting the Spanish switched focus to their new enemy, the US.
As the revolutionaries launched a heroic campaign of mobile guerilla warfare with the support of the Filipino masses, the US deployed 70,000 troops with instructions to use “overwhelming force”.
They slaughtered entire villages, tortured civilians and built concentration camps where thousands perished from hunger, disease and violence.
By December, Congress approved the Treaty, but the war wouldn’t end until 1902 with the US claiming “victory”. The end of the war began 44-years of US colonization of the Philippines and despite the latter securing independence in 1946, today it remains a semi-colony.
All post-independence Filipino governments have submitted to US-dominated international finance institutions whose prescriptions have plunged millions of Filipinos into extreme poverty.
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Did you know that Chiang Kai-Shek, who shaped today’s Taiwan, was responsible for the massacre of over 30,000 people on the island? Read on. 🧵
The February 28 (228) Massacre is considered to be one of the most significant events in Taiwan’s modern history. It marked the beginning of decades of White Terror, leaving a lasting impact on the island.
After WWII ended in 1945, Japan surrendered Taiwan to China’s Nationalist government, led by the Kuomintang (KMT). Meanwhile, a civil war raged in mainland China between the KMT and the Communist Party of China (CPC).
Jailed PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan has called on his organization to disband and lay down arms—but the final decision rests with the PKK’s upcoming congress. For 43 years, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party has fought a national liberation war.
Here’s how it all began. 🧵
The PKK is one of the largest armed non-state actors worldwide. Öcalan led its foundation in 1978 in the southeast of Türkiye with the zeal to fight for an independent Kurdistan. The early PKK was heavily inspired by the socialist and anti-colonial movement that defined the 1970s.
Just two years after the party’s founding, Türkiye was rocked by a military coup. The Kurdish language was banned. The state launched a full-blown counterinsurgency campaign, targeting the surging leftist and Kurdish independence movements that had begun to take root.
On this day in 1869, Bolshevik revolutionary Nadezhda Krupskaya was born. Many historians, however, overlook her tireless efforts and invaluable contributions to the Marxist-Leninist movement and Soviet society, reducing her to the role of “Lenin’s wife.” Read on to learn more about one of the Soviet Union’s most influential women. 🧵
Nadezhda Krupskaya was born on February 26, 1869. As a leading Bolshevik revolutionary and wife of Lenin, she made significant yet often overlooked contributions to the Marxist-Leninist movement.
Krupskaya’s early involvement in Marxist student societies gave her an understanding of the struggles and injustices of working-class people. She dedicated almost 50 years to the party and revolutionary transformation of society.
DPR Korean doctors are “violating” UN sanctions by providing medical services in DR Congo, according to US-funded Radio Free Asia (RFA). What the RFA report omits is that ongoing conflicts have left millions in DR Congo without much-needed medical services.
With one of the world’s lowest healthcare coverage rates, DR Congo’s hospitals and clinics lack personnel, equipment, and critical medicine. Decades of conflict—especially in the country’s east—have further restricted access to essential care.
However, since 2019, UN Security Council Resolution 2397 has barred all DPRK medical staff from working abroad in an effort to cut off funding for the DPRK’s weapons programs.
On this day in 1958, Cuban guerillas led by Fidel Castro kidnapped then Formula One reigning world champion Juan Manuel Fangio. They aimed to bring international attention to their cause and embarrass the US-backed dictator Fulgencio Batista’s government. 🧵
The summer of 1958 saw the second anniversary of the “Monaco Grand Prix of the Caribbean” in Havana, Cuba. Although the race was not part of the world championship, plenty of prominent drivers participated - partly because the US-backed dictator Batista dug deep into his pockets to provide a spectacle for the national bourgeoisie and tourists.
The 46-year-old race champion Juan Manuel Fangio nicknamed El Maestro for his unprecedented win rate of 24 out of 52 Formula One races, arrived in Havana on February 23, 1958, to defend his title at the upcoming Grand Prix.
Here are some little-known facts about the former head of Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, that you probably didn’t know. From his meeting with Chomsky to his admiration for Maradona’s playing style, read on to learn more. 🧵
Hassan Nasrallah spent the first 15 years of his life in an impoverished and diverse neighborhood in the eastern suburbs of Beirut. He came from a working class family and his father was a vegetable vendor. Hassan was originally from the village of Bassouriyeh in South Lebanon, from which his family was displaced during the Lebanese Civil War.
Since his childhood, Hassan Nasrallah loved to read. However, his political commitment
gradually distanced him from leisurely reading. He spent his time studying analyses, articles, and research, dedicating much of it to translating and reading Israeli newspapers to understand their society and mentality. His deep political knowledge and insight into Israeli society have been feared by several Israeli leaders.