Unit 1: NSTP Common Modulesit 1: NSTP Common Modules Module 6: National Security Concerns
Unit 1: NSTP Common Modulesit 1: NSTP Common Modules Module 6: National Security Concerns
Introduction:
What is security?
Security refers to all the measures that are taken to protect a place, or to ensure
that only people with permission enter it or leave it.
Security mostly refers to protection from hostile forces, but it has a wide range of
other senses: for example, as the absence of harm (e.g. freedom from want); as the
presence of an essential good (e.g. food security); as resilience against potential
damage or harm (e.g. secure foundations); as secrecy (e.g. a secure telephone line); as
containment (e.g. a secure room or cell); and as a state of mind (e.g. emotional
security).
Safety is the state of being "safe"), the condition of being protected from harm or
other non-desirable outcomes. Safety can also refer to the control of recognized
hazards in order to achieve an acceptable level of risk.
Based from the give definitions and on what you have read further, how would you
differentiate security from safety?
One of the primary difference between the two terms is their definition. Security
refers to the protection of individuals, organizations, and properties against external
threats that are likely to cause harm. It is clear that security is generally focused on
ensuring that external factors do not cause trouble or unwelcome situation to the
organization, individuals, and the properties within the premises. On the other hand,
safety is the feeling of being protected from the factors that causes harm. It is also
important to highlight that an individual who controls the risk causing factors has the
feeling of being safe.
Lesson Proper:
NATIONAL SECURITY
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_security
Commonwealth Act No. 1, also known as the National Defense Act, is the original
policy basis of the national security program of the Republic of the Philippines.
The 1987 Constitution mandates civilian control of the military and establishes the
President as commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces. The President also heads the
National Security Council, the policy-making and advisory body for matters connected
with national defense.
The council itself is composed of the President and at least nine others:
Vice President
AFP chief of staff
National Security Council director
Executive Secretary
Secretary of Foreign Affairs
Secretary of National Defense
Secretary of Interior and Local Government
Secretary of Justice
Secretary of Labor and Employment
There are seven fundamental elements that lie at the core of, and therefore
further amplify our definition of national security. At the same time, they
constitute the most important challenges we face as a nation and people.
1. Socio-Political Stability - the government and the people must engage in nation-
building under the rule of law, Constitutional democracy and the full respect for human
rights.
2. Territorial Integrity - we must ensure the permanent inviolability of our national
territory and its effective control by the Government and the State. This includes the
preservation of our country’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) and its protection from
illegal incursions and resource exploitation.
7. External Peace - we must pursue constructive and cordial relations with all
nations and peoples, even as our nation itself must chart an independent course, free
From external control, interference or threat of aggression.
In its external aspects, national security is concerned with safeguarding the state
against outside or foreign forces, pressures, or influence designed to conquer it or
undermine its sovereignty, or placing under the domination or control of some foreign
state or states. In this sense, national security embraces the defense arrangements
directed at insuring the safety of the state against foreign intervention or domination.
TYPES OF THREATS
There are six common types of threats that undermine security:
INTERNAL THREATS
Our national security is infused with four important dimensions. Internal threats to
our national security make up the first dimension.
Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG)
The main internal threat arises from the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF)
which, in open rebellion against the government, has the avowed objective of
establishing an independent Islamic state in southern Philippines. Hand-in-hand with
this security problem is the threat from the Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG), a small band of
highly mobile terrorists with suspected links to international networks.
Organized Crime
The challenge of illegal drugs, in particular, has grown into a major threat to the
national community. Of the 42,979 barangays nationwide, about 12 per cent are
affected in varying degrees. The anti-drug campaign is a major cornerstone of the
government’s law and order drive, involving the police, the Local Government Units and
the private sector, and focusing on a tripartite strategy of reducing drug supply and
demand as well domestic and international cooperation.
Economic Sabotage
Under this category are underground activities such as counterfeiting, money
laundering, large-scale smuggling, inter-oceanic poaching and commercial dumping.
Severe Calamities
They cause serious food shortages, abet hoarding and profiteering and cause
hunger, disease and deprivation. Over the past ten years, the disaster toll stands at
more than 13,000 lives lost and P179 Billion worth of property destroyed. The National
Disaster Coordinating Center (NDCC) ensures the focused, coordinated and systematic
application of government and private manpower and resources to the tasks of disaster
mitigation, and community rehabilitation and reconstruction.
EXTERNAL THREATS
The growing uncertainties that lie in the regional and global milieu make up the
second dimension of our national security concerns even as threat of external
aggression against our country remains in the remote horizon.
Lingering effects of the currency crisis affecting the countries within the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
These are causes of regional anxieties, which tend to aggravate political
instabilities and socio-economic dislocations involving the poorest people.
Local or regional shortages of fresh water, arable land, food, fisheries, and
energy are already causing tensions.
Cybernetic crime
This is a growing global threat, as experienced with computer viruses such as
Melissa and Chernobyl, which have attacked isolated or networked information systems
through the internet or through software carriers and devices. Many vital decision-
making processes of our Government are now electronically-based and therefore
vulnerable to this threat.
For further reading click and read the following links
links
http://docshare.tips/nstp-national-
security_574d929cb6d87f411f8b5c79.html
file:///C:/Users/Acer/Documents/NSP-2017-2022%20(1).pdf
http://www.nsc.gov.ph/attachments/article/NSP/NSP-2011-
2016.pdf
Learning Activity
Assessment
Name: Score:
Section: Facilitator:
Identify the word or group of words that corresponds with each statement
below.
_____________1. It is the feeling of being protected from the factors that causes
harm.
_____________2. He is the founder of Communist Party of the Philippines.
_____________3. The head of the National Security Council in the Philippines.
_____________4. It pertains to civil disobedience and mass non-violent
resistance, to violent and organized attempts to destroy the
government.
_____________5. It refer to those violent acts which are intended to create fear,
which are perpetrated for an ideological goal, and deliberately
target or disregard the safety of civilians.
_____________6. It includes underground activities such as counterfeiting, money
laundering, large-scale smuggling, inter-oceanic poaching and
commercial dumping.
_____________7. This includes the preservation of our country’s Exclusive
Economic Zone (EEZ) and its protection from illegal incursions and
resource exploitation.
_____________8. It includes the effective conservation of our natural environment
in the face of industrial and agricultural expansion and population
growth.
_____________9. Its principal functions is to defend the State against internal and
external threats.
____________10. A confinement without legal authority.
____________11. Taking the property of another, with the intent to permanently
deprive the person of that property, by means of force or fear.
____________12. It embraces the defense arrangements directed at insuring the
safety of the state against foreign intervention or domination.
____________13. The country that pose grave threat to the Philippines maritime
interest in West Philippine Sea.
____________14. It is a small band of highly mobile terrorists with suspected links
to international networks.
____________15. It saps public resources, undermines the morale of the civil
service and affects the delivery of quality basic services.
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_security
http://docshare.tips/nstp-national-security_574d929cb6d87f411f8b5c79.html
file:///C:/Users/Acer/Documents/NSP-2017-2022%20(1).pdf
http://www.nsc.gov.ph/attachments/article/NSP/NSP-2011-2016.pdf