What price sovereignty?
>> Friday, January 31, 2014
PERRYSCOPE
By Perry Diaz
One of the most
misunderstood words in Philippine vocabulary today is “sovereignty.” Just
mention “sovereignty” to some Filipinos and it would set them off into
attacking their favorite whipping boy, the United States.
Indeed,
many Filipinos – who call themselves “nationalists” – are zealously protective
of Philippine sovereignty that when U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry visited
the victims of Typhoon Haiyan/Yolanda in Tacloban last December, they protested
his visit and accused him of exploiting and violating our country’s
sovereignty. That after all what the U.S. had done for the typhoon
victims? Give me a break.
With all
the brouhaha over Philippine sovereignty, the question comes to mind: what
exactly is sovereignty? The Free Dictionary defines sovereignty as: (1)
Supremacy of authority or rule as exercised by a sovereign or sovereign state;
(2) Royal rank, authority, or power; (3) Complete independence and
self-government; (4) A territory existing as an independent state.
Well, based on this definition, I am convinced that the Philippines is a
sovereign, independent, and self-governing state. So what then is this
hullabaloo all about?
The
question of Philippine sovereignty has been debated over and over again since
1991 when the Philippine Senate voted to reject the retention of American
bases. The nationalists were convinced then that the Philippines
didn’t need the protection of the U.S. against foreign invasion. They asserted that continued presence of American bases was an
affront to Philippine sovereignty. However, they didn’t demand for the
rescission of the U.S.-Philippine Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT), which obligated
the U.S. to defend Philippine territory in the event of foreign invasion.
It’s like them saying, “We don’t want you around but we expect you to defend us
if we were invaded.” Indeed, it’s a love-hate relationship that is
nurtured to this day.
***
But two years after
the U.S. bases were closed in 1992, China seized the Panganiban Reef (Mischief
Reef) in the middle of the night. And the Philippine Armed Forces
couldn’t do anything to take it back.
As an
afterthought to the Senate’s folly of booting out the Americans from Philippine
soil, which left the Philippines at the mercy of a foreign country who’d use
force to nibble at our territory, the U.S. and the Philippines signed a
Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA). According to the Philippine Department
of Foreign Affairs, the VFA states that US forces in the Philippines have to follow
Philippine law and have to adhere to behavior that is consistent with
Philippine law. The Senate ratified it on May 27, 1999, which makes one
wonder how the senators who voted to remove the U.S. bases in 1991 voted this
time around? But once again the nationalists went up in arms claiming
that VFA violates the Philippine constitution.
But the
nationalists had backed off when China took possession of Panatag Shoal
(Scarborough Shoal) in August 2012. China then roped off the narrow and
only opening to the shoal’s lagoon; thus, preventing Filipino fishermen from
getting in.
***
Last year,
China sent several warships to accompany about 30 Chinese fishing boats to the
Ayungin Reef, which is only 21 nautical miles from Panganiban Reef and only 100
nautical miles from Palawan. Fortunately, a detachment of six Philippine
marines was stationed on an old naval vessel, the BRP Sierra
Madre that
lay aground at Ayungin. It discouraged the Chinese from taking possession
of Ayungin.
But
that all changed on January 1, 2014 when China imposed restrictive fishing
rules within the area of South China Sea she claimed as her territory.
Several days later, a Chinese news network reported that China’s People’s
Liberation Army (PLA) was planning to seize the Pag-asa Island in the Spratly
archipelago this year. Although China did not officially confirm the news
report, it sent jitters to her neighbors particularly the Philippines and
Vietnam.
The
question is: In the event of a Chinese invasion, could the Philippines defend
and protect her sovereignty and territory? With two refurbished Coast
Guard cutters purchased from the U.S., and no other warships in her navy and no
warplanes in her air force, the Philippines is utterly defenseless and
incapable of protecting her sovereignty.
***
Just a few
days ago, Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin, in a display of bravado,
reportedly said that the Philippines would defy China’s new fishing
rules. He said that the navy would escort the fishing boats if
needed. “We still have the capability to secure them,” he said. “There is
really a need to show force because China has been very aggressive lately.”
“Show force?” Really?
With the
negotiation on the increased presence of American troops on Philippine soil on
hold right now, what has Gazmin have in mind what “force” to show the
Chinese? And why is the negotiation with the U.S. on hold? While
Philippine officials wouldn’t say the reason for the suspension of the
negotiation, the media reported that the suspension was due mainly to the
Philippines’ insistence that she should have access to these American
bases. But the U.S. wouldn’t agree to it; thus, the impasse.
Otherwise, the agreement would have been signed last December.
***
Time is of
the essence. The longer that an agreement cannot be reached, the more
vulnerable the Philippines becomes. Honestly, I don’t see any strategic
value to giving the Philippines access to U.S. bases. The only
conceivable reason why the Philippines wants to have access to U.S. bases is to
“preserve” her sovereignty and territorial integrity.
But we
should be reminded that the U.S. offered to provide military presence in
response to the Philippine government’s request for assistance. And just
when an agreement was about to be reached, the Philippines threw a monkey
wrench on the bilateral talks because of the issue of sovereignty.
And this
brings to mind the question: what price sovereignty? Would the
Philippines disallow American military presence needed to protect the
sovereignty that we hold so dearly? But without U.S. presence, our
sovereignty would be exposed to Chinese imperialistic advances.
It’s a dilemma that the Philippines has to grapple with. Simply
put, the Philippines cannot have it both ways. Sometimes you got to give
a little to gain strategic advantage. That’s geopolitics. (PerryDiaz@gmail.com)
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