Is Duterte remiss in protecting the country’s sovereignty?
>> Wednesday, July 4, 2018
PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
Perry Diaz
When
a Chinese military aircraft landed at the Davao International Airport on June
8, 2018 to refuel -- with no apparent permission to land -- it should have
triggered a diplomatic protest. However, according to Department of Foreign
Affairs (DFA) Assistant Secretary Elmer Cato, the aircraft, an IL-76 strategic
cargo aircraft, would have to have diplomatic clearance and the necessary
permission to land at the airport.
“We would have to check with the Intelligence
and Security Unit of the Department, which is in charge of issuing diplomatic
clearances for all foreign military aircraft entering Philippine airspace,” Cato
said. A senior military official then asked Cato: “Where did you get
that report [information]? I don’t know that.” Evidently, the
Philippine military was kept out of the loop on the reported landing of the
Chinese cargo aircraft.
From what transpired between Cato
and the unnamed military official, the question arises: Shouldn’t
the Department of Defense (DOD) been notified about the Chinese military
aircraft landing on Philippine territory? If it were an
emergency landing, that would have been understandable. But China’s
People’s Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) should have known that if the
aircraft needed refueling they should have requested the proper Philippine
government agency for clearance to land and refuel ahead of time. But
there was no evidence that such process had occurred.
But two days later, Special
Assistant to the President Bong Go said that a request for landing was
“received, processed, and cleared” by relevant Philippine government
agencies. Go explained that technical landings by foreign government
and commercial planes are done through close coordination by relevant
government agencies, “following established domestic procedure and in
consideration of existing agreements.” Presidential Spokesman Harry
Roque also issued a statement, saying that based on the records of the Civil
Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP), “the Chinese aircraft made a
technical stop in Davao City on June 8 for mere refueling. According
to the permit granted, the aircraft was bound for Cairns, Australia.”
Protection
for Duterte
If
the DOD was not privy to clearing the Chinese aircraft to land in Davao City,
it makes one wonder if Duterte has a secret understanding with Chinese
President Xi Jinping that would allow Chinese aircraft to land on Philippine
territory for refueling or any other logistical needs? Could this be
one of Duterte’s concessions to Xi who had promised Duterte during his trip to
Beijing last May that he’d protect Duterte from any plan to remove him from
office? When Duterte arrived in Manila from his Beijing trip, he
announced: “The assurances of Xi Jinping were very encouraging. ‘We will not
allow you to be taken out from your office, and we will not allow the
Philippines to go to the dogs’, Xi told me,” which begs the question: What
did Duterte promise Xi in return for Xi’s protection? Xi
wouldn’t put Duterte under his protective mantle unless Duterte was willing to
kowtow to his authority. Could it be that Duterte has placed his
country under the vassalage of China or as a protectorate of China?
Last June 12, Chinese Ambassador to the
Philippines Zhao Jianhua, who attended the Philippine Independence Day
celebration in Kawit, Cavite, dismissed fears and concerns over the landing of
Chinese aircraft in Davao City. He maintained that China followed
Philippine protocols regarding the aircraft’s landing in Davao
City.
On June 23, China did it again! The
same IL-76 cargo plane landed in Davao City. PLAAF sources said the
aircraft made a quick pit stop to refuel after participating in a military
exercise in New Zealand. Malacañang said that the refueling
was cleared by government agencies.
But while most
Philippine officials and journalists remain silent on the two refueling
incidents, Jose Antonio Custodio, a Filipino defense analyst and military
historian, told CNN Philippines’ The Source that it was a way
for China to “see how our reactions would be.” "They
could have refueled in those artificial islands [Chinese bases at the Mischief,
Fiery Cross, and Subi Reefs] they constructed in the seas they stole from
us. But they chose to do it in Davao," he said.
"Basically, they're probing us."
Conspiracy
theories
Custodio
doesn’t believe that China had obtained the necessary permissions and
clearances. He pointed out that the plane bore Chinese military insignia, which
means that it had to pass through an even higher level -- the Department of
Defense, AFP or the National Security Adviser. Citing reliable
military sources, Custodio claimed the Chinese aircraft was in Davao City for
“several days,” which was much longer than the time it would need to refuel.
There are a lot of questions, but no
answers. For instance: What did the aircraft or its crew does during
the time the aircraft was grounded for a few days? Were they on a classified or
secret mission? Was the aircraft a spy plane? Did they
bring some espionage or surveillance equipment to be used by Chinese spies
already in the country? Did they bring in a homing device or guidance
system to navigate Chinese aircraft, warships, missiles or
satellites? Did the crew secretly meet with Duterte?
It is a common knowledge that Davao City is
the de facto administrative capital of the country, which
explains why China is treating Davao City as the “seat of power,” not
Manila? With Duterte exercising his presidential duties from his
home in Davao City, Congress is isolated in Manila and detached from the goings
on of the Executive Branch, which is operating in Davao
City. Indeed, Manila was abound with rumors and conspiracy theories
since the Chinese aircraft landing in Davao City, which makes a lot of people
wonder: What is China up to?
Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV, a former Philippine
Navy officer and one of Duterte’s harshest critics, said the aircraft landing
in Davao City was “wrong in so many levels.” He questioned why of
all the airports in the region [Mindanao], the plane had to refuel in Davao
City, Duterte’s hometown.
He said, “This is not the first time such a
plane landed in Davao City” because a similar one was spotted there "few
weeks before [June 8]." He also said, “The fact that it’s a
cargo plane, most probably they unloaded some precious cargo. We’re trying to
verify on the ground what was unloaded." He also branded as a
"lie" the government's claim that the plane was in Davao to refuel,
noting that it was a cargo aircraft. “Where will this plane go from
Davao or where did it come from, except that Davao was the ultimate
destination?" he said.
At
a crossroads
Custodio
said that Philippine independence – or sovereignty -- is at a crossroads. “It
can choose the path to defend its interests, defend the sacrifices of our
forefathers who fought for freedom, or it can go this path and become a vassal
state of China,” he said.
“The thing with China is it knows it has its
foot in [already]. So [this time] it's going to bring its entire
body in," he added. "That's something we have to watch out [for]."
Surmise it to say, the refueling in Davao City
could have been be the first step in a series of maneuvers to pierce the
Philippines’ sovereignty. Indeed, China has already opened the
country’s backdoors in Davao City and established direct communication link
with Duterte. All China has to do now is send her troops on the
pretense of fighting ISIS in Mindanao. China has demonstrated that
its military aircraft and warships could intrude into Philippine territory at
will and the Philippine government wouldn’t do anything to stop her.
Xi Jinping knew that he has Duterte on a
string. Indeed, Duterte is at Xi’s beck and call. And
because of Duterte’s reluctance to go to war against China, if Xi tells him to
jump, Duterte would probably say, “How high, boss?” In other words, Philippine
sovereignty is rendered meaningless. As I mentioned in my recent
column, “Sovereignty without
security” (June 1, 2018), “What Duterte is now left
with is a sovereign country without security. But as a wise man once
said, ‘If you cannot defend and secure the independence of your country, then
you are not sovereign.’ If not, what are we then?”
And this brings the issue of sovereignty to the
fore, which is: Is President Duterte remiss in protecting the
country’s sovereignty?
(PerryDiaz@gmail.com)
(PerryDiaz@gmail.com)
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