Is Duterte reaching out to Uncle Sam?
>> Sunday, August 12, 2018
PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
Perry Diaz
For the most part of his
administration, President Rodrigo Duterte has manifested and demonstrated his Anti-American
policies, which is based on what he claimed as his personal hatred of the
Americans. Indeed, on several occasions, Duterte threatened to sever
relations with the U.S. including the expulsion of American troops who were
helping the ill-equipped Philippine military fight terrorism in Mindanao.
When he visited China in
October 2016, Duterte, addressing his Chinese audience, called for a military
and economic "separation" from the United States. “From now on,” he
told his audience, “it’s the Philippines, Russia and China against the
world.”
And what made him think
that he was at par with Russia and China? He must have been daydreaming,
bedazzled by the display of Chinese opulence. But would China’s Xi
Jinping and Russia’s Vladimir Putin take Duterte as an equal partner, or would
the two superpowers accept and treat Duterte as a “water boy”?
Upon Duterte’s return to
Manila, he lashed out anew at the U.S., saying she could forget a bilateral
defense deal. He said that he hated having foreign troops in his
country and told the U.S. not to treat his country “like a dog with a
leash.”
Duterte, who had
expressed his admiration for Xi –- “He is a great president,” he once said –
indicated that he would raise the Permanent Court of Arbitration’s
(PCA) arbitration award -- which favored the Philippines -- with Xi at a
latter date when bilateral relations between the two countries has
improved. He was hoping that China would provide low-interest loans
and infrastructure investments in billions of dollars.
‘We’ll go to war’
Seven months later, in
May 2017, Duterte visited Beijing again. Duterte discussed with Xi
the PCA arbitral award. The PCA ruling clarified Philippine
sovereign rights in her 200-mile Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) including
the Reed Bank, which is just 85 nautical miles off the Philippines’
coast. The PCA ruling also invalidated China’s “nine-dash line,”
which delineated her claim over most of the South China Sea.
At their meeting,
Duterte told Xi: “We intend to drill oil there, if it’s yours, well,
that’s your view, but my view is, I can drill the oil, if there is some inside
the bowels of the earth because it is ours.” Xi
responded: “We’re friends, we don’t want to quarrel with you, we want to
maintain the presence of warm relationship, but if you force the issue, we’ll
go to war.”
Whoa! That
was blunt! In no uncertain terms, Xi reminded Duterte to stay out of
the South China Sea! Duterte wasn’t prepared to hear
that. Indeed, it was a rude awakening for him. He
must have felt like the sky had fallen down on him.
Benham Rise
Since then, the
Philippines stayed clear of Chinese vessels seen in the South China Sea and the
Benham Rise, an underwater region larger than Luzon in the Philippine
Sea. Chinese spy ships were also observed in the Benham Rise, a
clear sign that China has set her eyes on the mineral-rich region.
In my
column, “China sets eyes on Benham Rise” (September 30, 2016), I
wrote: “In February 2016, the Philippines’ Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic
Resources (BFAR) reported that several Chinese ships were seen in the Benham
Rise. The following July, China Daily published a report about China’s
“secret undersea exploration” in the Benham Rise area. The report
said that China discovered massive mineral deposits. It also said
that the volume of natural gas deposits in the area was at par with what was
discovered in the Spratly Islands.”
If China decides to
claim all or part of Benham Rise, the Philippines would be helplessly
unprepared to defend it. And China knows that. It’s just
a matter of time for China to make her move, which begs the
question: How can the Philippines defend her territory from Chinese
invasion? The answer is: No, she can’t, which would bother Duterte
to no end.
Reaching out
On May 20, 2018, a
high-powered Philippine delegation went to Hawaii to meet with U.S Pacific
Command (PACOM) Chief Admiral Harry Harris Jr. The delegation consisted of:
Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea, Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA)
Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano, Department of Defense (DOD) Secretary Delfin
Lorenzana, Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) Secretary Eduardo
Año, Philippine Ambassador to the U.S. Jose Manuel Romualdez, and
Permanent Representative to the United Nations Teodoro Locsin Jr.
After the meeting, the
DFA announced: "The Philippines and the United States have reaffirmed
their firm resolve to bolster their enduring alliance anchored on common values
and interest, historic ties, and the Mutual Defense Treaty, in high-level
discussions in Honolulu. The Philippine delegation had a very
substantive exchange with Admiral Harris on regional challenges and both sides
agreed that the alliance remains consequential to the preservation of regional
stability and development.”
The mention of the
U.S.-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) signifies the two allies’
readiness to defend each other, which begs the question: Did they discuss
the mechanism of invoking the MDT in the event China goes to war against the
Philippines?
The meeting with PACOM
officials came in the wake of reports that China has installed missiles on
Mischief (Panganiban) Reef in the Spratly Islands, which China grabbed in 1994,
two years after the Philippine Senate closed all U.S. bases in
the country.
On June 21, 2018, in
another diplomatic move, DFA Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano led a delegation to
Washington, DC, which included Ambassador to the U.S. Jose Manuel Romualdez and
National Security Adviser (NSA) Hermogenes Esperon, Jr. They met
with U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
The two diplomats agreed
to work closely together to further reinforce the partnership between the
Philippines and the United States. They also explored opportunities
to enhance bilateral trade, and “increase security cooperation.”
While the meeting
appeared to be cordial by diplomatic standards, the haste with which it was
arranged suggests that there was urgency to meet with
Pompeo. With China’s deployment of missiles and aircraft
on the reclaimed and militarized Mischief Reef, Manila would be within minutes
of striking distance of Chinese missiles. That’s is too close for
comfort, which gives Duterte sleepless nights.
What’s cooking?
It’s pretty
obvious that something is cooking. The visit of several members of
Duterte’s National Security Team – DFA Secretary Cayetano, DOD
Secretary Lorenzana, and NSA Esperon – to Washington, DC to meet with U.S.
State and Defense officials to discuss closer US-Philippines bilateral
relations, was a far cry from when Duterte expressed disdain and disapproval of
the Philippines’ relationship with the U.S, including the stationing of
American troops on Philippine soil, which makes one wonder: What prompted
Duterte’s sudden change of heart in his attitude towards
America? Could it be presumed that China’s creeping invasion of
Philippine territory is a big factor in swaying Duterte away from China and
reach out to the Philippines’ century-old ally, Uncle Sam?
During the Philippine-US
Friendship Day last July 4 in Manila, reporters asked U.S. Ambassador to the
Philippines Sung Kim about the prospects of a second meeting between Duterte
and U.S. President Donald Trump. Kim responded that both the
Philippines and the U.S. have “strong interest” in pursuing Duterte’s visit to
Washington, DC.
Kim mentioned that Trump
had invited Duterte to the White House during a phone conversation in May
2017. He said that it’s just a question of scheduling, and noted
that Duterte and Trump have a “strong relationship.”
Last July 27, 2018,
presidential spokesman Harry Roque confirmed that a visit of Duterte to the
U.S. and another meeting with Trump are being worked out. Earlier,
Duterte said that his trip to the U.S. upon the invitation of his “friend”
Trump “has something to do with the schedule” and “not because of anybody or
any place there.”
This is quite the
contrary to when Duterte vowed never to set foot on American
soil. But as the saying goes: “There are no permanent
friends or permanent
enemies, only permanent interests.” And if there is
one “permanent interest” shared by the Philippines and America, it’s the South
China Sea. (PerryDiaz@gmail.com)
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