PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
Perry Diaz
A
recent issue of the Philippines Today, headlines: “Duterte
warns China of war over oil, uranium.” I couldn’t believe what I
was reading. Was President Rodrigo Duterte bluffing? Or
did he finally find the courage to remind Chinese President Xi Jinping of the
Philippines’ claim in the West Philippine Sea (WPS)?
Although Duterte had insinuated a few times
before about war with China over oil exploration, he wasn’t taken
seriously. People would say, “He was just joking.” But
this time around, he seemed to be serious. He gave the warning in a
speech before the League of Municipalities on the Philippines (LMP), about two
months prior to Xi’s scheduled visit to the Philippines in
November. What gives?
Duterte considers Xi as a “good friend,” having
been able to get huge loans for his infrastructure projects. He told
his audience: “Mr. Xi Jinping, we also have a claim. You
know we have the award [U.N.’s arbitral tribunal ruling that awarded the
Philippines in June 2016]. But I will not insist on recovering the
award because it would result in a war, and it will be a massacre, I
know. But please be it noted that one day during my term, I will assert
(our rights).”
Does that mean that by asserting our rights,
he’ll go to war – a real war, not word war – against China?
Which
bring another question to the fore: Did Duterte play “offensive”
move at a time when Xi is scheduled to visit the Philippines in November? Could
it be that he’s posturing to gain positional advantage when he faces Xi to talk
or negotiate the issues that have been festering ever since Duterte abandoned
pursuing the arbitral award?
Checkmating Duterte
Surmise it is to say, if
Duterte were a good chess player, he would move his pieces in positions to
prevent Xi from moving his pieces forward within checkmating
distance. Xi now has to rethink of revising his playbook when he
arrives in the Philippines. He may have to deal with a leader who
has changed his tune and might not be too willing to agree or accede to his
proposal – or demands? – in relations to the Philippines’ claims in the WPS.
But
the problem is what Duterte told his audience that if there is war, it “would
result in a massacre,” a line he had repeatedly mentioned in the
past. This would weaken Duterte’s hand.
Besides, Xi is certain that Duterte will never
go to war against China, simply because the Philippines doesn’t have the means
to go war. War with China would entail the use of naval and
air forces in the contested waters. With no heavy warships and just
a dozen jet fighters, Duterte was right when he said that it would end in a
massacre of Philippine forces.
Duterte’s ace card
Okay,
so Duterte was bluffing… just joking again. However, Xi knows he
can’t go to war with the Philippines because Duterte has an ace card: the
U.S.-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT), which calls for each party to
come to the aid of the other in the event of an invasion from China or any
other country for that matter.
It's
interesting to note that the anti-American leftists in the Philippines have
tirelessly been demanding for the revocation of the Visiting Forces Agreement
(VFA) and the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA) with the
U.S.
But what baffles a lot of people is that the
leftists don’t demand the abrogation of the MDT. Why? Is
it suffice to say that the Filipino people – including the leftists -- treat
the MDT as an “insurance” from the threat of war by another country,
particularly China?
When the Philippine Senate rejected the renewal
of U.S. bases in the country in 1991 and the closing of the bases the following
year, China – within two years – occupied the Panganiban (Mischief)
Reef. The Philippine government couldn’t do anything to stop the
occupation. China could then have invaded the
country. But the MDT deterred her. Without it, the
Philippines would have fallen easily to Chinese invasion. The
“insurance” worked.
It’s interesting to note that the MDT also
covers any Philippine naval vessel that is attacked in the high
seas. That is why the BPS Sierra Madre, a rusty vessel of World War
II vintage, was purposely grounded at the Ayungin Shoal in 1999 with a
contingent of Philippine marines stationed on board to keep the Chinese at
bay.
China
had incessantly demanded that the Philippines remove the grounded Sierra
Madre. They even offered to haul it away for
free! Obviously, once the Sierra Madre is removed, they can
then occupy Ayungin Shoal without interference.
Malacca Dilemma
But
China isn’t ready to go to war against America. Not
yet. It would take many years for China to catch up militarily with
the U.S. But because of China’s dependence on foreign oil that
accounts for 80% of her oil consumption imported from the Middle East and
Africa, China is inflicted psychologically with what is called “Malacca
Dilemma.”
The “Malacca Dilemma” is a term coined by
former Chinese President Hu Jintao in 2003 on China’s over-reliance on the Malacca
Straits where her oil imports from the Middle East and Africa pass
through. A conflict in the region or war with the U.S. would effect
China’s geopolitical and energy strategies.
If war erupts between U.S. and China, the U.S.
can block the chokepoint at the mouth of the Strait of Malacca and the Indian
Ocean; thus, stopping all oil shipments to China. It is estimated
that China has strategic oil reserves that would last for only 10
days. Without oil China would be paralyzed and rendered useless militarily.
In my column, “Duterte’s red lines: Is
it a joke?” (June13, 2018), I wrote: “When Duterte told
Chinese President Xi Jinping during a recent trip to Beijing that the
Philippines intended to drill in the Recto Bank, Xi told him: ‘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! It must have hit Duterte like a double
whammy!
“In
an effort to placate Xi and maintain a friendly relationship, Duterte offered
to jointly explore and drill for oil in the Recto Bank on a 60-40 sharing deal.
“China has offered joint exploration and joint operation. And I said, maybe, we
give you [China] a better deal, 60-40,” Duterte told an audience on April 26.”
Clearly,
China wouldn’t go to war against the U.S. and, by extension, the
Philippines. China couldn’t afford the economic loss she would incur
if war erupts, which makes one wonder: How are the Philippines and China going
to play their geopolitical chess game when Xi visits the
Philippines? And who is bluffing: Duterte or Xi? Or both?
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