PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
Perry Diaz
While
I personally believe that China is a threat to Philippine sovereignty, a lot of
opinion makers seem to think otherwise. What’s the matter, folks? Are you
still wearing your “nationalist” blinders or is it
simply you can’t see beyond your noses?
First, we isolated ourselves when the framers of the 1987
Constitution and inserted a
provision that bans the stationing of foreign troops in the country. Yet,
the American bases as Clark Field, Subic Bay, Sangley
Point, and a few others remained. Then in 1990, the Philippine Senate –
by a 12-11 vote – did not renew the American Bases Agreement, which in effect
evicted the Americans from the Philippines. The 12 senators called themselves
the “Magnificent 12” and in a display of bravura
raised their clenched fists in victory. Philippines is now truly
independent, they mused.
But then-President Cory Aquino, who promised to “kick out”
the American bases when she assumed the presidency, had a change of heart. In an attempt to reverse the Senate vote,
Aquino planned to lead a march to the Senate Building to save the treaty, which
she considered vital to the interests of the country. It did not
materialize. It was too late.
American
base closures
Clark Air Base was abandoned in 1991 -- a year ahead of
schedule -- due to the massive damage done by the Mt. Pinatubo eruption.
On November 24, 1992, the U.S. flag was lowered in Subic Bay Naval Base for the
last time. But the U.S.-Philippines Mutual Defense
Treaty (MDT) is still in effect, albeit inutile due to the constitutional ban
on foreign troops. In 1994, two years after the U.S. bases closed, China
grabbed Panganiban (Mischief) Reef in the middle of the night.
Then-President Fidel Ramos’ administration filed an aide-memoire and a diplomatic protest
against Beijing, which were ignored.
In November 1996, then-Chinese President Jiang Zemin,
during his state visit to the Philippines, proposed joint exploration of the
resource-rich Spratly Islands.
But Ramos knew that such joint
exploration would mean submission to Chinese hegemony in the South China
Sea. He told Jiang he would only agree to it if other countries agreed to
it too. Nobody did.
Eighteen
years later, China grabbed six other reefs in the Spratlys
and took soil from Mindanao to build artificial islands around them. They
then built air and naval bases on the reclaimed islands.
Today, aircraft, missiles, and warships are deployed to
these bases, which are within striking distance to any parts of the Philippines. It’s like a sword of Damocles
hanging over Manila.
***
During
President Rodrigo Duterte’s visit to China in 2017, he told Chinese
President Xi Jinping: “We intend to drill oil there [Spratly Islands], 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 bluntly told Duterte, “There would be war if Manila tried to enforce an
arbitration ruling and drill for oil in a disputed part of the South China Sea.”
It must have broken Duterte’s heart when Xi – whom he
blindly idolized – pointedly threatened him with war! Duterte backed off
and never talked about it again.
Broken
promises
In
my column, “China
First or Filipino First?” (February 21, 2020), I said: “When Xi visited the Philippines in 2018,
Duterte and Xi signed 29 deals in a framework agreement that set the stage for
a joint oil and gas exploration in the South China Sea. The agreement was based
on the $24-billion investment pledges Xi made in
2016. In effect Duterte gave away sovereign rights to the disputed area.
It’s no longer exclusively owned by the Philippines, which makes one wonder:
What did Duterte get in return? Nothing yet. And at the rate things
have been moving, it led some to believe that the
loan deals could be a case of ‘broken promises.’ It could also be a
‘policy of appeasement’ toward China, hoping that China would soon deliver its
part of the bargain.
“But what is appalling is a stipulation in the framework agreement that Chinese businesses would be employing Chinese
nationals only. As the number of Chinese workers increase in number, the
same number of Filipino workers are displaced. A case in point is
construction and Pogos – Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators– that are exclusively employing Chinese from Mainland China.”
The
good, the bad, and the ugly
It’s
interesting to note that some Filipino journalists’ mindsets are fixated on the
Philippines’ sovereignty status. They tend to believe that the Chinese are good, the Filipinos are bad, and the Americans are
ugly.
Yes,
I remember the movie, “The Ugly American.” Merriam-Webster dictionary
defines it as: “An American in a foreign country whose behavior is
offensive to the people of that country.” Although
it might be true to a small minority of Americans, the majority is friendly and
respectful of others. But one has to know them to truly appreciate their
candidness and directness, often mistaken for arrogance. Yet, in today’s
cultural diversity, Filipinos – according to various
polls – love Americans more than any other nationalities.
Could it be that Filipinos love America
because it’s the land of freedom-loving people? In contrast, Chinese live
under a godless communist authoritarian regime that suppresses
freedom and institutes oppressive laws. And Filipinos know what freedom
is. They suffered under the martial regime of the late dictator Ferdinand
Marcos for 21 years. In other words, a communist regime is anathema to the
freedom-loving Filipinos. Surmise it to say,
that’s the reason I believe why Filipinos mistrust China.
Creeping invasion
There were several incidents that reinforced
my belief of China’s creeping invasion. First was China’s incursion and
takeover of Panganiban Reef 1994. Second was China’s occupation of
Scarborough Shoal in 2012. Third was the nine-dash-line that China arbitrarily imposed on about 80% of the South China Sea that
includes most of the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone (EEZ) including the
Spratly Islands.
Fourth was China’s non-recognition of the U.N.
Arbitral Award that invalidated the nine-dash-line in
2016. Fifth was the building of seven artificial islands around reefs in
the Spratly Islands. These are several incidents in which China took
possession of slices of Philippine territory, which some Filipino journalists
refused to acknowledge.
These journalists
subscribe to the notion that China is not our enemy, America is. One of
them said that the senators who voted for a resolution that rejected Duterte’s
decision to abrogate VFA before the Supreme Court “want to go back to the days
of [American] imperial hegemony.”
As far as I know, American imperial hegemony ended in
1946 when the U.S. left its last colony, the Commonwealth of the
Philippines. The Philippines has been self-governing since then but their
alliance has endured until now.
But Mother America
did not leave the Philippines without providing security from foreign
invaders. After helping the government repel the Huk communist rebellion
during the early days of the Republic, the MDT was signed in 1951 to provide
military aid to the fledgling Philippine Armed
Forces.
The MDT continued to protect the Philippines from communist
threats from the Maoist New People’s Army (NPA), who took over the Huk movement
after its defeat under the government of the late president Ramon Magsaysay.
By 1990, the young
Republic matured into adulthood. Cory Aquino came to power in the People
Power revolution of 1986 on the shoulders of leftists and their oligarch
supporters. As a result, anti-American sentiments grew and the Senate
became the battleground for those who harbored
grudges against the American “imperialists.” They voted not to renew the bases
agreement. The rest is history.
America was never a threat to Philippine
sovereignty. But without the Philippines’ military alliance with the US,
its flanks are wide open, which makes it vulnerable
to Chinese machination and aggression. And without security, the Philippines’
sovereignty is indefensibly fragile. Indeed, China is now the new threat
to Philippine sovereignty. And they’re only 12 miles away from our shores. Beyond is the disputed South China
Sea.
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