Gulf Today

Marcos as Philippine president a boon for China

- Tom Allard,

Marcos, the son and namesake of the country’s former dictator, has long-standing ties with China and is seeking a new deal with Chinese ruler Xi Jinping over the contested waters of the South China Sea

The decisive victory of Ferdinand Marcos Jr. in the Philippine­s’ presidenti­al election on Monday is set to re-shape the Southeast Asian country’s relations with China and the United States as he seeks closer ties with Beijing. Marcos, the son and namesake of the country’s former dictator, has long-standing ties with China and is seeking a new deal with Chinese ruler Xi Jinping over the contested waters of the South China Sea. Marcos’s relations with the United States, on the other hand, are complicate­d by a contempt of court order for his refusal to co-operate with the District Court of Hawaii, which in 1995 ordered the Marcos family to pay $2 billion of plundered wealth to victims of Marcos Sr.’s rule. The Philippine­s is a fulcrum of the geopolitic­al rivalry between the US and China, with its maritime territory encompassi­ng part of the South China Sea, a strategic and resource-rich waterway over which China also claims sovereignt­y.

In 2016, an arbitral tribunal constitute­d under the Internatio­nal Law of the Sea ruled in favour of the Philippine­s over China’s claim, a decision seized upon by other claimant states, as well as the U.S. and its allies concerned by China’s constructi­on of military installati­ons on islands in the waters. But in interviews during the election campaign, Marcos said the ruling was “not effective” because China did not recognise it. He would seek a bilateral agreement with China to resolve their difference­s, he said. “If you let the US come in, you make China your enemy,” he told DZRH Radio. “I think we can come to an agreement (with China). As a mater of fact, people from the Chinese embassy are my friends. We have been talking about that.” A spokespers­on for the Chinese foreign ministry said on Wednesday the two countries, “facing each other across the waters, enjoy a longstandi­ng traditiona­l friendship” and that China remains “commited to good-neighbourl­iness” under the incoming president. Antonio Carpio, the former Supreme Court Judge who led the Philippine­s’ legal team at the arbitral tribunal, said Marcos’s stance was a “betrayal”. “He’s taken the side of China against the Philippine­s,” he said.

Rommel Banlaoi, a Manila-based security expert, said Marcos, also known as Bongbong, wanted friendlier ties with China but not at the expense of ceding territory. “He’s open to direct consultati­ons and bilateral negotiatio­ns with China to setle their difference­s,” he said. “He is willing to explore areas of pragmatic co-operation with China, including the developmen­t of natural gas and oil in the West Philippine­s Sea.”

The West Philippine­s Sea is within the Philippine­s’ exclusive economic zone in the South China Sea, but is also claimed by China. There have been repeated clashes between vessels belonging to the two countries in the area in recent years. Marcos is also keen to atract investment from China for his ambitious infrastruc­ture agenda, said Banlaoi. “The Marcoses have very fond memories of their trips to China.” Marcos’s father ruled the Philippine­s for 20 years until 1986 and was a close US ally but began engaging with China ater diplomatic relations were establishe­d in 1975. A year earlier, Marcos Jr., then 18, accompanie­d his mother Imelda to Beijing in a historic trip that paved the way for the diplomatic detente. Footage of the trip shows the beaming youngster meeting Chinese leader Mao Zedong. It was the first of many visits. In a cable sent to Washington D.C. in March 2007, obtained by Wikileaks, the US embassy reported that Marcos “travelled frequently to the PRC in 2005 and 2006 to drum up business”.

A month ater the cable was writen, China opened a consulate in Laoag City, capital of the family’s fiefdom in the province of Ilocos Norte, where Marcos was governor. Laoag City has a population of just 102,000 in a country of almost 110 million people and is one of two consulates outside the capital Manila.

The United States has upped its engagement in Southeast Asia, and the Philippine­s, in recent months, to combat China’s “coercion and aggression” in the region. In March and April, more than 5,000 U.S. military personnel undertook exercises with their Philippine counterpar­ts, the largest in seven years.

Renato Cruz De Castro, an internatio­nal affairs analyst at De la Salle university in Manila, said the manoeuvres highlighte­d how strategic imperative­s had forced outgoing Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte to build strong relations with Washington despite his hostility to the country’s former coloniser. Soon ater he was elected, Duterte called for the Philippine­s’ “separation” from the U.S. and courted China.

“Duterte realised that, whether you appease or challenge China, it doesn’t mater. They are still going to try to take your maritime territory,” he told Reuters.

“Marcos might have some issues with the United States (but) he will face constraint­s from his bureaucrat­s and the armed forces who really value the alliance.” U.S. State Department spokespers­on Ned Price said during a press briefing on Tuesday it was too early to comment on the results of the Philippine­s election or the impact it might have on relations, but said “we look forward to renewing our special partnershi­p” and working with a new administra­tion in Manila.

“As friends, as partners, as allies we’ll continue to collaborat­e closely to advance a free and open, connected, prosperous, secure and resilient Indo-pacific region,” Price said. “We’ll also continue...to promote respect for human rights and the rule of law, which is fundamenta­l to U.S. relations with the Philippine­s.”

Marcos hasn’t visited the United States for 15 years, fearful of the consequenc­es given he and his mother are facing a contempt of court ruling and a $353 million fine. That’s on top of the $2 billion payout he and his mother have been ordered to pay to 9,539 human rights victims, of which only $37 million has been recovered, according to the lawyer who launched the class action, Robert Swit.

“Somebody might think and say, ‘OK, Let’s jail this person’. They can do that,” Marcos told a Philippine­s journalist, Anthony Taberna, in August. “We don’t take that risk anymore.”

A spokesman for Marcos did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on his US travel plans as president. The US State Department and Department of Justice did not respond to requests for comment about whether Marcos would be granted diplomatic immunity if he visited. Swit, for his part, expected that he would get the customary immunity.

“Bongbong Marcos’s apparent victory will be met with disappoint­ment among many in Washington,” said Greg Poling, director of Southeast Asia Studies at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

“But it doesn’t change the fact that the Usphilippi­nes alliance is more vital than ever and the United States needs to continue working to deepen it.” Banlaoi said Marcos would seek to preserve the US alliance but keep his options open. “Depending on how the bilateral relationsh­ip of the Philippine­s and the US proceeds under BBM, renegotiat­ing the mutual defence treaty remains an option,” he said, using another nickname for Marcos.

 ?? Reuters ?? Supporters of Marcos Jr. celebrate outside the headquarte­rs in Mandaluyon­g City, Philippine­s, on Tuesday.
Reuters Supporters of Marcos Jr. celebrate outside the headquarte­rs in Mandaluyon­g City, Philippine­s, on Tuesday.

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