South China Morning Post

QUESTIONS RAISED OVER ADMIRAL’S ‘NEW MODEL’

Manila backs Alberto Carlos, saying he would not have approved a shoal deal, but critics doubt him in light of his time at a Chinese naval college

- Raissa Robles

A vice-admiral in the Philippine navy is at the centre of a geopolitic­al scandal after the Chinese embassy in Manila claimed to have an audio recording of him agreeing to a controvers­ial “new model” to manage conflict over a disputed shoal in the South China Sea.

Manila has denied that Vice-Admiral Alberto Carlos had approved the alleged deal that would limit the Philippine­s’ capacity from resupplyin­g its outpost in the Second Thomas Shoal.

The Philippine government and military have defended Carlos, but critics continue to question his ties to Beijing, in light of his attendance at China’s Naval Command College in 2008 where he was the first Filipino military officer to have completed a course there as part of an intergover­nmental programme.

Carlos is on an indefinite leave of absence from service, the military confirmed on Tuesday.

Local paper Palawan News, located in the same region where Wescom is based, reported that Carlos met Chinese envoy Huang Xilian on July 21, 2022 where he stressed the need for a “diplomatic approach” in resolving competing claims in the West Philippine Sea – Manila’s term for the section of the South China Sea that defines its maritime territory and includes its exclusive economic zone.

According to Palawan News, Carlos paid a courtesy call to Huang at the Chinese embassy in Makati City as he had attended the Chinese navy’s Command College in Nanjing.

Carlos apparently kept in touch with the embassy. Last Monday, Lian Jian, spokesman for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said the “new model” was reached “early this year … after multiple rounds of discussion­s through the diplomatic channel and AFP Wescom”.

The Philippine­s has accused China of trying to frame Carlos with fake evidence in the form of a transcript of one of his alleged conversati­ons with a Chinese diplomat.

According to an audio transcript shown to selected press members in Manila, Carlos confirmed when asked whether his superiors had approved the so-called new model.

The key points of the deal included a “1+1” model for both sides, meaning Manila would deploy a coastguard vessel and a resupply boat to the shoal, while China would launch one coastguard ship and a fishing boat.

Political analysts in the Philippine­s say China might be using Carlos as a “pawn” given his position as head of the Western Command.

“It’s part of the cognitive warfare of the [Chinese] military,” said Chester Cabalza, founding president of Manila-based think tank the Internatio­nal Developmen­t and Security Cooperatio­n.

On Friday, Philippine National Security Adviser Eduardo Ano called for Chinese diplomats to be expelled over the accusation­s against Carlos and urged a “serious penalty” for “repeated acts of engaging and disseminat­ion of disinforma­tion”.

This is not Carlos’ first brush with China.

Last December, Carlos and military chief Romeo Brawner Jnr, his 1989 batch mate at the Philippine Military Academy, were on board a vessel on a resupply mission to the outpost on the Second Thomas Shoal. During the trip, the vessel collided with a Chinese coastguard ship that fired high pressure water cannons at them.

On another resupply mission in February, Carlos sustained minor head injuries after the Chinese coastguard fired water cannons.

Former president Rodrigo Duterte appointed Carlos to head the Western Command in January 2022.

Analysts say Carlos’ academic background in China might have appealed to Duterte, who pivoted Philippine foreign policy from the United States and towards China.

In 2019, Carlos received the outstandin­g soldier of the year award from the Metrobank Foundation.

One of the award’s judges, Rock Ed Philippine­s founder Therese Gang Badoy-Capati, said she voted for Carlos because he “really stood out even back then”. Carlos had studied at the Chinese naval college and the US Naval Academy.

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