Business World

The appeal that Manila needs to make

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Julie Bishop, Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade, landed in Manila last Thursday to make her case for a rules-based internatio­nal order in the Asia Pacific, prompting an internatio­nal observer to remark that Bishop “said what Manila needs to, but won’t.” Despite Chinese intransige­nce over the West Philippine Sea, the Duterte administra­tion has looked the other way, claiming that any attempt to reinforce the internatio­nal ruling would be futile in the face of Chinese power.

PHILIPPINE INTERESTS AND THE RULES-BASED ORDER

Foreign Minister Bishop refrained from making any direct comment on the current conduct of Philippine foreign policy, noting only that any country — including Australia — would be expected to pursue its national interests. And yet, the rules-based order that she refers to is in all of our interests. All states, large or small, are better served by working within a stable, secure framework of rules when resolving disputes, preventing difficult situations from getting out of hand, and thereby preserving the peace and stability that has allowed Asia to ride a wave of economic growth and developmen­t. The order enables the Philippine­s to assert its rights through anything but force.

The need to protect a rulesbased order is even stronger when rising powers begin to test their limits. Even China has benefitted from the protection of this order — its exports protected by the World Trade Organizati­on ( WTO), its nationals by the United Nations (UN) and its resolution­s, and the sanctity of its rightful borders by other powers’ mutually recognized respect for its sovereignt­y. China could, of course, enforce its own borders by force — and it has, more than once. But in each case, whether with India in 1971 or with Vietnam in 1979, China spent blood and treasure without achieving the definitive resolution­s that would come years later, when the angry memories had passed and a new generation of leaders were ready to play by the rules.

DEFEATISM OPENS THE DOOR TO ABUSE

The Philippine­s must avoid giving China a free pass over its poor neighborli­ness, at best, and continued assertiven­ess, at worst. Defeatist attitudes at the top of this country are not solutions — they only fuel the resentment and suspicions that preclude our two countries finding a mutually agreeable and dignified exit option.

If we described our rightful claims in the West Philippine Sea as belonging within our national

“home,” the way we respond to continued or future trespassin­g will spell the difference between letting a burglar pick a series of locks versus simply leaving the front door wide open. Maybe a particular­ly persistent trespasser would work barge in anyway, but raising criticism, initiating legal action, and sending the patrols that we can would make it a lot more difficult for a burglar to take his spoils and enjoy them.

This is also why Bishop’s message carries so much weight. The Philippine­s is a relatively small power compared to China, leaving it with fewer cards to play when debating the what to do over Scarboroug­h Shoal and the West Philippine Sea. The legal and moral significan­ce of the Philippine victory at the Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n at the Hague has only thrown the terrible consequenc­es of President Duterte’s defeatism into stark relief. Instead of installing more locks, President Duterte has seemingly decided to throw the country’s doors wide open to maritime predation on our sovereign rights.

THE POWER THAT CHINA WILL BE

It is true that China is bigger, wealthier, and more powerful than the Philippine­s. But we should not conclude that nothing more can be done and, in so doing, turn our backs on the rules-based order that remains our strongest — if not our only — source of leverage in this longrunnin­g dispute. China will keep rising, as is its right. But should it rise to dominate its neighbors? Or should it instead reinforce the rules-based internatio­nal order that continues to protect it?

In recent days, the South Korean decision to deploy an American missile defense system has fanned the flames of a Chinese backlash against Korean culture and commerce. To many Chinese, the situation in South Korea not only damages their national security, but also calls to mind the deep resentment­s in China’s past. And yet, despite its angers, the country is not shaping up to be any different from those it criticizes most. As China continues to rise, it needs to be asked and to ask itself what power it will be.

In the long run, China’s response will play a vital role in shaping the future of the region, especially for all of us who live and work here. The better angels of our nature must prevail for our leaders to live up to their responsibi­lities and steer us safely toward greater growth and prosperity, not just in Beijing, but also in Tokyo, Seoul, Washington, Canberra, and Manila.

VICTOR ANDRES “DINDO” C. MANHIT is the founder and managing director of the Stratbase Group and president of its policy think tank, Albert del Rosario Institute for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies (ADRi). Prof. Manhit is a former chair and retired associate professor of Political Science of De La Salle University. He has authored numerous papers on governance, political, and electoral reforms.

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