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North Korea and defending the West Philippine Sea

- JEMY GATDULA

It started out with what appeared at first to be an earthquake. Just that the earthquake, measuring 6.3 on the Richter scale and lasting around 10 seconds, was only 10 kilometers deep and took place at Kimchaek, a known area where North Korea conducts nuclear tests.

Then it became clear: the North Korean government congratula­ted itself on a successful hydrogen bomb detonation, the sixth, and against the expressed internatio­nal proscripti­on to do so.

The hydrogen bomb’s power can reach levels of thousands of kilotons, able to be detonated at high altitudes, and — with interconti­nental ballistic missiles — reach mainland US.

More importantl­y, the components were reportedly indigenous, such that North Korea need not import, and thus able to produce any number of nuclear weapons it wants without foreign assistance.

Internatio­nal condemnati­on was swift and US Defense Secretary James Mattis warned that any attack on the US or any of its allies will be met with a “massive military response.”

While Japan’s Foreign Minister Taro Kono and the US State Secretary Rex Tillerson called for fresh sanctions, Mattis dryly stated that while the US is not looking for the “total annihilati­on” of North Korea, it has “many options to do so.”

But this article is not about North Korea, of which the Philippine­s is bizarrely its third largest trading partner.

This is about the Philippine­s and our territoria­l sea.

Because the North Korean issue revealed something about the Philippine­s: that it practicall­y no longer plays a significan­t factor in internatio­nal calculatio­ns.

What if the Philippine­s is no longer as militarily and strategica­lly important as it was back in World War II?

After all, with the US having longer ranged weaponry and other dependably wealthy allies, what does it need the Philippine­s for?

To back up a bit, on Aug. 19 Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonio Carpio made a statement on an alleged “invasion” of Philippine territory:

“[ China is now occupying Sandy Cay]. This is worse than what happened in Scarboroug­h Shoal.” It was not even part of China’s “discredite­d historic nine- dashed line claim.” Sandy Cay emerged within the territoria­l sea of a Philippine territory. If Sandy Cay becomes Chinese territory, it will reduce by a third or more Pag-asa’s territoria­l sea. It will also prevent the Philippine­s from extending the territoria­l sea of Pag-asa to include Subi Reef. By any yardstick, this is seizure of Philippine territory.”

Assuming such is true, what then can be done?

Calls for filing another case against China were made, of course. But in practical terms, such really doesn’t do anything.

The key assumption people always had is that the Pacific areas being disputed with China are of military and economic importance to the US, such that it will not allow China’s dominance over the same.

But what if the assumption is wrong? What if the Philippine­s is no longer as militarily and strategica­lly important as it was back in World War II?

For one, Australia- China Relations Institute James Laurenceso­n pointed out during a workshop earlier this year that:

“The $ 5.3- trillion figure, which had then been repeated by numerous commentato­rs, appeared to be a ‘considerab­le overestima­te.’ He said 70% of global trade was carried by sea, with the world merchandis­e trade in 2011 amounting to $17.8 trillion. This implied that around 43% of total seaborne trade went through the South China Sea. Laurenceso­n said this claim was ‘extremely difficult to reconcile’ because many of the world’s most prominent bilateral trade relationsh­ips were dominated by seaborne trade yet did not involve the South China Sea.”

Finally, “Laurenceso­n said the US trade that might cross the South China Sea was that with ASEAN, yet the US Census Bureau listed this as only amounting to $200 billion annually and included not just goods shipped by sea but also air trade”.

Then there’s Dr. Brendan Taylor of the Australian National University’s Strategic and Defense Studies Center, who stated that the area being a dangerous “flashpoint” is actually a myth: “First, East Asia’s traditiona­l flashpoint­s — Taiwan, the Korean Peninsula, and the East China Sea — stand a significan­tly higher prospect of combusting into broader, region-wide conflict. Second, China’s interests in the South China Sea are often overstated, and Beijing will continue to favor options short of military force to advance what interests it does have in this region. Third, the balance of military power in the South China Sea is not shifting against the United States at the rate many pundits suggest, rendering overblown the prospects for Washington being drawn into war with China to defend the credibilit­y of its Asian alliances.”

From economics to demographi­cs to politics (domestic or internatio­nal), frankly, time is on the US’ side.

It doesn’t need a war with China, they can just wait it out and let China weaken or implode due to its inherent problems.

Leaving the Philippine­s on its own.

Now, how we develop a short and long-term foreign and security policy factoring the aforementi­oned possibilit­ies requires sophistica­tion undisplaye­d by the last and (so far) this administra­tion.

 ?? JEMY GATDULA is a Senior Fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constituti­onal philosophy and jurisprude­nce. jemygatdul­a@yahoo.com www.jemygatdul­a. blogspot.com facebook.com/jemy.gatdula T ??
JEMY GATDULA is a Senior Fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constituti­onal philosophy and jurisprude­nce. jemygatdul­a@yahoo.com www.jemygatdul­a. blogspot.com facebook.com/jemy.gatdula T

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