The Manila Times

Two Aquinos lost us Philippine territory, Marcos acquired territory

- RIGOBERTO TIGLAO Email: tiglao.manilatime­s@gmail.com Facebook: Rigoberto Tiglao Twitter: @bobitiglao

got us nothing but nods of approval from the US. He instead stirred up China’s as well as Malaysia’s animosity which President Duterte mightily, and successful­ly, reversed.

I have written six columns since 2012 about what Aquino and the Yellow Cult have been unable to refute at all: that Aquino because of his hubris and ineptness lost us Scarboroug­h (Panatag) Shoal in 2012.

He is the only president to have lost Philippine territory.

Or maybe not. The weakening – or even effective abandonmen­t – of our claim to Sabah was due to his father Benigno Aquino, Jr. and the Liberal Party’s revealing in 1968 to the Malaysians and the world President Marcos’ covert plan to take over Sabah by force.

Sneaky Jabidah hoax

They did this in a very sneaky way by concocting— and then calling for a congressio­nal investigat­ion—the Jabidah hoax in which they claimed Muslim recruits for Marcos’ project mutinied and were subsequent­ly killed. Two months of investigat­ion by the Senate and the House of Representa­tives concluded that no such massacre occurred. Warned of the plan, Malaysia mobilized its forces to tighten its hold on Sabah. Worse it trained and funded what would be the Moro National Liberation Front, which ironically tried to violently secede Muslim areas from the Republic.

Fast forward four decades after Aquino, Jr.’s son, Benigno Aquino 3rd, becomes president: he loses Panatag Shoal because of his bungling. The following was the course of events:

April 10, 2012: Even as Panatag Shoal had been traditiona­lly an area where

reaching such a far- flung fishing site, Philippine Navy surveillan­ce ship board

the shoal’s lagoon. They try to arrest the

“harvesting endangered marine species.” However, two civilian China Maritime Surveillan­ce (CMS) ships come to their rescue and prevent the arrests.

April 11, 2012: Itching to try his new warship, President Aquino orders the frigate BRP Gregorio del Pilar – just “brand new” as the US coast guard had refurbishe­d it and turned it over to our navy in May 2011 – to confront the Chinese at Panatag. “What is important is we take care of our sovereignt­y. We cannot give [Scarboroug­h Shoal] away and we cannot depend on others but ourselves,” Aquino blustered.

April 12, 2012: Three CMS ships enter The number of CMS vessels in the days that follow increases to 10.

BRP Gregorio del Pilar – unexpected­ly – leaves the area, according to Navy Flag

“to replenish fuel and food provisions” in its base in La Union.

Lame excuse

That was a lame excuse. Aquino was told by Washington that sending a naval warship was a stupid move, as it made the Philippine­s appear as the aggressor. While CMS vessels have been practicall­y China’s muscle in enforcing its claims in the South China Sea, these are officially civilian, part of its Ministry of Transport’s Maritime Safety Administra­tion.

Aquino played into China’s hands as the Asian power claimed to the world that the Philippine­s had militarize­d the dispute by sending a “warship,” even though the vessel was a hand-me-down from the US Coast Guard. China, therefore, felt it had the right to retaliate and occupy the shoal.

When BRP Gregorio del Pilar leaves, Aquino orders a vessel from the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) and two Coast Guard vessels to remain near the entrance to the shoal’s lagoon. A stand-off ensues that lasted three weeks that May.

Late May to June 2: Aquino appoints Sen. Antonio Trillanes as his secret, special envoy and to go to China and talk with his contacts to resolve the standoff — without informing Foreign Affairs Secretatar­y Albert del Rosario. After his trip to Beijing, Trillanes tells Aquino that the Chinese agreed on a simultaneo­us withdrawal of the Chinese ships and the Philippine vessels.

June 4–10: Philippine vessels leave the lagoon, with Aquino claiming he was told by Del Rosario that American mediators got the Chinese to agree to a simultaneo­us withdrawal. The Chinese don’t leave the shoal, and instead sent more civilian maritime vessels. Trillanes was furious, claiming he was still talking to his Chinese contacts on the mechanics of the withdrawal.

No proof Chinese agreed

Chinese strategist­s must have been rolling on the ground with laughter at Aquino. They had brilliantl­y manipulate­d Trillanes and their US contacts to fool Aquino that they would withdraw their ships from Scarboroug­h if we did. They didn’t.

If the Congress then hadn’t been a total puppet of Aquino, it would have called for an investigat­ion into how we lost Philippine territory, and even had the President impeached.

A November 2014 study of the Center for Naval Analyses, a private think-tank for the US military, entitled “The South China Sea: Assessing US Policy and Options for the Future” reported:

“China resolved the sovereignt­y dispute with the Philippine­s over Scarboroug­h Shoal in 2012 when it establishe­d control over the shoal. Again, it is unlikely to relinquish it. The government of the Philippine­s is in no position to even begin to contemplat­e the use of force to recover Scarboroug­h, and the United States is not going to become involved in any attempt to expel the Chinese.”

Award ignored

Prodded by the US which provided Washington- based lawyers, Aqiuno in order to cover up his government’s bungling filed the UNCLOS case against China in January 2013. Whatever the purportedl­y favorable provisions of the “arbitratio­n award,” the Chinese – and the world, even Vietnam and Malaysia that are claimants to many islands and reefs in the South China Sea – have ignored the arbitratio­n award.

Such irony: It was Ferdinand Marcos, whom the Aquinos claim to have ruined the country, who acquired the only territory we have now in the South China Sea. Marcos simply grabbed in 1974 an area in the Spratlys, including its islands and reefs, naming it the Kalayaan Island Group and making it part of Palawan province. Marcos claimed the area was “terra nullus,” or lands no country claimed, which of course wasn’t true as both Vietnam and

when Tomas Cloma stumbled into the area and claimed it for his own.

And of course, Vietnam was than in a bloody civil war and couldn’t defend its claims. So was China, much poorer than us in 1974, and worse, in economic and political chaos because of Mao’s Great Proletaria­n Cultural Revolution.

That’s the way of the world. Internatio­nal law will be totally enforced maybe only in the next century. It’s been power and brains that have mattered in territoria­l disputes, with the Philippine­s unfortunat­ely having a president who really didn’t have either.

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