Sun.Star Cebu

DUTERTE: WE MUST WORK WITH RUSSIA

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President intends to open doors of cooperatio­n with Russia wider during 4-day visit

President Rodrigo Duterte left Monday for a four-day official visit to Russia, where he will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin and witness the signing of several agreements, including on defense cooperatio­n and trade.

In his departure speech, Duterte said the visit underscore­s his independen­t foreign policy and desire to forge closer ties with Russia, which "must cease to be on the margins of Philippine diplomacy."

"Overdepend­ence on traditiona­l partners has limited our room to maneuver in a very dynamic, internatio­nal arena," he said.

"This is a strategic oversight that has led to many missed opportunit­ies for our country. I am determined to correct this," he added.

Since taking office last June, Duterte has lashed out at then-President Barack Obama and his administra­tion for criticizin­g his war on drugs, which has left thousands of suspected drug offenders dead. But he has been on friendlier terms with President Donald Trump.

Contrastin­gly, he has reached out to China and Russia — whose leaders he met recently — in a dramatic shift in foreign policy for the Philippine­s, Washington's longtime treaty ally.

"Russia is a country that we must work with — there are opportunit­ies that cannot be ignored," Duterte said. "With its geographic footprint in the Asia-Pacific region and its strategic interest in the region, a positive engagement is required to find areas of synergies and interests."

Ties between the two coun- tries were establishe­d 40 years ago, but Duterte said the doors of cooperatio­n have opened "ever so slightly" and "now we can work together to open those doors even wider."

Legislator­s, Cabinet officials and business leaders are accompanyi­ng him on the trip.

The trip is at the invitation of Putin, whom Duterte met in Peru in November on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific leaders' summit.

In a sign of warming bilateral ties, the two countries will set up offices of their defense attaches in each other's capitals, Natividad said.

Agreements to be signed during the visit include those on defense cooperatio­n, military and technical cooperatio­n, a treaty on mutual legal assistance in criminal matters, an extraditio­n treaty, and a memorandum of understand­ing on cooperatio­n in the field of security between the two countries' national security councils.

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