Senate must make stand on WPS activity – Drilon
MANILA — The Senate should play a more active role in the Philippines' foreign policy, Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon said in a radio interview yesterday.
"The Senate should have strong resolve. This is a challenge to the new leadership: We must assert the Senate's role in foreign relations. We must condemn this creeping invasion of our territory and sovereignty," Drilon said.
Drilon's statement comes after the reported deployment of long-range bombers to Woody Island in the South China Sea.
"Chinese bombers including the H-6K conduct takeoff and landing training on an island reef at a southern sea area," read China's state-run People's Daily said in a tweet.
According to Washington-based think tank Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative, China can use the H-6K bomber to cover most of the Southeast Asian region.
"Nearly all of the Philippines falls within the radius of the bombers, including Manila and all five Philippine military bases earmarked for development under the US-Philippines Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement," AMTI also said.
President Rodrigo Duterte, whose administration has chosen to focus on investments from and better relations with China and not on the 2016 ruling by an international arbitral tribunal that the regional giant's nine-dash-line claim has no basis in international law, has said there is little the Philippines can do about the situation now.
"What will we arm ourselves with if there's a war? Will we resort to slapping each other? I couldn't even buy myself a rifle. It was given to me. So how will we even fight with the Chinese?" the president of the Republic of the Philippines is quoted as saying in a speech in Cebu on Saturday.
Law experts have stressed that the Philippines can protest the buildup in the South China Sea or otherwise oppose China diplomatically without resorting to war, which the 1987 Constitution renounces as an instrument of national policy.
"We should assert our sovereignty. Not through war, we cannot do it that way. In other fora, we should continue our campaign to get back our islands that China has occupied," Drilon said in English and Filipino.
"We are asserting that Spratlys is part of our territory, and China is already there. They are already – we can say – occupying a part of the Philippine territory," he also said.