The Freeman

Window dressing

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President Rodrigo Duterte delivered a monumental message before the United Nations Organizati­on general assembly, few days ago. To me, a professed unbeliever of his leadership, it was an almost perfect speech as to become an awesome source of national pride to all of us, Filipinos (meaning, including me). Not only was it written and therefore read, in a form that approximat­es the highest diplomatic standards, it, more importantl­y, hews along the tenets of internatio­nal law. When Duterte spoke of the decision of the internatio­nal arbitral tribunal acknowledg­ing the sovereign rights of our country over some islands in the West Philippine Sea as against China’s Nine-Dash Line, he harkened to the call of the millions of our countrymen to uphold what is our legal territoria­l right. He was not and could not go wrong. After all, an internatio­nal body so ruled.

The president could not be wrong in the declaratio­n he made before the UN. To assert, among other matters, that the decision of the arbitral tribunal is now part of a compendiou­s and expanding body of maritime law and jurisprude­nce, demonstrat­es a brand new Duterte fealty to the rule of law. My God, he rekindled my diminishin­g idea of public internatio­nal law. Duterte was and will continue to be correct in this, his UN message. In effect, he alerts all other sovereign states, the People’s Republic of China, among them, that we are poised to invoke what has been legally determined. That we own the islands dotting the West Philippine Sea is a now such a settled issue that there is nothing that can perceptive­ly challenge its validity. Negatively speaking, the Nine-Dash Line assertions of China which tended to cast doubt on our territoria­l claims is without legal basis. China’s installing military facilities in this area certainly transgress­es our territoria­l rights as it violates transnatio­nal maritime trade.

To many among us, the president clarified an earlier leadership uncertaint­y. For more than three years starting at the beginning of his presidency, Duterte’s stance on this issue was marked with troubling vagueness. His friendline­ss with Communist China was too obvious. To ordinary citizens like me, Duterte appeared to develop a preference for China over our national interest. His pronounced refusal to benefit from the ruling handed down by the tribunal seemed to indicate his disregard of the legal adjudicati­on in our favor.

While it seems to me that there is a perceptibl­e change in our president’s internatio­nal color, I cannot help but be wary. This is caused by a historical fact. In the early 1980s, I came across the term “window dressing”. An opinion column of a then leading-business daily wrote about the figures of the economic performanc­e of the Philippine­s in the period. In all honesty, I didn’t quite understand the full impact of the article principall­y because I had no economics background which, apparently, the term is a part of. Hoping to understand better the article, I did a little research and from what I read, I realized that window dressing meant a clever but actually misleading presentati­on of something. In the context of the write-up, it was a projection of a badly-performing economy in a better imagery. Whatever rosy pictures of the country’s economy government fiscal officers attempted to show were, in fact, false concoction­s.

What Duterte did was a case of political window dressing. He could not deliver a speech that would accept China’s incursion into our territory because that would put him on the proverbial spot. The internatio­nal hostility he would create in admitting that the military installati­ons built by China in our islands would keep internatio­nal peace would only generate turmoil. Yes, Duterte could only do a window dressing.

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