The Philippine Star

Trump lauds Du30 grisly drug drive?

- By FEDERICO D. PASCUAL Jr.

IT IS hard to swallow the Malacañang line that US President-elect Donald Trump praised or endorsed President Rodrigo Duterte’s drug war that has killed some 5,000 suspects in the past five months.

We will believe the story only if the incoming US President himself confirms having told Duterte he was waging his bloody narcotics campaign “the right way” – or if Malacañang or the White House releases the unedited transcript of the conversati­on.

Even the duration of the seven-minute Duterte-Trump chat is being massaged to the last second, with some Palace types rounding it up to 10 minutes, presumably on the theory that the time Trump had devoted to it indicates how high he held the caller in esteem.

(During a past unlamented regime, a call at the Oval Office was rated by, among other details, how long the US President chatted with the state visitor from Manila. So the caller would keep the conversati­on running while an aide recorded the time lapse for the press release.)

Trump is obviously on a PR offensive. A transcript will show also how many times he used such fulsome adjectives as “great” and “fantastic.” The descriptio­ns roll out of his mouth so profusely that they sound like hardly meaning anything.

Before Duterte’s boys start packing their travel bags, they should also be advised that when heads of government talk/meet as in summits and phone chats, it is de rigueur to invite their counterpar­t to pay a visit naman – and they respond with a reciprocal invitation.

If all government leaders took seriously the courtesy invitation, Trump would probably be busy acting as grand receptioni­st at least twice a week, leaving him not much time to running the US government and his global business empire.

After he put down the hot line Friday evening, Duterte excitedly told all and sundry that Trump had asked him to inform the tycoon whenever the Filipino executive was in New York.

This political gesture reminds us of a former Makati mayor then planning to run for president who always told fellow local executives from the provinces to make sure they called him when they were in the big city so he could attend to their requiremen­ts. It almost worked.

The Philippine president made the regulation pre-arranged call Friday evening to congratula­te Trump on his victory. Trump in turn reportedly wished him “success” in his controvers­ial crackdown on drug dealers and users.

Duterte recalled in a statement: “He (Trump) was quite sensitive also to our worry about drugs. And he wishes me well... in my campaign and he said that... we are doing it as a sovereign nation, the right way.” An aide described the chat as “very engaging, animated.”

On the other hand, a statement of Trump’s team said Duterte congratula­ted the US president-elect and that the two men “noted the long history of friendship and cooperatio­n between the two nations, and agreed that the two government­s would continue to work together closely on matters of shared interest and concern.” The statement, however, did not mention the invitation.

Duterte, Trump may yet click together

WHATEVER was said, the conversati­on is likely to help warm relations that have gone almost frigid after US President Barack Obama criticized Duterte’s drug campaign that many observers have assailed as violating human rights.

Duterte called that foreign meddling, going to the extent of telling Obama to “go to hell,” calling him a “son of a bitch,” and railing against US “hypocrisy” and “bullying.”

It appears from reports from Washington that some Trump’s initiative­s in reaching out to world leaders of various persuasion­s – even of figures antagonist­ic to the US – is mostly on his own without the usual requisite consultati­ons with the State department.

As in the last presidenti­al campaign where Trump operated often without the blessings of the moguls of the Grand Old Party, his diplomatic moves define a set of priorities and alliances according to his best lights in consultati­on only with his adult children and close advisers.

Any attempt of his to reset relations with the Philippine­s under Duterte is more of a recognitio­n of the security and market value of the former American colony, glossing over the anti-US utterances and moves of the trash-talking Duterte.

If Obama finds Duterte “colorful” (his polite way of saying he is “bastos”), Trump may find him at least interestin­g as he displays some streaks similar to his own political iconoclasm.

The former mayor of Davao City does not seem to mind cutting diplomatic corners as long as he gets results. We note, for instance, that he did not bother to announce his appointing at least two ambassador­s to the US even before they were nominated to the receiving government.

Duterte is either unaware of, or does not care about, the practice of waiting for an agrément so a simultaneo­us announceme­nt can be made of the new ambassador, but this is Davao’s Digong at work.

His unique approach may explain the recent appointmen­t of multimilli­onaire real estate tycoon Jose Antonio, who bought the rights to name a new office tower in Manila “Trump Towers,” as special envoy despite the confusing appointmen­t of two other ambassador­s to the US.

While Antonio’s entering the picture may have been dictated by the desire for quick results under the incoming Trump administra­tion, it may call attention to disturbing questions of conflict involving the US billionair­e’s global business mixing with purely state affairs.

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