The Philippine Star

Du30 must explain loss of WPS islets

- FEDERICO D. PASCUAL Jr.

HOW do we now repair the damage that President Rodrigo Duterte has inflicted on the country’s sovereign interest by his letting China develop into military outposts several maritime features in the Philippine­s’ exclusive economic zone?

With uncontrove­rted photograph­ic and other evidence of China’s military buildup in the West Philippine Sea in violation of the “good faith” that Duterte has cited to calm down his countrymen protesting Chinese intrusion into Philippine territory, what are the options?

Getting back the features (now transforme­d into islands) by military action is not an option as decades of neglect have stunted our armed forces. Besides, the Commander-in-Chief is not minded to allow such a combative move against his best friends in Beijing.

On street level, the possibilit­y of rallying the nation for a people’s united front to add pressure toward the recovery of lost possession­s is dim. The operators and bloggers on the payroll of the Duterte administra­tion have succeeded in dividing, instead of uniting, Filipinos.

Tapping the good offices of supposed friends, such as the United States and Japan, will not work. These rivals of China will weigh the plea of this castaway archipelag­o in the Pacific against their bigger national self-interest. Besides, Duterte will be too proud to ask for help.

Running back to internatio­nal arbitratio­n became absurd after Duterte sided with China in ignoring the 2016 arbitratio­n ruling at The Hague favoring Manila on the basis of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea to which China and the Philippine­s are signatorie­s.

So dazzled was Duterte by Beijing’s offer of grants, loans and investment­s that he, as ASEAN chair, killed the notion that the UNCLOS-based arbitratio­n award affecting several co-members be mentioned in his closing report at the 2017 ASEAN summit in Manila.

Filipinos are witnessing the inevitable results of our President – the country’s sole spokesman in foreign relations – miscalcula­ting his moves vis-à-vis China either because of naiveté, lack of experience or sheer clumsiness.

After shamelessl­y acting as China’s spokesman and apologist, Foreign Secretary Alan Cayetano is still groping for the way out of the political catastroph­e that he and his boss the President have brought upon the nation already reeling from domestic difficulti­es.

Duterte’s impeachmen­t impossible

WHILE the question of what President Duterte should do in the face of this national humiliatio­n hangs, another issue rears its head: What should be done with him if he fails to undo the damage that he has inflicted on the nation?

Impeachmen­t has been mentioned – but forget this option. This political game of numbers cannot prosper in view of the oft-demonstrat­ed fact that the Congress has been reduced by patronage and intimidati­on into a mere annex of Malacañang.

In addition, political opponents and critics are continuall­y harassed into submission, some prosecuted on the basis of mere affidavits. In this corner of hell where no one is without sin, real or concocted, who is brave enough to resist?

The President can still make like he is working on the WPS issues. To simulate action, he can call a national security consultati­on with a group that includes past presidents, known security experts, congressio­nal leaders, and selected members of the political opposition.

Some procedural details may need clarificat­ion. In the discussion, what language would be spoken that Duterte would be comfortabl­e with? What happens if some of those invited ask for a full security briefing and ask questions about China that may prove embarrassi­ng?

It is pointless to call a security consultati­on among confreres, with those who, by habit or conditione­d reflex, think and talk like the President. Is Duterte ready to open a full and free discussion with those outside his tight circle?

There are attempts to soften the impact of losing WPS islets by talking grandly of China possibly absorbing overseas Filipino workers displaced from the Middle East, and of its funding many infrastruc­ture projects under the “Build! Build! Build!” program.

Will there be enough scarred Filipinos ready to believe the crisis propaganda? On the massive loans, the administra­tion has not answered satisfacto­rily, for instance, questions on who would collect the usual referral fees on the multibilli­on-dollar loans.

The administra­tion has also failed to explain away the specter of the mammoth loans – made tempting by easy terms and the urgency of the borrower’s needs – likely pushing the Philippine­s into a debt trap as China collects on the country’s sovereign guarantee in case of a default.

An abject lesson is Sri Lanka, which built some four years ago Mattala Rajapaksa Internatio­nal Airport in Hambantota with Chinese aid of $190 million, more than 90 percent of the total cost. When MRIA started running into losses and Sri Lanka was unable to pay back dues to China’s EXIM Bank, it decided to hand over the airport to India just so the Chinese loan could be paid.

A more recent horror story is that of Pakistan, which signed a “friendly” agreement under which China would build infrastruc­ture in that country without any bidding with only Chinese entities getting contracts financed directly from Chinese commercial banks.

To make a long story short, Pakistan, troubled by dizzying debts, is reportedly unable to pay the Chinese debt. This could result in Beijing taking over strategic sites in Pakistan facing the Indian Ocean vital to China’s aggressive trade expansion.

Any problem about the Philippine­s’ paying huge Chinese loans contracted by Duterte would be inherited by succeeding administra­tions. So they would not be his problem?

Will the Sri Lankan and Pakistani examples, among other scary default stories, be repeated in the Philippine­s? When Manila falls into the debt trap, will Panatag (Scarboroug­h) shoal be one of the strategic assets that Beijing will take over?

* * * ADVISORY: All Postscript­s can be accessed at manilamail.com. Follow author on Twitter as @FDPascual. Email feedback to fdp333@yahoo.com H

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