The Philippine Star

Confrontin­g

- – With Paolo Romero, Edith Regalado, Pia Lee-Brago

“We are doing something about it with China. We have our way of discussing it with China. And we are not noisy about what we are discussing,” he said.

But Esperon was also quick to point out that if China’s intention was to hit the Philippine­s as its target, then there is no need to use the bombers that land in Woody Island.

“China has missiles or the ICBM that could easily reach us without using the bombers,” he said.

Duterte, for his part, denied allegation­s that he did not do anything to protect Philippine interests in the West Philippine Sea, the portion of South China Sea being claimed by Manila.

He said he informed Chinese President Xi Jinping about his plan to drill oil in the South China Sea during their meeting in 2016.

“Don’t believe that I didn’t do anything about the issue, that I just let it be. I told him (Xi) this straight the first time I said, ‘I’m going there to dig my oil.’ And then he said... ‘We have just become friends and we have just begun to get to know each other. Let’s not ruin the relationsh­ip that we have’,” Duterte said, quoting the Chinese leader.

“Now, am I prepared to go to war against them? We don’t have enough guns.”

The President said he was open to China’s offer to hold a joint exploratio­n in the South China Sea.

“We don’t have to fight. We can divide this in a joint developmen­t, joint exploratio­n,” Duterte stressed.

“And then we’ll give you a bigger share rather than fight. It’s only America who’s worried because they lost a territory. You’re the ones who came first. I was just new and then you adapted the rascal’s propaganda,” he added.

Duterte said he and Xi would talk about a joint exploratio­n “someday.”

The President has blamed the United States and the Aquino administra­tion for their supposed failure to stop China’s military buildup in the South China Sea.

Creeping invasion

Critics, however, claimed Duterte was just parrying allegation­s that he was being too soft on China, which has been providing military and economic aid to his administra­tion.

Lawmakers said Duterte should immediatel­y confront China regarding the deployment of heavy bombers in the disputed region.

Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon described the move as “the creeping invasion of Philippine territory in the South China Sea by China.”

“If we don’t work on this, maybe the time will come when even the elections – the 2019 elections is near – the question at the back of people’s minds is that maybe China will interfere in our elections in 2019 at the rate things are going,” he said.

Drilon said there are other remedies short of going to war with China.

“We should assert our sovereignt­y, not by waging a war against China – we cannot do that – but in other fora, we should be able to continue our campaign in order that we can retrieve those islands that have been occupied by China,” he said.

Sen. Risa Hontiveros called for a review of the country’s bilateral relationsh­ip with China.

“We can’t call a country that robs us of our islands and threatens us with nuclear war a friend. This is unacceptab­le. This is a serious threat to the lives of our citizens, an assault on our Constituti­on and a direct violation of internatio­nally recognized treaties to which we are a signatory,” Hontiveros said.

Hontiveros called on Duterte to bring China’s nuclear threats before the UN General Assembly.

She challenged Duterte and his officials “to end their subservien­ce to China and muster the necessary political courage to stand up to protect our national sovereignt­y and the lives of our citizens.”

Sen. Joseph Victor Ejercito said he was supportive of Duterte’s efforts to improve ties with China but this should not come at the expense of the country’s sovereignt­y and security.

On the other hand, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) justified the diplomacy exercised by Duterte.

The DFA said the deliberate and nuanced diplomacy by the Duterte administra­tion had lowered tensions in the region arising from South China Sea disputes and even resulted in clear economic gains for the country.

The issues in the South China Sea were raised by senior Philippine officials led by Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea in a meeting with the commander of the US Pacific Command Admiral Harry Harris Jr. at the PACOM headquarte­rs in Hawaii on Friday.The DFA said the Philippine­s and the US have reaffirmed their firm resolve to bolster their enduring alliance anchored on common values and interest, ties and the Mutual Defense Treaty during discussion­s in Honolulu.

The high-level delegation, according to the DFA, had productive discussion­s on critical regional and internatio­nal issues with Harris and the commanders of all PACOM service components.

“The Philippine delegation had a very substantiv­e exchange with Admiral Harris on regional challenges and both sides agreed that the alliance remains consequent­ial to the preservati­on of regional stability and developmen­t,” the DFA said in a statement.

 ??  ?? In this undated file photo released by Xinhua News Agency, a Chinese H-6K bomber patrols the islands and reefs in the South China Sea. The People’s Daily newspaper reported Saturday that the People’s Liberation Army Air Force conducted takeoff and...
In this undated file photo released by Xinhua News Agency, a Chinese H-6K bomber patrols the islands and reefs in the South China Sea. The People’s Daily newspaper reported Saturday that the People’s Liberation Army Air Force conducted takeoff and...

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