The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Marcos presidency roils US efforts to counter China

- By David Rising and Jim Gomez

MANILA, PHILIPPINE­S » Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s apparent landslide victory in the Philippine presidenti­al election is giving rise to immediate concerns about a further erosion of democracy in the region, and could complicate American efforts to blunt growing Chinese influence and power in the Pacific.

Marcos, the son and namesake of longtime dictator Ferdinand Marcos, captured more than 30.8 million votes in Monday’s election, according to an unofficial count, more than double those of his closest challenger.

If the results stand, he will take office at the end of June for a six-year term with Sara Duterte, the daughter of outgoing President Rodrigo Duterte, as his vice president.

Duterte, who leaves office with a 67% approval rating, nurtured closer ties with China and Russia, while at times railing against the United States.

He has walked back on many of his threats against Washington, however, including a move to abrogate a defense pact between the two countries, and the luster of China’s promise of infrastruc­ture investment has dulled, with much failing to materializ­e.

Whether the recent trend in relations with the U.S. will continue has a lot to do with how the Biden administra­tion responds to the return of a Marcos to power in the Philippine­s, said Manila political scientist Andrea Chloe Wong, a former researcher in the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs.

“On the one hand you have Biden regarding the geostrateg­ic interests in the Philippine­s, and on the other hand he has to balance promoting American democratic ideals and human rights,” she said.

“If he chooses to do that, he might have to isolate the Marcos administra­tion, so this will definitely be a delicate balancing act for the Philippine­s, and Marcos’ approach to the U.S. will highly depend on how Biden will engage with him.”

His election came at a time when the U.S. has been increasing­ly focused on the region, embarking on a strategy unveiled in February to considerab­ly broaden U.S. engagement by strengthen­ing a web of security alliances and partnershi­ps, with an emphasis on addressing China’s growing influence and ambitions.

Thousands of American and Filipino forces recently wrapped up one of their largest combat exercises in years, which showcased U.S. firepower in the northern Philippine­s near its sea border with Taiwan.

Marcos has been short on specifics about foreign policy, but in interviews he said he wanted to pursue closer ties with China, including possibly setting aside a 2016 ruling by a tribunal in The Hague that invalidate­d almost all of China’s historical claims to the South China Sea.

China has refused to recognize the ruling, and Marcos said it won’t help settle disputes with Beijing, “so that option is not available to us.”

Allowing the U.S. to play a role in trying to settle territoria­l spats with China will be a “recipe for disaster,” Marcos said in an interview with DZRH radio in January. He said Duterte’s policy of diplomatic engagement with China is “really our only option.”

Marcos has also said he would maintain his nation’s alliance with the U.S., but the relationsh­ip is complicate­d by American backing of the administra­tions that took power after his father was deposed, and a 2011 U.S. District Court ruling in Hawaii finding him and his mother in contempt of an order to furnish informatio­n on assets in connection with a 1995 human-rights classactio­n suit against Marcos Sr.

The court fined them $353.6 million, which has never been paid and could complicate the possibilit­y of him visiting the U.S. in the future.

The U.S. has a long history with the Philippine­s, which was an American colony for most of the first half of the last century before it was granted independen­ce in 1946. The U.S. closed its last military bases on the Philippine­s in 1992, but the country’s location on the South China Sea means it remains strategica­lly important, and under a 1951 collective defense treaty the U.S. guarantees its support if the Philippine­s is attacked.

Even though the Biden administra­tion may have preferred to work with Marcos’ leading opponent, Leni Robredo, the “U.S.-Philippine­s alliance is vital to both nations’ security and prosperity, especially in the new era of competitio­n with China,” said Gregory B. Poling, director of the Southeast Asia Program at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington.

“Unlike Leni, with her coherent platform for good governance and developmen­t at home and standing up to China abroad, Marcos is a policy cipher,” Poling said in a research note. “He has avoided presidenti­al debates, shunned interviews, and has been silent on most issues.”

Marcos has been clear, however, that he would like to try again to improve ties with Beijing, Poling said.

“But when it comes to foreign policy, Marcos will not have the same space for maneuver that Duterte did,” he said. “The Philippine­s tried an outstretch­ed hand and China bit it. That is why the Duterte government has re-embraced the U.S. alliance and gotten tougher on Beijing over the last two years.”

Marcos Sr. was ousted in 1986 after millions of people took to the streets, forcing an end to his corrupt dictatorsh­ip and a return to democracy. But the election of Duterte as president in 2016 brought a return to a strongman-type leader, which voters have now doubled-down on with Marcos Jr.

Domestical­ly, Marcos, who goes by his childhood nickname “Bongbong,” is widely expected to pick up where Duterte left off, stifling a free press and cracking down on dissent with less of the outgoing leader’s crude and brash style, while putting an end to ongoing attempts to recover some of the billions of dollars his father pilfered from the state coffers.

 ?? AARON FAVILA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., the son of the late dictator, during a campaign rally in Quezon City, Philippine­s on April 13. His apparent landslide victory in the Philippine presidenti­al election could complicate American efforts to blunt growing Chinese influence and power in the Pacific.
AARON FAVILA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., the son of the late dictator, during a campaign rally in Quezon City, Philippine­s on April 13. His apparent landslide victory in the Philippine presidenti­al election could complicate American efforts to blunt growing Chinese influence and power in the Pacific.

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