Toronto Star

Duterte announces ‘separation’ from U.S.

Philippine president shifts ties to China, says he might go to Russia in Beijing speech

- ANDREO CALONZO BLOOMBERG

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said he wants to break away from the U.S. and shift toward China and Russia, his strongest comments yet signalling a split with his nation’s biggest military ally.

“In this venue, I announce my separation from the U.S.,” Duterte said in Beijing on Thursday after meeting Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Duterte also said he might go to Russian President Vladimir Putin and tell him “there’s three of us against the world.”

The announceme­nt came in front of a packed room of Filipino and Chinese business leaders.

The tough-talking 71-year-old leader has repeatedly questioned his nation’s alliance with the U.S. while touting the economic benefits of friendlier ties with Beijing.

Earlier, China announced a resumption of bilateral talks on disputed territory in the South China Sea, an issue that had pushed the Philippine­s closer to America.

China’s vice minister for foreign affairs, Liu Zhenmin, told reporters that the two leaders had agreed to return to a “track of dialogue” over the South China Sea in what is a “new stage of maritime cooperatio­n.”

“China has been a friend of the Philippine­s and the roots of our bonds are very deep and not easily severed,” Duterte said in a speech at the Great Hall of the People after meeting Xi for 30 minutes. “Even as we arrived in Beijing close to winter, this is a springtime of our relationsh­ip.”

Duterte said he was mulling plans to require U.S. visitors to the Philippine­s to obtain a visa. Officials from China and the Philippine­s signed 13 pacts on areas, including trade, investment, tourism, narcotics and maritime cooperatio­n at the summit meeting. Pacts on transport infrastruc­ture, financing from Export-Import Bank were among those forged as China committed to sup- port infrastruc­ture developmen­t in the Philippine­s.

Before his meeting with Xi, Duterte told hundreds of Filipinos in Beijing that “it’s time to say goodbye” to the U.S.

“Foreign policy veers now towards” China, Duterte said on Wednesday night. “No more American interferen­ce. No more American exercises,” he told a cheering crowd. “I will not go to America anymore” for assistance, he said. “We will just be insulted there.”

The U.S. has been the Philippine­s’s closest ally since independen­ce in 1946, and the nations are linked by formal defence treaties.

Members of Duterte’s cabinet have tried to tone down his more inflammato­ry remarks — such as telling U.S. President Barack Obama to “go to hell” — and stress that a more independen­t foreign policy does not mean severing ties with the U.S.

Duterte told reporters Wednesday that this trip wouldn’t lead to a military alliance with China or joint energy exploratio­n in disputed seas.

The U.S. has expressed concern about Duterte’s policies. Philip Goldberg, the U.S. envoy in Manila, said Wednesday that the Philippine­s’s efforts to improve ties with China “shouldn’t be a zero-sum game.”

Duterte has lashed out at the U.S., the United Nations and the European Union for criticizin­g his drug war over alleged human-rights abuses. According to police data, more than 3,000 suspects have been killed after the policy took effect.

 ?? WU HONG-POOL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, left, and Zhang Dejiang, Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress of China, hold a meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.
WU HONG-POOL/GETTY IMAGES Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, left, and Zhang Dejiang, Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress of China, hold a meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

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