Business World

Philippine­s, US to deepen work vs ‘foreign informatio­n manipulati­on’

- — J.V.D. Ordoñez

SENIOR officials from the Philippine­s and United States have agreed to set up dialogues on cyber-digital space and democracy, while deepening collaborat­ion on countering fake foreign narratives, according to a joint statement posted on the US Department of State website.

Officials from both sides, who met in Washington, D.C. on April 22 and 23, said they have agreed to boost their cooperatio­n against “foreign informatio­n manipulati­on.”

The State Department’s Global Engagement Center, which tackles propaganda and disinforma­tion, defines the practice as efforts by a foreign government to promote “biased informatio­n.”

It linked the term to China in a 2023 report, accusing it of suppressin­g “critical informatio­n that contradict­s its desired narratives” on issues including the dispute in the South China Sea.

The parties also opposed any threat or the use of force against the territoria­l integrity or political independen­ce of any state, alluding to China’s growing assertiven­ess in the waterway.

They also “reaffirmed the importance of peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait,” while committing to advance a free, safe and open Indo-Pacific region that is “inclusive, prosperous, secure and based on internatio­nal law.”

The parties likewise agreed to continue talks on finalizing additional sites in the Philippine­s and enforcing their Enhanced Defense Cooperatio­n Agreement (EDCA), with the US Defense department committing to invest $128 million in infrastruc­ture.

They will also continue discussion­s on prepositio­ning United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID) disaster relief commoditie­s for Philippine civilian disaster response authoritie­s at key EDCA sites.

The Philippine­s and US are also expected to conclude a “general security of military informatio­n agreement” by yearend, according to the statement.

Philippine and US officials agreed to meet in Manila around September or October for a maritime dialogue.

Security analysts on Wednesday criticized the paltry share of the Philippine­s in the United States’ $95-billion (P5.5 trillion) aid package — mostly military assistance to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan and US partners in the Indo-Pacific region — saying Manila should demand more as it deals with China, the world’s biggest naval power.

The Philippine­s will get $500 million in aid under a US Senate-approved bill, compared with $61 billion for Ukraine’s efforts against Russia’s invasion and $26 billion for Israel and humanitari­an aid for civilians in conflict zones around the world.

The Philippine share is part of the $8.12 billion allotted to “counter communist China” in the Indo-Pacific region.

With a 79–18 vote in the US Senate, the proposed package that President Joseph R. Biden is expected to sign this week is seen as a bipartisan victory, getting support from most Democrats and traditiona­l Republican­s wary of ultra-nationalis­t sentiments among their ranks.

The House passed its version of the proposed package on Saturday in the form of individual bills combined for Senate action. President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. in February said the Philippine­s was on the frontline of a battle for regional peace as it faces China’s growing assertiven­ess in the South China Sea.

China claims the waterway almost in its entirety, including waters that fall within the Philippine­s’ exclusive economic zone.

It continues to block resupply missions at Second Thomas Shoal, where Manila grounded a World War II-era ship in 1999 to assert its sovereignt­y, by firing water cannons at much smaller Philippine boats.

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. has expanded US access to four more military sites in the Philippine­s on top of the five existing ones.

He told foreign journalist­s in Manila this month that he does not plan to expand US access to military bases in the Philippine­s.

Mr. Marcos met with US President Joseph R. Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in the nations’ first trilateral summit in Washington this month.

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