The Manila Times

US documents: Defense treaty does not cover Spratlys, Scarboroug­h

- RIGOBERTO D. TIGLAO

THE big reason why we cannot believe

Vice President Kamala Harris’ assurances of her nation’s military support in our territoria­l disputes in the South China Sea is that the US doctrine on this issue has long been settled and documented: It doesn’t recognize the Philippine­s’ and three other nations’ territoria­l nor maritime claims in the Spratlys. It therefore cannot intervene in these disputes if an armed conflict breaks out there.

There is no evidence, no documentat­ion that this US policy has been changed. Harris and other American officials simply make it appear that it has changed. Harris speaks with a forked tongue.

It was President Ferdinand E. Marcos, the current president’s father, who demanded that the Americans give him a clear written statement on this issue, way back in 1976.

As reported in the 1976 document “Memorandum From the President’s Assistant for National Security Affairs (Scowcroft) to President Ford,” declassifi­ed by the US State Department*, Paul Scowcroft, the presidenti­al assistant for national security, told then President Gerald Ford:

“President Marcos has asked us for a clear written statement of whether we will respond under the Mutual Defense Treaty if his forces are attacked while operating in the Reed Bank in the Spratlys. Marcos made clear that a formal answer on this question must precede any further progress on the base negotiatio­ns.”

By “negotiatio­ns,” Scowcroft was referring to the talks between the US and the Philippine­s in November 1976 to change the terms of the Military Bases Agreement. Next to Marcos’ demand for a $2 billion “rent” for the next five years, the other big obstacle to a new agreement was his insistence on a declared US commitment to defend Philippine forces in the areas in the South China Sea that his nation as well as China, Vietnam and Taiwan claim.

Reed Bank

Marcos had then just authorized a private consortium of Swedish and Filipino companies — in which the American Oil Co. (Amoco) had a minor stake — to explore for gas and oil in the Reed Bank at the northeaste­rn corner of the Spratlys. This is the same Reed Bank, where a vessel of the First Pacific-Enrique Razon partnershi­p attempted to survey for natural gas reserves in 2011. The vessel was blocked and shooed away by Chinese civilian government vessels — triggering President Aquino 3rd’s belligeren­t stance against China.

Marcos troops’ had occupied eight islands in the Spratlys from 1970 to 1971, which were intended to be military bases to defend the consortium’s exploratio­n of the Reed Bank, which was totally submerged and therefore could not have bases.

China and Vietnam vociferous­ly opposed the occupation, claiming these areas were part of their sovereign territory, but could do nothing. China was then in a deep political and economic crisis because of the euphemisti­cally called “Great Proletaria­n Cultural Revolution.” Vietnam was debilitate­d by its civil war with the communist North although it managed — prodded by American oil exploratio­n firms — to occupy six features in the Spratlys from 1973 to 1974, or before the conflict ended in November 1975.

Deterrent

Marcos apparently was concerned that the battle-hardened troops of the North Vietnamese Army would attack Philippine forces in the Spratlys. As a deterrent to such possibilit­y, Marcos asked the US to send a clear public message it will defend Filipino forces in the Spratlys by its 1951 Mutual Defense Treaty. Marcos told the American negotiator­s he would agree to a new Military Bases Agreement only if the US made such a declaratio­n. The Americans didn’t. Scowcroft explained to Ford in his memorandum: “As disputed areas, the Spratlys and the Reed Bank can be defined as territory to which the treaty would not apply. However, the broader reference to forces, vessels or aircraft ‘in the Pacific,’ could be interprete­d to cover Philippine units attacked in either the Spratlys or the Reed Bank. We have consistent­ly declined to take a position on any of the claims to the Spratlys and the Reed Bank.”

The US ambassador to Manila at the time, William Sullivan, also recommende­d in his November 1976 telegram to the State Department secretary, that they should inform the Filipino negotiator­s that the MDT commits the US to defend from armed attack only the Philippine­s’ “metropolit­an territory.” Sullivan claimed these refers only to the “land areas delineated in the (1898) Treaty of Paris” as the Philippine­s’ territory, which excludes the Spratlys and Scarboroug­h Shoal.

Scowcroft in his memorandum explained why and how the US, rather than explaining to Marcos the limits of the MDT, should respond ambiguousl­y, which to this day is the template of the US government’s public stance on the issue.

Three responses

“Essentiall­y, there are three responses we can give to Marcos on this issue: an affirmativ­e one clearly extending our commitment to cover Philippine units attacked in the Reed Bank; a negative one definitely excluding the area from our defense commitment; or an ambiguous one restating our overall defense commitment to the Philippine­s but leaving unanswered whether we would respond to all attacks on Philippine units in the area.

“A clearly negative response to this issue may at the very least be expected to complicate gravely our current task of renegotiat­ing the bases agreement. It could well lead to tighter restrictio­ns on the use of our bases, e.g., for support of activities in the Indian Ocean.

“On the other hand, any strongly affirmativ­e response to Marcos will bear at least equal risks. It would increase the possibilit­y of tensions with the PRC and Vietnam. Congress and the public would probably see such a position as an unnecessar­y expansion of our defense commitment.

“Finally, a forthcomin­g response might encourage Marcos to pursue his claims to the Spratlys more actively, and to use military force to protect such claims.

Ambiguous

“State and Defense recommend that you authorize our making an ambiguous reply. In it we would state that we would consider Philippine units operating in the Reed Bank as covered by our defense treaty as long as their presence is consistent with the provisions of the Mutual Defense Treaty, particular­ly Article I regarding peaceful settlement of disputes and refraining from the threat or use of force.”

In short, the recommenda­tion was to tell the Philippine government that the US will defend its forces if attacked, as long as it first settles the dispute peacefully, and does not threaten force or use force in the disputed areas.

The document indicated Ford approved with his signature Scowcroft’s recommenda­tions.

Forty-six years later, the dispute over the Spratlys had not been settled peacefully. Then President Aquino 3rd in 2012 foolishly sent the Navy’s largest warship, the RP Gregorio del Pilar, to Scarboroug­h Shoal to assist the civilian authoritie­s going after Chinese fishermen allegedly fishing endangered species. China saw it as a “threat to use force,” which for the US invalidate­d the MDT.

Taking advantage of the Philippine­s’ lack of patrols and of a surveillan­ce system, the Chinese occupied unchalleng­ed seven reefs in 1988, another in 1994. They then transforme­d these into huge artificial island fortificat­ions in 2012, in retaliatio­n against the Aquino regime’s arbitratio­n suit against China. After the seven reefs that Vietnam also occupied in 1988, they seized eight other features in the Spratlys from 1989 to 2016, building their own kind of fortificat­ions on many of these.**

In the South China Sea disputes, the MDT has been totally, absolutely, incontrove­rtibly useless for us. Why keep it?

*Office of the Historian, State Department Memorandum From the President’s Assistant for National Security Affairs (Scowcroft) to President Ford, declassifi­ed by the State Department, 1976.

**Office of the Historian, State Department, Telegram 18586 From the Embassy in the Philippine­s to the Department of State, Nov. 29, 1976.

***Details of these with sources shown are in my 2022 book Debacle: The Aquino Regime’s Scarboroug­h Fiasco and the South China Sea Arbitratio­n Deception, available online purchase https://rigobertot­iglao. com/debacle/rigobertig­lao.com/ debacle and www.amazon.com.

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 ?? ?? Spratlys and Scarboroug­h Shoal outside the Treaty of Paris limits, which the US says is the ‘metropolit­an territory’ it is bound to defend under the Mutual Defense Treaty. Map is from Rosen, Mark E. ‘Philippine Claims in the South China Sea: A Legal Analysis.’ (CNA Occasional Paper. Arlington, Virginia: Center for Naval Analysis, August 2014.)
Spratlys and Scarboroug­h Shoal outside the Treaty of Paris limits, which the US says is the ‘metropolit­an territory’ it is bound to defend under the Mutual Defense Treaty. Map is from Rosen, Mark E. ‘Philippine Claims in the South China Sea: A Legal Analysis.’ (CNA Occasional Paper. Arlington, Virginia: Center for Naval Analysis, August 2014.)

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