Philippine Daily Inquirer

A HISTORY OF ‘BEST FRIENDS’ FIGHTING

- —AFP

A meeting between US President Donald Trump and Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte in Manila on Monday follows a stormy 16 months in their nations’ decadeslon­g alliance.

Here are five things to know about relations between the United States and one of its oldest allies in Asia.

Former colony

The Philippine­s went from centuries of Spanish rule to becoming a US colony in 1898 under the Treaty of Paris that was signed to end the SpanishAme­rican war.

The colonial period began with a three-year resistance, which claimed the lives of more than 20,000 Filipino nationalis­ts and 4,200 American troops, according to US government historical records.

In 1941, Japanese forces invaded the Philippine­s and began more than three years of brutal occupation.

The Americans later returned to liberate the nation and it gained independen­ce in 1946, marking the start of a 71- year alliance.

The Philippine­s and the United States signed a Mutual Defense Treaty in 1951, pledging to help each other if they were attacked by an external enemy.

The Philippine­s is one of only two American defense treaty allies in Southeast Asia, along with Thailand.

US-backed dictator

Ferdinand Marcos ruled the Philippine­s for 20 years with US backing despite overseeing widespread rights abuses and embezzling up to $10 billion from state coffers.

The United States backed Marcos, who went from democratic hopeful to dictator, as he guaranteed strategic US bases in the Philippine­s and was seen as a bulwark against communism.

In 1986, the Edsa People Power Revolution toppled Marcos, sending him and his family into exile in Hawaii.

Nearly a century of major US military presence ended in 1992 when the Philippine­s closed two of America’s biggest Asian bases.

The Philippine Senate re- jected a treaty extension following rising popular sentiment against the United States.

But the Philippine­s’ maritime dispute with China over the South China Sea, and US concerns over Islamic militancy in the restive south, brought the nation back into an American embrace.

The allies signed a Visiting Forces Agreement in 1998 and a 2014 accord that led to increased defense cooperatio­n, including more annual joint military exercises.

Duterte tirades

Mr. Duterte’s election last year brought a sudden reversal of the policy of his pro-American predecesso­r, Benigno Aquino III.

The outspoken leader launched a brutal war on drugs that was condemned by the administra­tion of then US President Barack Obama.

Mr. Duterte responded by announcing his “separation” from the United States, calling Obama a “son of a bitch” and pursuing closer ties with China and Russia.

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