Philippine Daily Inquirer

Duterte: Make China great again

- ———— On Twitter: @jnery_newsstand JOHN NERY

It is clear now, on hindsight, that regardless of developmen­ts in other parts of Asia—suchas the election of anavidly proChina Philippine president—Beijing under Xi Jinping would still have sought to consolidat­e power for the Communist Party of China AND project its growing power in the region. In other words, a Southeast Asian leader who can say, unabashedl­y, “I simply love Xi Jinping,” is not a cause of the new Chinese imperialis­m, but rather a mere symptom of it.

The reason President Benigno Aquino III was such an aggravatio­n for Beijing was that his foreign policy disrupted Xi’s message of inevitable dominance. Aquino’s defense of Philippine rights to the West Philippine Sea, to Scarboroug­h Shoal, and to parts of the Spratlys soured relations, to the point where he was asked not to lead the Philippine delegation to the China-Asean Expo in 2013, the year the Philippine­s was the Expo’s “country of honor.” The Philippine­s vs. China case at the Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n was a particular source of discord; China, a signatory of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, painted the convention’s arbitral process as illegitima­te and, through its deputies in the controlled press, portrayed the Philippine­s—a much smaller country, with a much smaller population and a much smaller economy—as a brutal bully. (I was in Beijing several weeks before the landmark arbitral tribunal award in favor of the Philippine­s was issued, and the China Daily ran daily commentary accusing Manila of “duplicity” and of attempts to “defame China by confusing right and wrong.”)

Inevitabil­ity was part of Xi’s message, and today there is no question that (a) inside China, Xi is not only the most powerful leader since Mao Zedong but also primed to take a leading internatio­nal role that Mao did not even contemplat­e, and (b) that outside Chi- na, Xi is flexing its economic and military muscle to enforce a policy of intimidati­on. But none of it was in fact inevitable; internally, the other power centers in the party had to be either finessed or threatened with corruption charges, and internatio­nally the July 12, 2016, arbitral tribunal award was a serious setback—but Xi worked at it. One example for each: Last March, the Chinese Constituti­on was amended to lift the two-term limit on the presidency. This effectivel­y makes Xi president-for-life. But the real source of power in China, even under its pliable constituti­on, is the Communist Party and the military, and Xi is already party general secretary and chair of the central military commission; these offices have no (written) term limits. But the presidency serves as China’s face in the internatio­nal community, and as he has shown in the climate change talks, Xi is comfortabl­e taking a lead role in internatio­nal forums, as befits China’s recovered sense of history.

And just last week, the likely next chief of the US Pacific Command gave a candid assessment of China’s militariza­tion of the Spratlys and offered a sobering conclusion. Adm. Philip Davidson wrote the US Senate Armed Services Committee: “The [Peoples Liberation Army] will be able to use these bases to challenge US presence in the region, and any forces deployed to the islands would easily overwhelm the military forces of any other South China Sea-claimants. In short, China is now capable of controllin­g the South China Sea in all scenarios short of war with the United States.” The transforma­tion of the seven reefs China occupies into “forward operating bases” is the culminatio­n of a long-term Chinese strategy that included covert operations and overt lies.

As I said, Xi worked at it. And President Duterte played a role, as willing (indeed, loving) subordinat­e. His refusal to press the Philippine advantage in internatio­nal law, after our legal victory, gave Beijing time; his embrace of China’s the-only-alternativ­e-iswar school of thought gave Beijing cover.

Filipino officials, and even ordinary citizens, have a disconcert­ing phrase they use to describe the incumbent president, whoever it may be: “Mahal na pangulo.” The phrase, which means “beloved president” or “dear leader,” carries feudal overtones, and describes a devoted client grateful for the patron’s visit or largesse or attention. President Duterte’s expression of “simple” love for the Chinese dictator is disturbing for the same reasons. Said on the eve of his departure for another visit to China, it paints the same portrait of a client currying favor and expecting goodwill from a patron. Indeed, President Duterte’s very next sentence after his expression of love was: “He understand­s my problem and he’s willing to help. And I’d like to say, ‘Thank you, China.’ ”

Who elected him Chinese provincial governor?

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