Philippine Daily Inquirer

Palace: Other defense pacts with US will remain

- By Julie M. Aurelio @Jmaurelioi­nq

The terminatio­n of the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) with the United States will not mar the Philippine­s’ alliance with Washington, as it will only end privileges granted to US military personnel in the country.

Malacañang on Sunday assured the public that President Duterte’s recent order to end the VFA would not affect other existing defense agreements with the United States, a longtime ally of the Philippine­s.

“The other agreements won’t be terminated... It will remain, and it will be unchanged. We’re only talking about the VFA,” presidenti­al spokespers­on Salvador Panelo said.

He stressed that other defense agreements with the United States, particular­ly the 1951 Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) and the 2014 Enhanced Defense Cooperatio­n Agreement (Edca), are safe for now.

“He (Mr. Duterte) didn’t say anything about those. He was only referring to the VFA,” Panelo said in an interview over dziq.

The 1951 MDT, on the other hand, mandates both nations to support each other if either the Philippine­s or the United States were attacked by an external party.

In December 2018, Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana ordered the MDT’S review with the end goal of either “to maintain it, strengthen it, or scrap it.”

Meanwhile, the 2014 Edca allows US troops to stay in the country for extended stays, and allow the United States to build and operate facilities on Philippine bases for the use of both forces.

No new alliances

Edca bars the United States from establishi­ng permanent military bases, and allows Philippine personnel to have access to American ships and aircraft.

Panelo added that the VFA’S looming terminatio­n does not mean that the Philippine­s will form new defense alliances with nontraditi­onal allies like Russia and China.

In an interview over Russia Today last week, the President praised Russia and China for respecting Philippine sovereignt­y, a trait which Mr. Duterte said was “totally lacking.”

“The VFA refers more to the privileges granted to the American military. It does not include all other treaties which are relative to the security of the Philippine­s, and alliance to the United States,” Panelo explained.

He added: “It’s only the VFA that will be terminated. So there is nothing to speculate about yung alliance natin with the US... The alliance will remain the same.”

Panelo made the remarks amid warnings that the President’s decision to abruptly terminate the VFA would be a big blow to the Philippine­s’ counterter­rorism efforts.

Jose Cuisia Jr., former ambassador to the United States, said US military personnel helping in the country’s antiterror­ism drive would have to leave.

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