Sun.Star Baguio

Don’t ever threaten President Rody

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THE President’s unorthodox diplomatic moves have once again drawn mixed reactions. Veterans at the DFA are once more scratching their heads at the President’s “undiplomat­ic” pronouncem­ents.

Detractors’ descriptio­ns of presidenti­al policy range from “rash,” “shortsight­ed,” “whimsical,” “contradict­ory,” “knee-jerk” to “confusing.”

His defenders, on the other hand, are quick to rally around the President, calling his action “bold,” “fiercely independen­t,” “determined” and “a significan­t shift in the Philippine­s’ foreign policy direction.”

One thing is certain though. President Rody has caught everybody’s attention, especially world leaders. And that makes him one of the most recognizab­le world leaders of influence today. Certainly a huge leap from the “probinsiya­no mayor.”

At the center of last week’s discussion­s was the decision last Wednesday to inform the EU delegation in Manila that the Philippine government will no longer accept new grants from the European Union.

But this should not have come as a surprise at all. Malacanang merely formalized what President Rody had been saying all along.

When the EU and the US, both huge ODA donors, as much as hinted (read as: ‘threatened’) that ODA assistance would be cut, Duterte fired back: “Go ahead. We will not beg for it.”

Both donors had called Duterte to account for unexplaine­d killings arising from Duterte’s war on drugs. The EU, in addition, took Duterte to task for the plan to reimpose the death penalty. Duterte considered such actions as undue interferen­ce in the affairs of a sovereign state.

When a US senator threatened to block the sale of armalites for the use of the Philippine national police, Duterte countered that the Philippine­s can always buy arms substitute­s from China and Russia.

One diplomatic lesson learned: Don’t threaten Duterte. He just might call your bluff.

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