The Freeman

Philippine­s’ pivot to Russia signals decline of US hegemony – expert

- —Philstar.com

MANILA — The pivot of President Rodrigo Duterte to Russia, a nontraditi­onal ally of the Philippine­s, may show the collapse of a United States-dominated unipolar world, a Polish political science professor said.

Krystian Cholaszczy­nski, a visiting professor from the College of Social and Media Culture in Torun, Poland, called move of the Philippine­s to deepen its ties with alternativ­e power like Russia a “symbolic situation.”

“It’s quite significan­t that we have two states at this moment which are really close to Russia but earlier were really close to America: Turkey— the most important non-American member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on and the Philippine­s—the most important ally of America which is not part of NATO,” Cholaszczy­nski said in a forum held at the University of Santo Tomas Thursday.

He added: “It’s very interestin­g that these two states decided to seek new partnershi­ps and they found this partner in Russia.”

The Philippine­s began expanding its relationsh­ip with Moscow and Beijing and lessening its historical dependence on Washington when President Rodrigo Duterte assumed office in 2016. The outreach to Russia came after the United States’ supposed meddling in Duterte's violent antidrug campaign.

But Malacañang earlier said the outreach to Russia is part and parcel of Duterte’s independen­t foreign policy.

“When I heard that the Philippine government treat Russia as a partner, I understand that you need partners, you need powers. Just like us in the central Europe, we need more powerful allies. We found our allies not in Europe but in America. You found one in Russia,” Cholaszczy­nski said.

In October 2017, the Russian government turned over military equipment to the Philippine government.

Last October, Philippine Navy vessel BRP Tarlac made a historic port call to Vladivosto­k, Russia.

Duterte, a vocal admirer of Russian leader Vladimir Putin, visited Russia in May 2017 but he had to cut his trip short after a local terrorist group attacked Marawi City in Mindanao.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? President Rodrigo Duterte discusses matters with Russian President Vladimir Putin during their bilateral meeting in Vietnam last month.
FILE PHOTO President Rodrigo Duterte discusses matters with Russian President Vladimir Putin during their bilateral meeting in Vietnam last month.

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