The Philippine Star

DFA sings new tune on Chinese relations

- FEDERICO D. PASCUAL Jr.

HAVE you noticed the new tune being sung by the Department of Foreign Affairs on how the Philippine­s would like its Chinese neighbor to behave?

On Friday, Foreign Secretary Teddy Locsin Jr. surprised us with a warning that the Philippine­s would unleash “the severest response” if China’s military exercises in the South China Sea stray into the country’s sovereign waters.

Locsin was reacting to reports that the People’s Liberation Army of China has been conducting naval exercises around Paracel Islands since July 1. The disputed cluster in the SCS is being claimed by China and Vietnam.

The secretary said he quickly checked the coordinate­s of the drills as announced by China and saw that they “do not impinge on Philippine territory”. Since they did not, not yet anyway, there was no need for him to fire a warning shot.

But Locsin did, saying: “Should the exercises spill over to Philippine territory, then China is forewarned that it will be met with the severest response, diplomatic and whatever else is appropriat­e.” We imagined Teddyboy firing a most virulent undiplomat­ic protest.

Having gotten used to President Duterte’s trotting behind China’s paramount leader Xi Jinping as he waited for promised Chinese aid, loans and investment­s, we were surprised to hear Locsin growling about the red dragon’s roiling the waters in the Paracels.

Duterte has tried explaining his spineless posture, confessing that he did not find it a healthy option to question China’s aggressive expansioni­st moves in the Philippine­s’ exclusive economic zone.

In fact, he has considered Philippine-Chinese joint exploratio­n of mineral resources in the country’s maritime areas. It reminds us of a former foreign secretary who said that if rape was inevitable, one might as well lean back and enjoy it.

So why is Locsin now singing an apparently assertive tune different from the pitch set by his President?

Then on Sunday, Locsin marked the fourth anniversar­y of Manila’s winning most of its submission­s in the Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n at The Hague against Beijing’s claim over some 88 percent of the SCS by firing another salvo in the direction of the mainland.

Rejecting Beijing’s claim over a vast area within the nine-dash line it has drawn unilateral­ly, the PCA also declared China to have caused “severe harm” to the ecosystem with its reclamatio­n of marine features.

There was no fresh provocatio­n as far as we know, but Locsin called on China to adhere to the arbitral ruling, stressing that the 2016 award based on the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea was “non-negotiable.”

The Philippine­s, he said, reaffirms “its adherence to the award and its enforcemen­t without any possibilit­y of compromise or change.”

But using veiled threats of military reprisals and offering generous assistance for Duterte’s ambitious infrastruc­ture program, Xi has succeeded in stalematin­g him.

With Duterte estopped by his pro-China pronouncem­ents, and considerin­g his apparently declining health, has Malacañang decided that in dealing with China, Locsin would now do the talking?

In other areas, as in the proliferat­ion of Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators that have brought in hordes of Chinese workers as well as crimes associated with gambling, and the signing of onerous investment contracts leading to debt traps, other Locsins may be needed.

It is no coincidenc­e that Manila’s relations with Washington have improved lately, marked by earnest dialogue and stepped-up US assistance, including support for the country’s efforts to stem the spread of the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19).

A signal event was Duterte’s decision to suspend his notice served on Feb. 11 for the terminatio­n after 180 days of the Visiting Forces Agreement, the main legal basis for the rotational but continued presence of US military forces in the Philippine­s.

It may be a petty footnote to the ongoing repair job on tattered ties, but we cannot help noticing also the US embassy’s contacting Sen. Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa, a Duterte point man, about his canceled US visa’s possibly being restored.

The White House has followed up its courtship of Duterte before he is totally lost to China with a phone call days ago by President Trump taking time off his hectic reelection campaign.

We can imagine the Great White Father flattering the Davao mayor about his “terrific” job, assuring him of US readiness to help, and reiteratin­g an invitation to visit the US, the center of the universe, after Trump trounces his Democratic challenger in November.

We assume that Xi, the other party in the political ménage à trois, has been watching US moves, but with the COVID-19 crisis flattening his Belt and Road Initiative, his business-based courting of Duterte has suffered.

• 2 Pampanga solons voted for ABS-CBN closure

WE want to inform our cabalen that two of the four congressme­n of Pampanga voted for the shutdown of ABS-CBN, the country’s biggest media network. They were Juan Miguel “Mikey” Macapagal Arroyo (2nd Dist.) and Juan Pablo “Rimpy” P. Bondoc (4th Dist.) Two other Pampanga solons – Carmelo “Jon” B. Lazatin II (1st Dist.) and Aurelio “Dong” D. Gonzales Jr. (3rd Dist.) – were not members of the House committee that voted 70-11 on Friday to reject the renewal of the 25year ABS-CBN franchise that expired May 4.

To their credit, the 11 who voted to renew the franchise were Sol Aragones (Laguna, 3rd Dist.), Christophe­r De

Venecia (Pangasinan, 4th Dist.), Carlos Zarate (Bayan Muna Party-list), Gabriel Bordado (Camarines Sur, 3rd Dist.), Vilma Santos (Batangas, 6th Dist.), Lianda Bo

lilia (Batangas, 4th Dist.), Jose Tejada (North Cotabato, 4th Dist.), Bienvenido Abante (Manila, 6th Dist.), Stella Quimbo (Marikina, 2nd Dist.), Mujiv Hataman (Basilan. Lone Dist.), and Edward Maceda (Manila, 4th Dist.).

Congressme­n Alfred Vargas (Quezon City, 5th Dist.) and Micaela S. Violago (Nueva Ecija, 2nd Dist.) inhibited themselves, citing the possibilit­y of their being called out for “conflict of interest” if they voted. Rep. Alfredo A. Garbin Jr. (Ako Bicol-Party List) abstained. * * * Nota Bene: All Postscript­s are archived at manilamail.

com. Author is on Twitter as @FDPascual. Feedback can be emailed to fdp333@yahoo.com H

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