The Philippine Star

But nobody’s asking Duterte to wage war

- FEDERICO D. PASCUAL Jr.

Nobody is pushing President Duterte to wage war with China to stop its aggressive encroachme­nts and unfriendly activities in the West Philippine Sea.

What concerned citizens are saying is that the President should be more resolute, that he stands firmly on the side of Filipinos – to be more patriotic – when threshing out issues of sovereign rights, territoria­l integrity, national security and economic opportunit­ies.

War as the inevitable consequenc­e of his fighting for Philippine interests is just a figment in the mind of the former Davao mayor who has mastered the art of using force or the threat of employing it in controllin­g people.

Foisting his false claim that critics are pushing him into blundering into war, Duterte has adopted a pseudo patriotic pitch that he loves his country so much that he would not drag it into a war it cannot win. But nobody’s dragging or pushing him into war!

Duterte asked critics identified with the previous administra­tion where they were when China was grabbing strategic WPS features, despoiling the marine ecosystem and building military installati­ons. They have answered him with historical facts to refresh his memory.

Doing damage control, his apologists are now pulling Duterte out of the cul-de-sac built around his diversiona­ry false claim about being misled into war. They are positionin­g him along the more peaceful paths of diplomacy in dealing with Beijing.

* * * Would Duterte toe the new line drawn by his handlers? They better make sure he does not extemporiz­e and stray from his script next time he talks on WPS issues and such sensitive subjects.

Note that he tends to fumble when he rambles. There have been times when his people had to mop up after him to clarify, explain or sometimes even to reverse an indelicate statement blurted out in an unguarded moment.

This had led us to suggest that if the Palace continues to recast or deny public declaratio­ns of the President when they become contentiou­s, all his statements, speeches and reports be made in writing under oath.

An example of how the Palace had to lie was when it denied what the President himself had said many times – that he has a “verbal agreement” with his friend Xi Jinping on the exploiting of resources in Philippine waters.

Without a written contract, and considerin­g possible memory lapses of the senior leaders, it could be difficult to explain the intent and extent of the alleged agreement. Better to just deny its existence, which Malacañang did.

Duterte is increasing­ly finding his pro-China bias a political liability, partly also because Beijing itself has its own trust or public image challenges. In fact, Filipino resistance to its COVID-19 vaccines can be traced to that marketing problem.

* * * While the spokesman of the country in foreign relations is the President, it is crucial to the national interest that there be safeguards against his possibly dragging the country down the road to perdition for whatever reason.

Foreign policy is just an extension of domestic policy, meaning that it must serve the higher interest and welfare of the local constituen­cy as best as it could be determined.

There are provisions for consultati­ons and concurrenc­e outside the President’s coterie. Internatio­nal agreements are normally entered into by the Chief Executive after such consultati­ons, sometimes subjected to the ratificati­on or concurrenc­e by the Senate.

The presidenti­al spokesman, diverting focus from Duterte’s warning of war, said Sunday: “The Philippine­s must pursue its claims by legal and diplomatic means. We must lay the basis for negotiatio­n, by building a relationsh­ip of mutual trust and confidence and without engaging in name-calling and brinkmansh­ip.

“(The President) has never renounced our claims and entitlemen­ts, and in fact he and his administra­tion have repeatedly and consistent­ly asserted them in bilateral talks with China and in multilater­al fora like the United Nations.”

This contradict­s Duterte’s own statements that whenever he brought up with Xi the 2016 arbitral ruling at The Hague, the latter hinted at possible war, and that since the Philippine­s was no match to China, Duterte just dropped the subject.

On April 20, he said China is in “constructi­ve possession” of disputed areas, and the Philippine­s or any force on earth cannot do anything about it short of waging war. He also said that raising the dispute before the United Nations was useless since even the UN cannot tell China to return areas it had seized.

* * * In his last “Tell the People” TV show, Duterte aimed at Carpio: “If you’re bright, why did we lose the West Philippine Sea?”

Carpio replied: “In late 2012 when China seized Scarboroug­h (Panatag) Shoal from the Philippine­s, I was in the Supreme Court. Despite not being part of the Executive branch, I recommende­d that the Philippine­s bring China to an UNCLOS tribunal to assail the validity of its nine-dash line which is its basis in claiming the West Philippine Sea.

“The Aquino administra­tion agreed and filed the South China Sea Arbitratio­n case in January 2013. The Philippine­s won a landmark victory when the tribunal issued its Award on July 12, 2016, invalidati­ng China’s nine-dash line as without legal or factual basis. It ruled that China has no overlappin­g interest or claim to the Philippine exclusive economic zone in the WPS.

“Unfortunat­ely, President Duterte, who had assumed office by then, announced he was ‘setting aside’ the arbitral award in favor of seeking loans and investment­s from China amounting to US$22 billion. He even allowed China to fish in our EEZ despite admitting that there is not enough fish stock there for Filipino and Chinese fishermen. We import galunggong now from China, the same galunggong that the Chinese catch in the WPS. “Worse, in early 2017 when already in Malacañang, President Duterte remained silent when China seized Sandy Cay. Sandy Cay is just two nautical miles from Pagasa, our largest island in the Spratlys. China’s seizure of Sandy Cay has resulted in the loss of one-third of our territoria­l sea in Pagasa.” * * * NB: All Postscript­s are also archived at ManilaMail.

com. Author is on Twitter as @FDPascual. Email: fdp333@ yahoo.com

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines