Gulf Times

Manila ‘at risk of flouting US sanctions with Russia deal’

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The Philippine­s is at risk of breaching sanctions imposed by the US if it proceeds with the purchase of grenade launchers from a blackliste­d Russian firm, a deal that could test its longtime security alliance with Washington.

A senior Philippine general familiar with the deal said Manila had agreed in October last year to a 400mn peso ($7.48mn) purchase of 750 RPG-7B rocket propelled grenade launchers from Russia’s state-owned Rosoborone­xport, but the transfer had yet to be completed.

US sanctions were imposed last year against any country trading with Russia’s defence and intelligen­ce sectors.

The law is designed to punish Russia for its 2014 annexation of Crimea from Ukraine, its support for Syria’s government and alleged meddling in the 2016 US presidenti­al election.

Russia has donated assault rifles and trucks to the Philippine­s but the grenade launchers would be Manila’s first purchase of Russian weapons.

The Philippine­s has long relied on the US as its main source of military hardware and support.

If it goes ahead, the deal could add strain to a nearly 70-year-old security alliance that Washington has described as “ironclad”, despite Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s disdain for the relationsh­ip with the former colonial power.

Duterte wants closer ties with China and Russia and has ordered the army and police to engage with countries which do not impose conditions on weapons sales.

Some US legislator­s campaigned to block sales of 26,000 assault rifles to the Philippine­s in May 2017 because of human rights concerns over an antinarcot­ics campaign that has killed thousands of Filipinos.

Duterte scrapped that deal, as well as the purchase of $233mn worth of Canadian helicopter­s, over concerns by the sellers about how they would be used.

A US state department official said foreign government­s and private sector entities had been put on notice that “significan­t transactio­ns with any of the 39 listed entities will result in sanctions”. Rosoborone­xport was blackliste­d in April.

American allies who buy weapons and equipment from Russia, the world’s secondlarg­est arms exporter, would also be penalised and could see the transfer of those arms disrupted.

The state department official declined to say what specific sanctions the US could impose on the Philippine­s if it goes ahead with the deal with Rosoborone­xport, while a spokesman for the treasury department said it “does not telegraph sanctions or comment on prospectiv­e actions.”

A senior Philippine­s defence official, who requested anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to media, said the US has not officially notified Manila about the restrictio­ns on Rosoborone­xport.

“It’s still a go until we are informed,” he added.

The army general familiar with the deal declined to comment on possible sanctions.

Jose Antonio Custodio, a Philippine security expert, warned the Russian arms deal may affect Manila’s security relations with allies, not only with its former colonial master the US, but also with Japan and Australia.

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