OF LAW AND POLITICS
First of Four Articles on the Notice
to Terminate the Visiting Forces Agreement: Big Picture
Jaime S. Bautista
The first part of this series of articles gives a brief
historical picture of the issues which should be looked at in considering the
issues of sovereignty and the threats to our country’s territorial
integrity. This is a reprint of my
article entitled “Reviewing the Visiting Forces Agreement” which was first
published by the Manila Times under this column on 21 September 2013. Reproduced below is the entire article:
“The Philippines should conduct the negotiations with respect to
the revision of the Visiting Forces Agreement, mindful of the shifts in the
global balance of power, the full range of threats to our security, and all the
options to extend our security, including our economic interests.
“Since the signing of the VFA in 1999, there have been strategic
developments both in Asia and elsewhere, and shifts in the axis of power.
The so-called “US pivot to Asia” is a reaction to these changes taking
place.
US Pivot to Asia
“Historically, the US pivot to Asia might be said to have begun
in the nineteenth century when the United States invaded the Philippine Islands
during the Spanish American War of 1898. This conflict recorded the first
misunderstanding between the Americans and Filipinos, which led to the
Philippine American War. Commodore George Dewey denied that he had struck
a deal with President Emilio Aguinaldo for Philippine support for the American
invasion of the Walled City of Manila. At that time, international law
was defined as the body of rules binding upon “civilized states” in their
relations with one another. The Philippines did not qualify as a subject
of international law, with rights and duties under this law. This is the
background for the famous anecdote of President William McKinley praying to
God, and deciding thereafter to annex the Philippines.
“Clearly, the renegotiation of the VFA provides the occasion to
establish a clear understanding of the scope and conditions for the visits of
US naval vessels, planes and troops to the Philippines on a
proposed “rotational basis.”
“This occasion also provides the opportunity for the Philippines
to re-visit the Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) with the United States, on which
the VFA is based, and to address the issues on which there has been
dissatisfaction on the part of critics of this treaty. These include the
issue that the MDT does not provide for automatic operation of the treaty in
case of an attack on the Philippines as in the case of the NATO treaty, that
the defense treaty is not clear on whether it provides protection for the
islands and rocks outside the Philippines’ archipelagic baselines but within
its Economic Exclusive Zone (EEZ), and that the said treaty has not been of
sufficient help with respect to the modernization of the Armed Forces of the
Philippines.
“At the outset, it should be pointed out that the VFA signed in
1999 covered only visits approved by the Philippine Government.
Nevertheless, as the USA is the world’s superpower, the Philippines should be
mindful of a number of scenarios that could take place, given the tensions in
areas near the Philippines. What will happen, for example, should
the United States launch a military strike against Iran in the Gulf or against
North Korea in the Korean peninsula and the Philippines should opt to stay out
of the conflict? Under international law, the Philippines would have
obligations as a neutral state not to allow its territory to be used as a
staging point.
“The Philippines has a special concern with what
happens in the Middle East, the Gulf, and the Korean peninsula. It has a
big diaspora in countries in all of these potential conflict areas, and this
gives the Philippines a global reach.
“A scenario closer to home is the conflict that may take place
in the Taiwan Straights although this scenario is not likely, given the
improved relations between China and Taiwan. In the past, the
presence of the US Seventh Fleet impeded the invasion of Taiwan from the
Chinese mainland. If war should break out in the Taiwan Straits, and the
United States intervenes, US armed forces present in the Philippines would be
exposed to attack.
China Threat
“Critics of the VFA point to this scenario and argue that the
Philippines should revoke the VFA because they think of the Philippines as a
small country, which should avoid being crushed in a fight between two
elephants. Moreover, they also see the USA is a declining power and that
in time, China will become the dominant superpower.
“This rising economic superpower is the immediate threat to the
Philippines’ security with its armed occupation of Bajo
de Masinloc (Scarborough Shoal) and Mischief Reef and its continuing threat to
seize other submerged features and protruding rocks within the Philippines’
Continental Shelf and Exclusive Economic Zone. It is through this prism
that Filipinos today view the Philippines’ strategic relations with China.
“Some political analysts argue that the crisis over Masinloc has
come about as a result of China’s apprehension to the so-called US pivot to the
Asia Pacific region and its reaction to the increased military presence of the
United States in the Philippines under the Visiting Forces Agreement. It
is China engaging in shadow boxing with the United States. The Philippines
evidently is no match militarily and has the weakest armed forces in the
region, although they have experience in combat and as peacekeeping
forces.
PH Strategic Importance
“However, the Philippines cannot be thought of as a small island
in the Pacific. The Philippines is one of the three great archipelagoes
located close to the Asian Continent. At the northern end is Japan, at
the southern end Indonesia and strategically located at the center is the
Philippines. Like Indonesia and Japan, the Philippines is a large
maritime country with the twelfth largest population in the world. It is
the second largest in ASEAN in terms of human resources and its economy is one
of the few bright spots in the world today.
“Not only is the Philippines strategically important because of
its geographical location at the center of the maritime region where half of
the world’s cargo passes but the Philippines plays a strategic role in
international commerce. It is the backbone of the shipping industry,
being the biggest seafaring country in the world.
“These are the strengths that the Philippines bring to the
negotiating table. The main concern of the Philippines is the
protection of its sovereign rights over its continental shelf and exclusive
economic zone. The Philippines has adopted a three-pronged strategy to
achieve this end by bringing a case before the Arbitral Tribunal of the Law of
the Sea, a dialogue with China bilaterally and in the ASEAN forums,
and
inviting the attention of the United States to the tensions in
the West Philippine Sea under its defense arrangements.
“The on-going talks on a new Access Agreement on a “rotational
basis” is recognition by the United States of having neglected its interests in
the Asia Pacific and leaving the countries in Southeast Asia exposed to the
growing economic and military power of China. The Philippines was
constrained to have its own pivot to China under President Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo. The so-called pivot of the United States to Asia Pacific is
to prevent the region from falling within China’s sphere of influence.
“The Philippines has shifted its emphasis on relations with
China and the United States from economic to security interests because of
China’s aggression. As long as China is engaged along this road, the
Philippines will want to have strengthened defense arrangements with the United
States.
“The Philippines has benefited from the VFA. It has
received assistance in setting up its Coast Watch System (basically a national
radar system for its maritime domain awareness) related to protecting its
marine resources. It has also received assistance in disaster management
as the Philippines is prone to typhoons and other calamities, and beefing up
its national security and counter-terrorism capabilities, important for
Mindanao.
Equivocal Commitments
“However, the Philippines has received only equivocal
commitments from the United States with respect to the defense of the
Philippines’ sovereign rights in its continental shelf and exclusive economic
zone in the West Philippine Seas unlike the commitment given to Japan over
Japan’s administration of the disputed Senkaku/Diayao Island. Secretary
of State Hilary Clinton explicitly guaranteed US support for all Japanese
territory, including the Senkaku/Diayao Islands, under its Mutual Defense
Treaty with Japan.
“It should be noted that the Philippines’ mainland is not
perceived to be under threat of external attack. Only its maritime
territory is subject to Chinese aggression. Unless the Philippines
receives a firm commitment like that provided to Japan, the Philippines should
assess the value that the VFA has for the Philippines vis a vis the
dangers arising and the economic losses to be sustained.
“In any event, the Philippines should look down the road in the
next years for a cost-benefit analysis of whether security guarantees/ support
will continue to be more important than sustained Chinese investment over the
next 20-30 years. As an alternative to security guarantees, the Philippines
should develop a strategy of building a web of interlocking economic interests
as a shield against external attack. Supporting this strategy would be greater
reliance on international law, which should be a guiding principle of
Philippine foreign policy.”
Ambassador Jaime S. Bautista, Doctor of laws, and
Vice President of the Philippine Ambassadors’ Foundation Inc and
of the Philippine Council For Foreign Relations
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