MANILA, Philippines — Chinese officials
pushing for Beijing's claims on the West Philippine Sea believe the Philippines
is still a "factotum" of the United States.
This is what lawyer Harry Roque, among
the petitioners questioning the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA),
noted before the Supreme Court during the oral arguments on Tuesday.
Senior Associate Justice Antonio Carpio
quizzed Roque on what he would advise President Benigno Aquino III if China
attacks a Philippine-claimed territory, giving him four options:
"You are now the adviser of the
President, what would you advise him?" Carpio asked Roque.
1. To increase our defense spending from 1 percent to 3
percent of GDP, which is ASEAN average. We have the weakest Navy, practically
non-existent.
2. Enter into alliances with Japan and India just like what Vietnam did, or Australia.
3. Strengthen our relationship with our sole treaty partner, the US.
4. Sue China before the [United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea] or before any other [international] body.
2. Enter into alliances with Japan and India just like what Vietnam did, or Australia.
3. Strengthen our relationship with our sole treaty partner, the US.
4. Sue China before the [United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea] or before any other [international] body.
Roque responded, saying he would choose
all options, "except strengthening our partnership with the United
States."
"From my personal experience, in
all instances where I've had occasion to dialogue with Chinese officials, they
have never looked at the Philippines as an independent republic with its own
national interest to promote," Roque, an international law expert, said.
"We are considered as factotum of
the United States," he added.
He said it is "crucial" for
Manila to convince Beijing that it is independent from Washington, its former
colonizer, if it wants the maritime disputes to be peacefully resolved.
Roque said the Philippines will be
better off forging alliances with its neighbors in the region as they have
common interests.
"They perceive China as a regional
threat ... [It is] more beneficial to have a closer alliance with those that
are proximate to us and who have the same perception [of China]," he said.
"We have our national interests,
we're safeguarding our territory because that is our national territory and not
because we are mere lackeys of our former colonial master," Roque added.
He noted that the Philippines can no
longer be considered a "poor" country as it has been able to
appropriate billions for the modernization of armed forces, especially the
Navy.
Carpio, however, did not seem to be
convinced with Roque's argument and said China is also asserting sovereignty
over Vietnam-claimed areas and has evicted Vietnamese control over maritime
features.
"For China it doesn't matter,
because China says, I own that territory, I own these waters, whether you're
allied to the US, USSR or any other country, we don't care because we have the
might now, we will take over that area," Carpio, himself an expert in maritime
law, said.
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