|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
Philippine president accused of treason over Spratlys
deal with China
By Dante Pastrana
29 March 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
More political fuel was added this month to the crisis surrounding
Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. There were accusations
that her administration had betrayed the country by signing a
2005 agreement with China and Vietnam to conduct a joint seismic
survey of the disputed Spratly Islands chain. The new allegations
come on top of accusations of massive kickbacks involving the
awarding of a now-cancelled $US329 million contract to a Chinese
corporation, Zhongxing Telecommunication Equipment Co. (ZTE),
to build a nationwide broadband network (NBN) in the Philippines.
While the agreement with China and Vietnam is not new, opposition
politicians utilised an article in January/February 2008 edition
of the Far Eastern Economic Review (FEER) to resurrect
the issue. The payoffs contained in the 2006 ZTE contract, they
claimed, were made in return for signing the Spratlys agreement
in 2005. The Spratlys, which sit aside key strategic sea lanes
in the South China Sea and are believed to have significant reserves
of oil and gas, have been the subject of bitter and long-running
disputes between China, Vietnam, Taiwan, the Philippines and Malaysia.
The FEER article entitled Manilas Bungle in the
South China Sea was scathing in its criticism, declaring:
As details of the undertaking emerge, the JMSU [Joint Marine
Seismic Undertaking] is beginning to look like anything but the
way to go. For a start, the Philippine government has broken ranks
with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations [ASEAN], which
was dealing with China as a bloc on the South China Sea issue.
The Philippines also has made breathtaking concessions in agreeing
to the area for study, including parts of its own continental
shelf not even claimed by China and Vietnam. Through its actions,
Manila has given a certain legitimacy to Chinas legally
spurious historic claim to most of the South China
Sea.
Arroyos opponentsboth left and rightimmediately
seized on the FEER article. In the lower house, Teodoro Casiño
and Satur Ocampo from the Stalinist Bayan Muna joined with 12
other congressmen to declare that the JMSU agreement was effectively
giving away the national patrimony as it actually concedes the
exploration and exploitation of natural resources to foreigners
which, under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea
(UNCLOS), clearly fall within the archipelagic waters, exclusive
economic zone and continental shelf of the Philippines.
In the Senate, Panfilo Lacson and Anna Madrigal, both right-wing
allies of former President Joseph Estrada, and Antonio Trillanes,
the leader of a failed 2006 military uprising, filed separate
resolutions against Arroyo. Trillaness resolution defined
the agreement as treacherous and an apparent attempt
to circumvent the constitution and to undermine the powers
vested by the constitution upon the senate. If proven, this
amounts to a betrayal of public trust and treason, for which
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and other responsible members of her Government
should be held accountable, his resolution stated.
It may appear odd that a three-year-old agreement has suddenly
surfaced in the midst of a bitter faction row in the Philippine
political establishment. In fact, the new JMSU scandal
helps to clarify what lies beneath the allegations of corruption,
nepotism and now treason against Arroyo that fill the pages of
the Filipino press. Arroyos opponents speak for those layers
of the ruling elite most closely aligned with the old colonial
powerthe United Stateswho are hostile to her administrations
developing economic and political relations with China.
In the tussle for the NBN contract, the Chinese corporation
ZTE won out over an American rival ARESCOM. In the case of the
Spratlys, even bigger interests are at stake. Ever since September
2001, the Bush administration has been intent on using its fraudulent
war on terrorism to strengthen the US strategic position
in South East Asia and counter its rising rival China. Arroyo
immediately sided with Washington and, with US military support,
waged her own war on terror in southern Mindanao.
At the same time, however, her administration has been increasingly
dependent on aid and investment from China to boost the shaky
Filipino economy.
US opposition to the JMSU deal was evident in 2005. The right-wing
American think tank, the Heritage Foundation, was particularly
incensed. It accused Arroyo of caving in to bullies
and vehemently disagreed with her claims that the agreement
with China does not constitute a surrender of sovereignty over
a potentially sensitive area near the Philippines coast.
A similar note was sounded by Mark Valencia, currently a senior
associate of the Nautilus Institute, who warned that the agreement
would seem to legitimise Chinas occupation of Mischief
Reef on the Philippines legal continental shelf, and also
tacitly implies that both parties recognise the legitimacy of
each others claims to the area to be researched,
as well as to the nearby features.
Washingtons opposition
Not accidentally, Valencia is the independent expert
cited in the FEER article. He has been a senior fellow at the
East-West Centre funded by the US Congress, and a contributor
to the right-wing Asian Wall Street Journal and Washington
Times. He has consistently articulated US strategic interests
in opposing the legitimacy of Chinas maritime territorial
claims in the South China Sea.
In a Japan Times article in 2000, Valencia branded Chinas
claims as a serious, long-term threat to safe and secure
passage in the South China Sea. He argued that in basing
its claims of sovereignty over the disputed sea as historic
waters, China was, in effect, directly challenging US interests
in the area: freedom of navigation, not just for international
shipping, but more importantly for US military forces. Freedom
of navigation and overflight principles do not apply in historic
waters, he wrote.
US efforts to undermine Chinas claims in the South China
Sea stem from broader strategic considerations. The Bush administration
has exploited its bogus war on terrorism to secure
closer military ties with a number of countries in Asia, including
India, Japan and in Central Asia.
However, many countries in the region, including the Philippines,
have become increasingly dependent on China economically as a
major market and source of investment and aid. Philippine exports
to China, 80 percent of which are electronic parts, have ballooned
from $3.14 billion in 2000 to $30.62 billion in 2007. By last
year, the Philippines had become the fourth biggest trader with
China among ASEAN members. China and Hong Kong together displaced
the US as the Philippines largest trading partner, representing
23 percent of the countrys foreign trade. On the other hand,
Philippine exports to the US fell from more than 35 percent of
total exports in 1997 to just 18.3 percent by 2006.
China is competing with Australian and US multinationals in
the Philippine mining industry and has reportedly invested $1
billion in the Surigao del Norte province. It has also invested
$476 million in the rehabilitation of the North Luzon Railway
System. By contrast with the US, which had generated resentment
by refusing to sign a free trade agreement and remove subsidies
for US agricultural goods, China has signed major agreements committing
the Philippines to set aside 1.5 million hectares for the production
of agricultural goods exclusively for the Chinese market.
In 2006, according to a New York Times report, China
offered an extraordinary package of $2 billion in loans
each year for the next three years from its Export-Import Bank.
The aid offer easily trumped the $200 million offered separately
by the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank for that year
alone and outstripped a $1 billion loan under negotiation
with Japan.
The Philippines hosted the second East Asian Summit in January
2007, linking ASEAN countries with China, Japan and South Korea.
Australia, New Zealand and India were allowed to attend, but the
US was notably absent. Concerns have been expressed in Washington
that the East Asian Summit will become a means for Beijing to
use its growing economic muscle to extend its regional influence.
Arroyo, on the other hand, declared at the summit: We are
happy to have China as our big brother in the region.
The rapid rise of China is profoundly destabilising economic
and political relations in the Philippines. As popular opposition
has grown over deepening social inequality, rising inflation and
high unemployment, Arroyo and her backers have underlined her
administrations economic success story. Her claims, however,
largely rest on the financial influx from China, which has contributed
heavily to the relatively buoyant Philippine peso, allowing the
government to pay off debts, cut the budget deficit and even pump
prime the economy.
Chinese aid, investment and trade are cutting across economic
ties to the US. The resurrection of the JMSU issue, and its linkage
to the ZTE scandal, shows that sections of the ruling elite in
Manila are concerned that longstanding strategic ties between
the US and its former colony are being compromised. Growing global
financial instability and economic uncertainty are compounding
the tensions. The increasingly bitter factional disputes in Philippine
ruling circles are not being fought out openly, but by means of
a sordid scandal, now accompanied by lurid accusations of treason,
with the aim of disciplining, if not removing Arroyo.
The key role in obscuring the issues and politically subordinating
working people to the anti-Arroyo faction of the ruling elite
is being played by the various Stalinist parties, who line up
with right-wing figures in denouncing Arroyo and calling for her
removal. All this plays a critical function for the ruling class
in blocking the emergence of an independent political movement
of the working class fighting for its own interests.
See Also:
ZTE-NBN scandal triggers political crisis
in the Philippines
[7 March 2008]
Philippines power
grid to be contracted out to private operator
[1 October 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |