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Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte and President Xi Jinping of China at the Malacañang Palace in Manila on November 20, 2018. Photo: Malacañang

Philippines’ Rodrigo Duterte claims China threatened war over South China Sea if status quo not kept

  • Former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte said Chinese President Xi Jinping had strongly warned him against drilling for oil in the disputed waters
  • Duterte said he understood that China would ‘go to war’ if the Philippines asserted its rights in the South China Sea
Former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte has broken his silence on an unwritten “gentleman’s agreement” he was said to have made with Chinese President Xi Jinping, claiming he did not concede to any territorial demands but that Beijing was ready to “go to war” if Manila exercised its economic rights in the South China Sea.

At a press briefing on Thursday, Duterte recalled his first state visit to China in 2016, during which he discussed various issues with Xi, including the Philippines’ plan to “dig oil” in the West Philippine Sea – Manila’s term for the waters of the South China Sea within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone. Duterte said his Chinese counterpart was adamantly opposed and warned him strongly against it.

“I just want to let you know, this was the response of President Xi: ‘I’m afraid you cannot do that.’ … [I said] I will get oil from the portion of the South China Sea that belongs to the Philippines. He told me: ‘Please do not do it! For the life of me. We are friends and I do not want to destroy that friendship,’” Duterte said.

“My understanding is ‘there will be trouble’ if we insist on our own way there in the West Philippine Sea. China will go to war,” he added.

Duterte also denied that he had ever struck a “gentlemen’s deal” with Xi that would entail forfeiting his country’s territorial rights, and that the only thing they agreed on was maintaining the status quo within the disputed waters, meaning no new facilities or infrastructure.

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte (left) and Chinese President Xi Jinping shake hands after a signing ceremony held in Beijing on October 20, 2016. Photo: Reuters

“Aside from the fact of having a handshake with President Xi Jinping, the only thing I remember was ‘status quo’. That’s the word,” Duterte said.

Last week, Harry Roque, who had served as Duterte’s presidential spokesman, said the reason for China’s recent water cannon attacks on Philippine vessels in March, which left three sailors injured, could be due to the “gentleman’s agreement” he claimed Duterte and Xi had made.

Roque speculated that Beijing felt Manila’s missions to the Second Thomas Shoal to resupply the BPS Sierra Madre – a WWII era navy vessel that was purposefully grounded on the shoal to bolster the Philippines’ territorial claims – was a violation of the unwritten agreement made by Duterte.

During his six years in office, Duterte, who consistently called Xi a very close “friend”, reoriented Philippine foreign policy away from the United States towards closer ties with China.

China has competing claims in the South China Sea with the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Vietnam. In 2016, a UN arbitration court ruled in favour of the Philippines, invalidating China’s historical claims on much of the disputed region’s waters. Beijing, however, rejected the ruling and continues to insist that it has jurisdiction over everything within its nine-dash boundary claim.

Manila and Washington have an existing 1951 Mutual Defence Treaty (MDT) that calls on both countries to aid each other in times of aggression by an external power.

On the same day that Duterte gave his press briefing, his successor, President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr, met US President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at the White House for a trilateral summit to discuss a number of matters, including maritime security. During the meeting, Biden reiterated that the MDT was still in effect and would be honoured.
US President Joe Biden escorts Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr and Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida to their trilateral summit at the White House in Washington on Thursday. Photo: Reuters

“United States defence commitments to Japan, and to the Philippines, are ironclad, they’re ironclad,” Biden told the media. “Any attack on Philippine aircraft vessels or armed forces in the South China Sea would invoke our mutual defence treaty.”

Calibrating alliances

Many observers believe that Marcos Jnr has increasingly aligned his country with the US since taking office in 2022 as a means of counterbalancing China. However, political analyst and professor Edmund Tayao from the San Beda Graduate School of Law said he thought the current administration was simply recalibrating the relationship after the Philippines grew closer to China under Duterte.

“The only reason there is this perception that we are leaning more towards the US is because the past administration set aside our long-time friendship with the US,” he told This Week in Asia.

Tayao said he believed Marcos Jnr was doing the right thing, not just by leaning towards the US but by expanding the country’s foreign policy options by strengthening relations with other nations, such as Japan, as well.

Both the US and China would think long and hard before doing anything in the South China Sea that would risk bringing them into conflict, Tayao argued, noting their economic interdependence on trade.

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Why is the Philippines aligning itself with the US after years of close China ties under Duterte

Why is the Philippines aligning itself with the US after years of close China ties under Duterte

Renato Cruz De Castro, a professor of international studies at De La Salle University in Manila, told This Week in Asia that the US would only act in defence of the Philippines if it was in its own self-interest.

“We have a treaty relationship with the US, not because we like each other, but because we are faced by a greater threat and that is China,” De Castro said.

“You have to understand the notion of alliance. The alliance [members] do not like each other. Alliances are formed because you have a greater threat and that is China. We share a common interest and of course that is to prevent China from becoming the dominant power in the region,” he added.

“Historically, if you look at the case of World War I, Britain and Germany were economically linked. The same in the Pacific War, Japan and the US were economically linked together also. But after the first shot has been fired, economic interdependence simply does not really matter,” De Castro warned, adding “Manila has to prepare for the inevitable”.

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