Filipinos in South Korea

Philippines Led USA in China-America Power Competition

The Philippines has emerged as a frontline state in the rivalry between the United States and China for Southeast Asian power and influence. Locked in a bitter territorial dispute with Beijing in the South China Sea, and with no prospects of a diplomatic resolution in sight, Manila has moved to bolster to its long-standing strategic alliance with Washington.

As China fortifies its military and administrative hold on disputed islands in the Spratly Islands and other South China Sea territories, the Philippines is effectively reverting to its pre-1992 state of strategic affairs, an era when the US helped to determine the island nation's security and provided strong steering to its foreign policy.

Against China's growing assertiveness in the region, including anaval standoff over a contested shoal earlier this year, Manila is turning back on almost two decades of relative strategic independence, beginning with the Philippine Senate's refusal in 1991 to extend the US's lease at Subic Bay naval base, a military presence nationalistic lawmakers then assailed as a vestige of colonialism and affront to national sovereignty.

Fast forward to the present, Manila is now actively, if not desperately, courting US military support vis-a-vis China. Certain Philippine officials have even signaled an openness to hosting greater numbers of American soldiers in the country on a rotational basis; constitutional provisions bar the establishment of foreign military bases on Philippine soil, a nationalistic reaction to the US's previous use of the country as a military staging ground.

The two sides already hold annual joint military exercises, known as "shoulder to shoulder". These are staged ostensibly as practice counter-terrorism operations, but have recently included exercises that could be construed as targeting China, including in areas adjacent to contested South China Sea territories.

The Philippines has also been at the center of revitalized diplomatic efforts among America's regional treaty and strategic allies, including Japan, Vietnam, and Australia, to form what some view as a US-led "string of pearls" aimed at containing China's purported expansionary zeal in the region, including its growing naval capabilities in the South China Sea.

At the same time, Manila has pushed the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to adopt a binding code of conduct for the South China Sea, while calling for international arbitration to settle its conflicting maritime claims with China. Both moves have put Manila at loggerheads with Beijing and play to existing US positions on the issues.

Strategic sacrifice

With regional tensions on the rise, questions are mounting about the strategic wisdom of the President Benigno Aquino government's current course. Those concerns have tended to focus on four key interrelated issues, namely:

The loss of strategic flexibility and national sovereignty to an overreliance on the US;

Uncertainty over America's commitment to Philippine national security, especially in the event of an armed confrontation with China, and the depth of Washington's declared strategic "pivot";

The sincerity and effectiveness of Manila's diplomatic efforts, especially on its calls for a regional code of conduct and ASEAN-led conflict resolution;

The rising economic and political costs of confronting China, a major trading partner and source of investments.

The crisis in China-Philippine relations is a product of several factors, ranging from the murky nature of the United Nations Convention on the Laws of the Sea (UNCLOS) and lack of an effective regional conflict management mechanism, to growing popular nationalism and military expenditures in China, to deepening geo-strategic competition between a rising China and embattled America over natural resources and for regional maritime primacy.

The escalating territorial conflicts in the Spratlys and other maritime areas are in this context a subset of deeper systemic imbalances, as well as a reflection of weaknesses in the region's emerging security architecture. UNCLOS, which has motivated overlapping claims within the South China Sea, represents one of those structural flaws.

With each claimant country projecting a 200 nautical mile exclusive economic zone from its immediate shores, with different parties adopting divergent interpretations of the convention, the entire South China Sea is now plagued with contested claims among Brunei, China, the Philippines, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam. Those tensions have recently intensified between the China and the Philippines after a series of incidents at sea.

"China's baselines are all expressed in its coastal geography through a U-shaped line in the (South China Sea) and in several offshore places. This exceeds those allowed by the UNCLOS and international law," says Chester Cabalza, a professor at the Philippine National Defense College. "On the other hand, the Philippines, being an archipelagic country, is entitled to enclose large bodies of water within the baselines and assert sovereignty over it."

The only way to peacefully settle these differences will be through either bilaterally agreed upon arbitration by an international body, or under the aegis of a multilateral regional organization with an enforcement capacity to implement binding rules of behavior. Yet China has so far refused to subject its claims to international arbitration, while regional organizations such as ASEAN lack the power and will to intervene.

China, citing its wide sweeping nine-dash line map, has even refused to acknowledge that its claims in the South China Sea are contested. Those ambitious claims could have grave strategic and economic implications for the region's smaller countries and as such have coaxed former critics and adversaries in the region into Washington's strategic embrace.

"If you take the doctrine to its logical conclusion, it means that [China] will have the final say or sovereignty over who passes through such an important international waterway by subjecting it to internal waterway regulations," said prominent Filipino intellectual and legislator Walden Bello. "This is where the real fear begins for many smaller neighbors such as the Philippines and Vietnam."

Empty declaration

In 2002, ASEAN and China agreed upon a non-binding, highly symbolic "Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea". A decade later, there has been no concrete movement in terms of building even guidelines for a binding agreement. In large part that's because Beijing refuses to acknowledge that features of the Paracel and Spratly island chains are contested, including by the Philippines and Vietnam.

The recent fiasco in Phnom Penh, where ASEAN members failed to issue a final communique for the first time in the grouping's history, demonstrated its impotence vis-a-vis China's influence over certain smaller member states - in this case Cambodia. It also highlighted the grouping's well-established inability to contemplate and resolve regional problems.

"The Phnom Penh summit reflected the fundamental structural deficiencies within ASEAN, whereby you have no dispute settlement mechanisms within the charter and mechanisms of the organization," said Herman Kraft, former director of the Manila-based Institute for Strategic and Developmental Studies. "The summit works on the basis of consensus, so if there is no consensus there is no resolution."

The lack of ASEAN cohesion and integrity signals a trend towards China using its economic power to drive a wedge within the grouping and in the multilateral vacuum pressure smaller states through bilateral means. Aware of Manila's dependence on tourism and commodity exports, Beijing has recently deployed a combination of travel bans, non-tariff barriers and threats of economic sanctions to pressure the Philippines. Its ban on Philippine banana exports, for example, has recently deprived Manila of a US$250 million market.

With countries such as Cambodia, which relies heavily on Chinese trade and investment, now openly opposing other pro-US ASEAN members such as the Philippines, the organization is arguably splintering on China versus US geo-strategic lines.

"There is a neo-Cold war in the region ... the region is torn between the US and China," said Cabalza. "This is very apparent in most official regional and multilateral engagements that I have attended. Actually, all Indo-Chinese countries in ASEAN are handcuffed by China."

The US and its strategic allies, meanwhile, have recently bolstered aid to the Philippines. Japan recently signed a new defense pact with the Philippines, which together with South Korea, will help Manila to improve its deterrence and maritime surveillance capacities. Australia, too, is set to step up its security cooperation with Manila, thanks to the Philippine Senate's recent ratification of a long pending Status of Forces Agreement.

As part of its declared "pivot" to Asia, the US has offered a mixture of aid, military hardware, increased joint-military exercises, and financial support to the Philippines. Washington's call for "freedom of navigation" in the South China Sea and "peaceful settlement of disputes" through a more binding code of conduct under ASEAN and UNCLOS have fortified Philippine positions.

Nationalistic response

So how will China respond? A tumultuous leadership transition, slowing economy and growing social discontent have all recently pushed Beijing in a more nationalistic direction. By projecting confidence and assertiveness on foreign fronts, including the South China Sea, Chinese leaders apparently hope to distract attention from rising domestic challenges.

Other actors, including the People's Liberation Army's navy (PLAN), a major recipient of ballooning military expenditures, are believed to be conducting their own independent strategic policies.

"The situation is becoming more complex, with China's armed forces becoming more influential within the internal power equation in China and using the territorial issue as a springboard to legitimize its rising influence within the establishment," said Philippine lawmaker Bello.

China's growing investments in offshore drilling technology and brown and blue naval capabilities signal to strategic analysts a medium-term drive to lock down and take ownership over the South China Sea's potentially rich stores of energy resources. At the same time, Beijing is believed to harbor a longer-term strategy of dominating the South China Sea's international sea lanes to supplant the US's maritime supremacy in the Asia-Pacific and establish its own.

Although China has been widely criticized for stoking recent regional tensions, there are concomitant concerns about the Philippines' responses. Analysts note that China-Philippine bilateral ties were strong until 2009 but then suddenly deteriorated after a series of diplomatic spats and maritime incidents.

"The main trigger, as I see it, was the deadline of submission of claims under UNCLOS whereby the Philippines and Vietnam somehow internationalized their territorial claims against China," said Kraft. He says China sees "the Philippines as an irrelevant player - amidst a frank assessment that the US is a declining power - so how dare it threaten to take China to international arbitration over claims in the [South China Sea]."

There are also concerns that the Philippines has overestimated America's security commitment vis-a-vis China. As a result, Manila has adopted an overly aggressive diplomatic strategy in its dealings with fellow ASEAN countries, witnessed by the recent breakdown in consensus in Phnom Penh. The Philippines' pitched rhetoric against China is believed to have alienated ASEAN members, like Indonesia, who have pursued a more moderate diplomacy on South China Sea issues.

"In terms of assertion of Philippine sovereignty, the government has overall done a good job. It has used all diplomatic means to impress its legitimate claims to features in the Spratlys," said Bello. "My only reservation is the increasing reliance on America to deter Chinese aggression ... Now what we have are regional states locked into a superpower confrontation, sidelining legitimate territorial disputes. Thus hawks have been empowered at the expense of those who have emphasized the wisdom of creative diplomacy."

Unless Manila is able to arrive at a "third way" - utilizing creative diplomacy and multilateral dispute settlement mechanisms - strategic reliance on the US will likely grow in the years ahead. Yet if an armed conflict erupts with China, it is not certain that the US would come to the Philippines' rescue. (The US-Philippine mutual defense treaty could be interpreted in a way that does not cover contested territories.) The US's "pivot" towards Asia, meanwhile, has given China added motivation to militarize its territorial claims in the region.

"The Americans are sweet talkers. The Philippines should not rely on US military capability in case of a conflict with China in the [South China Sea]," said Cabalza. "The US will not save us and won't act as our knight in shining armor. The US will protect its own economic and strategic interests with China."

Asia Times

Hollywood Zac Efron will Visit the Philippines for Butanding in Cebu and escape in El Nido?

El Nido Palawan Miniloc Resort

Work, curiosity and leisure trigger the Hollywood Hunk Zac Efron to visit the Philippines. He is once a one time was Hollywood's highest paid teenage actor during his High School Musical days.

Mindoro Island and lovely beaches of the Philippines was always a music in his ears when he's young and his Dad once served under the Merchant Marines and often visited in Mindoro Island.

Recently, the "Bourne Legacy" movie-full scenes were also taken in the Philippines with the Paradise of El Nido Palawan of many fantastic islands as the farewell and escape of the Bourne.

World curiosity of  El Nido Palawan is on the rise after a French reality show were taken in El Nido making Palawan as  one of the most famed and admired paradise as seen in the France TV and North African TV who were following the show.

Before news of his endorsement with local retail giant Penshoppe broke out, Zac Efron's connection to the Philippines with his former "High School Musical" sweetheart, Vanessa Hudgens, is of Filipino descent is already vibrant.

But now, we've actually discovered that the teen heartthrob-turned-Hollywood hunk has more ties to our beautiful, sunny shores than we'd originally thought. Get this: he's actually very, very excited about his trip. And no, that's not just lip service.

Coming straight from the international premiere of his latest movie, "The Paperboy," Zac is set to appear in this year's Penshoppe Fan Conference on Sept. 29, at the SM Mall of Asia Arena. Gates open at 6PM.

Curiosity about the Philippines

It will be Zac's first time in the Philippines. Initially, he wasn't so keen about doing endorsements. But when he heard that Penshoppe is a Filipino brand, he immediately said yes.

"It's the perfect, perfect excuse to finally visit. I can't take my mind off that country," he was reported to have said.

Why? Because his father, Dave Efron, used to serve under the Merchant Marines and often visited the Philippines in the past (Mindoro in particular). He's also flying in with Zac for the trip.

"Zac has always had this curiosity and/or mystique over the Philippines since he was a kid," said Dave. "The beaches there are lovely and we can't wait to come!"

"Sometimes my father will disappear for weeks 'cause he's enjoying the Philippines so much. So I've always wanted to come and visit," added Zac.

When asked what he'd like to do if he could go on a holiday in the country, Zac had a ready answer.

"I want to see the beaches. I want to swim with the whale sharks, go on a mountain adventure, try the food like adobo and balut, and just hang with my friends over there. Oh, and I also want to learn how to waterski!"

Zac plans to stay for almost a week in the country. He is said to be taking some personal time off to go on the ultimate Philippine holiday of his dreams prior to the FanCon. Do we hear "butanding" calling?

His parting words: "Can't wait to see you guys! I heard I'll meet around 12,000 or more people at the FanCon. I'll see you all soon."

FanCon ticket mechanics (As published by Inquirer)

For a minimum single receipt purchase of 800.00, PENSHOPPE customers can get FanCon vouchers from the store manager and exchange them for free tickets at any SM Tickets branch.

The tickets entitle customers to General Admission seats. Receipts worth 1,200.00 can be exchanged for Upper Box seats, while total purchases amounting to 2,500.00, 3,500.00 and 5,000.00 entitle customers to Lower Box seats, Patron seats and VIP seats, respectively.

Penshoppe customers are also given the opportunity to choose pass combinations for every single receipt purchase. All ticket categories are on a free seating basis.

Penshoppe branches included in the promo are those located at the SM Mall of Asia, SM Megamall, Ayala Trinoma, SM North Edsa, SM Pampanga, SM Baguio, SM Lucena, SM Batangas, SM Cebu, SM Iloilo, SM Davao and SM Cagayan De Oro as well as 10 new stores at Glorietta, SM Fairview, SM San Lazaro, Robinsons Ermita, Ali Mall, Festival Mall Alabang, SM Marikina, SM Manila, Eastwood, and SM Southmall.

Thailand Yes to China, Good bye USA after Armament Upgrade – Philippines less Offered

The US's "pivot" strategy towards the Asia-Pacific aims to reinvigorate security alliances with its established partners in the region. In Southeast Asia, the Philippines and Thailand have long been US treaty allies, affording them privileged access to US armaments and in the case of the Philippines a mutual defense guarantee if attacked by a third party.

The Philippines and Thailand, however, have had decidedly different responses to the US's renewed security engagement with the region. While Manila has warmly welcomed the US's military presence, Bangkok has adopted a hedging strategy to preserve its vibrant ties with China. Washington's ties with Bangkok and Manila are now influenced by two crucial factors: (1) the perception of an existential threat and (2) domestic political and economic interests.

A key strategic hub for American forces, the Philippines has offered the US greater access to its military facilities in exchange for assistance in the modernization of its military. The Philippine government announced on August 24 that it welcomed America's plan to deploy "X-band", a powerful new early warning radar, in Japan and the Philippines. The plan is seen by some as the centerpiece of the US's defense build-up in Asia to counter threats from nuclear North Korea and to contain China's rising military power.

As tensions mount in the South China Sea, there is now a new facet to the US-Philippines alliance, ie China's emergence as an existential threat. The mutual defense treaty, which dates back to 1951, is perceived as a deterrent to China's creeping assertiveness in nearby maritime areas, including the contested Spratly Islands.

Following a naval stand-off between Manila and Beijing in April this year, Washington pledged to triple its military assistance to Manila, deployed two US nuclear-armed submarines to make symbolic port calls at Subic, and sent thousands of American troops and American warships for joint military exercises with their Filipino counterparts.

Thailand has been a US treaty ally since 1954, a designation that was upgraded to major non-NATO ally in 2003 as a reward for Bangkok's cooperation in Washington's global war on terror. Now, with enhanced commercial and defense ties with China, Bangkok is less willing to open its territory to facilitate US strategic rebalancing.

Most notably, Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra's cabinet decided in June to allow parliament to scrutinize a US NASA request to use U-tapao airbase for atmospheric studies. After opposition lawmakers argued that approval of the request could jeopardize Thailand's vibrant trade ties with China, NASA withdrew its request after the Thais missed a June 26 deadline to respond.

Since the Vietnam War, U-tapao has been used by US aircraft to support military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq as well as humanitarian interventions, including in the aftermath of the 2004 tsunami. US troops also have special access to U-tapao through the annual Cobra Gold war games held in Thailand and staged with various international actors. NASA initially planned to use the airbase for a six-week climate study but the request was viewed in some quarters as a veiled attempt to spy on China.

Unlike the 1960s and 1970s when China backed communist guerillas in Thailand, Washington and Bangkok no longer have a common security threat to motivate a significant enhancement of their existing alliance. This "threat deficit" has significantly affected US-Thai cooperation in recent years. Though Thailand may be wary of China's perceived growing assertiveness, it nonetheless highly values its robust political and economic relations with Beijing.

While US-Thai strategic relations have arguably stalled, Thailand and China upgraded their ties to a "comprehensive strategic cooperative partnership" during Yingluck's visit with a high level military delegation to Beijing in April. One reason why Sino-Thai relations are strong is the absence of contentious territorial disputes. (Unlike Brunei, the Philippines, Malaysia and Vietnam, Thailand has no claim to contested areas in the South China Sea.)

Strategic economics

Thailand's recent strategic behavior has been driven clearly by economic interests. Bangkok has benefitted enormously from China's economic rise. Although the US remains a major investor in Thailand, China is now Thailand's largest export market. Sino-Thai trade was valued at US$64.7 billion in 2011, overshadowing US-Thai trade of $35 billion in the same period.

China has also pledged strong assistance in Thailand's reconstruction and water management projects in the wake of last year's devastating floods. As Thailand benefits from China's soft power diplomacy, it is not surprising that Bangkok has adopted a hedging strategy.

In the Philippines, the US is the largest source of foreign direct investment and second-largest trade partner. In 2011, US-Philippines bilateral trade reached $13.6 billion, slightly higher than the $12.1 billion value of China-Philippines commerce. China's economic muscle flexing has in instances pushed the Philippines closer to the US. When Beijing recently tried to sanction Manila by banning Philippine banana imports, a move that threatened to hit come 200,000 Filipino farmers and weaken exports, the US offered to buy the surplus bananas.

The stagnation of US-Thai defense ties is likewise tied to Thailand's turbulent domestic politics. Since the 2006 military ouster of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, a focus on domestic politics has come up at the expense of foreign relations. The opposition Democrat Party claimed that Yingluck would approve the NASA proposal in exchange for granting her exiled, criminally convicted brother Thaksin a visa to travel to the US. While the NASA project was cancelled, Thaksin was nonetheless given a visa, with the caveat that he not travel to Washington, according to press reports.

In the Philippines, domestic politics under Benigno Aquino's administration have been conducive to a vibrant US-Philippines alliance. Most political leaders, apart from left-leaning nationalistic parties, have backed Aquino's efforts to bolster ties with the US to counterbalance China's rising assertiveness in the South China Sea. He has notably made a number of trips to Washington to request stronger strategic cooperation and arms transfers.

Unlike his predecessor Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Aquino has appeared to be less receptive to Beijing's dangled commercial incentives. Elected on an anti-corruption platform, Aquino has cancelled certain Chinese-funded projects which were marred by irregularities. His diplomatic balancing is reflective of the national mood: a Social Weather Station survey conducted in the second quarter showed that 55% of Filipinos have little trust in China, representing a record low, while the US notched a public trust rating of 62%.

The convergence and divergence of threat perceptions has determined the depth of US defense cooperation with the Philippines and Thailand as Washington attempts to implement its "pivot" policy in Asia. Local political and economic concerns have dictated how both countries have received Washington's strategic overtures. Whether the split among two of the US's top traditional allies will undermine the "pivot" policy's overall effectiveness will be closely watched and aggravated as much as possible by China.

Asia Times 

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