During our lunch, we reminisced about those old times and inquired about each other’s families before the topic turned to Pres. Benigno S. Aquino’s remarks about China which appeared in the New York Times on February 4, 2014.
My friends told me they were in Beijing when they read the blazing headlines in the newspapers -“Philippine president compares China turf claims to Nazi legacy”. In the interview with The New York Times, the Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported that Aquino called for “world leaders not to make the mistake of appeasing China as it seeks to cement control over contested waters and islands in the strategically vital South China Sea.”
The newspapers described Aquino as calling on “nations around the world to do more to support the Philippines in resisting China’s assertive claims to the seas near his country, drawing a comparison to the West’s failure to support Czechoslovakia against Hitler’s demands for Czech land in 1938.”
My friends described the furious Chinese reaction to Aquino’s comments which were roundly denounced by China’s state-run Xinhua news agency. In editorials published and aired in all the Chinese media, Xinhua declared that Aquino’s “latest reported attack against China, in which he senselessly compared his northern neighbor to the Nazi Germany, exposed his true colors as an amateurish politician who was ignorant both of history and reality.”
That’s the difference between China and the Philippines, I told my friends. In China, every TV, radio and online news report has to kowtow to the official government script that “Aquino is an ignorant fool who does not know anything about history.” No Chinese reporter or commentator would dare disagree with the Chinese government’s official line.
But in the Philippines, I told them, China’s supporters like Rigoberto Tiglao, the former spokesman of Pres. Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (“China’s favorite Philippine president” I told my friends), are free to denounce Aquino for his remarks. As viciously as they care to.
For example, in his Manila Times column on February 6, 2014, Tiglao wrote: “Aquino likened China’s claims over the Spratly Islands to Hitler’s demand in 1938 for Czechoslovakia’s Sudetenland region to be turned over to Nazi Germany. Aquino’s analogy is something only an ignoramus would make… How many people live in the disputed Spratly Islands area which Aquino likens to Sudetenland?”
So does that mean it’s okay for China to seize the Kalayaan Island Group because only a few hundred Filipinos live there unlike the Sudetenland where, Tiglao reported, “22 percent of Czechoslovakia’s population, or 3.2 million people, who considered themselves ethnically Germans, lived”?
Even the Philippines’ most militant labor union, the Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU), through its secretary-general Roger Soluta, got in on the action and slammed Aquino for “comparing the leaders of China with Adolf Hitler.”
Instead of organizing the workers in the 30 China-owned mining corporations in the Philippines which are exploiting and sucking up the country’s natural resources and blatantly subverting the country’s labor and environmental laws in the process, the KMU is spending its time defending China and attacking Aquino.
I told my friends that the state-run Xinhua news agency and China’s supporters in the Philippines had distorted Pres. Aquino’s comments. According to the New York Times, Aquino said: “Like Czechoslovakia, the Philippines faces demands to surrender territory piecemeal to a much stronger foreign power and needs more robust foreign support for the rule of international law if it is to resist”. He did not compare “the leaders of China with Adolf Hitler”. He simply compared the appeasement of Hitler in 1938 over the Sudetenland issue with the appeasement of China now.
Aquino’s point, as Inquirer columnist Conrado de Quiros correctly noted, was that “if you don’t stop China from fledgling expansionism now, you won’t be able to stop it from full-blown expansionism later.”
My
friends told me they respectfully disagreed with me and agreed with
what China’s Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Hong Lei said: “As an
unwavering upholder of international justice, China made huge sacrifice
and indelible historical contribution to the victory of the World
Anti-Fascist War. It is inconceivable and unreasonable to place
China-Philippines South China Sea disputes in the same category with the
WWII history.”
But China has placed the whole South China Sea – all 1.4 million square miles of it – under the jurisdiction and control of its Sansha City Prefecture with a powerful People’s Liberation Army (PLA) naval fleet patrolling it and authorized “to board, seize and expel foreign ships” found anywhere in the South China Sea.
China has also placed the entire South China Sea under its Air Defence Identification Zone (ADIZ) which the Philippines denounced as infringing on the freedom of the countries of the world to fly in international airspace, compromising the safety of civil aviation, threatening the national security of all the affected states and transforming the entire air zone of the South China Sea into China’s “domestic airspace.”
It is “inconceivable and unreasonable” to imagine it only because China experienced this same type of imperialist occupation on February 18, 1932 when Japan invaded its territory of Manchuria and proclaimed the state of Manchukuo as the governing body for the occupied region which it had detached from China.
What the Chinese people don’t understand is that the Filipino people are as determined to erase the memory of the establishment of the Sansha Prefecture in 2012 as the Chinese people were determined to erase the memory of the establishment of the Manchukuo Prefecture in 1932.
My friends recalled reading my San Francisco op-ed article about this subject where I described China’s annexation of the South China Sea as “the most brazen maritime territorial grab in history.”
http://www.sfgate.com/opinion/openforum/article/Filipinos-protest-China-s-actions-4682719.php
But my friends assured me that China does not intend to actually gobble up the Philippines. “We have a long history of friendship. China will not do anything to jeopardize that friendship,” they assured me.
I respectfully disagreed with them and reminded my friends of the old Chinese proverb – “beware of one who speaks with honey in mouth but dagger in heart”.
My friends turned the proverb around and said that was true of the US interests in supporting the Philippines. They asked me: “Don’t you see the US is just using the Philippines to contain China?”
I assured them I harbored no illusions about the self-interest of the US in the conflict between the Philippines and China. But, unlike in the past when the Philippines was acting at the behest of its colonial ruler, here the Philippines is acting on behalf of its own self-interest.
China wants to seize the Ayungin Reef, the gateway to the Recto Bank, which according to the US Energy Information Agency (EIA), contains 17.7 billion tons or approximately 126 billion barrels of oil worth trillions of dollars along with 25.5 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. China desperately wants this oil to fuel the ever expanding needs of its ever-growing economy. But the Philippines also needs the oil to ensure a prosperous future for the country instead of one dependent on exploited and abused overseas foreign workers. This is what is at stake. This is why Pres. Aquino warned China in his State of the Nation address in July 2011 “If you trample on Recto Bank, it is like you are trampling on Recto Avenue”.
Somehow, our lunch discussion then shifted to Pres. Richard Nixon and the role he played in opening China to the west in 1972. My friends shared that it was actually Chairman Mao Zedong who initiated China’s opening to the US because of its border conflict with the Soviet Union which flared up in violent clashes in 1969. China needed the US as leverage against its more powerful neighbor in the north.
“Bingo! There you go,” I said. The Philippines is simply taking a page from China’s playbook, I told them. It also needs the US as leverage against its more powerful neighbor in the north.
With that, we finished our dessert.
(Send comments to Rodel50@gmail.com or mail them to the Law Offices of Rodel Rodis at 2429 Ocean Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94127 or call 415.334.7800).
source: Inquirer by Rodel Rodis
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