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South China Sea Forum

248 中国南沙 西礁
China Nansha Islands Xī Jiāo
8o49’ - 8o53’ 112o12’ - 112o17’
大弄鼻 Xi Jiao
West Reef or West London Reef

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large pic 3702X3704 2.8M RAR

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ä¼*æ’*图文版南海岛礁影像图(更新 西礁 高清图) -
 
(Reuters) - Philippine President Benigno Aquino said on Wednesday the concrete blocks found on a disputed shoal in the South China Sea are "very old", backtracking on Manila's earlier accusation that China was building new structures in the area.

In an embarrassing twist after foreign affairs and defense officials had accused China of preparing to build new structures on Scarborough Shoal, a group of rocks about 120 nautical miles off the coast of the main island of Luzon, Aquino said the blocks found within the shoal "are not a new phenomenon" and "some of them have barnacles attached to them."


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Manila backtracks on South China Sea accusation against China | Reuters
 
PNoy bullish on code of conduct in West PH Sea
Posted at 10/23/2013

President-Aquino.jpg


MANILA – President Benigno Aquino III remains bullish on the crafting of a binding code of conduct (COC) in the South China Sea.

At the Presidential Forum of the Foreign Correspondents Association of the Philippines (FOCAP), Aquino pointed out that the first meeting has already been held in Suzhou, China to discuss the formulation of the code aimed at easing tensions in the disputed territory, recognized in the Philippines as the West Philippine Sea.

The president said the Philippines will continue to pursue arbitration before the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea despite China's refusal to take part in the proceedings.

"From the time in 2002 to 2013, we are starting to sit down and everybody has to show that image of cooperating and crafting the COC, which will undoubtedly ease the tension," Aquino said.

"We are undergoing arbitration. We are pursuing a second track with the COC. At the end of the day, either or both will seek to clarify everybody's entitlement with regards to this body of water."

Aquino said the code is important as the Declaration on the Conduct of the Parties in the South China Sea, which was crafted in 2002, was merely "motherhood principles, which had no operational components and was not in a sense legally binding."

- ANC Dateline Philippines, 23 October 2013

PNoy bullish on code of conduct in West PH Sea | ABS-CBN News
 
India signs ‘West Philippine Sea’ statement
Shubhajit Roy : New Delhi, Tue Oct 22 2013

As Prime Minister Manmohan Singh meets the Chinese leadership in Beijing, India has signed a joint statement with Philippines which mentions South China Sea as 'West Philippine Sea' and has supported peaceful resolution of the dispute over the name, in accordance with the "freedom of navigation" and "rule of law".

Delhi's position in the face of an assertive Beijing on the South China Sea dispute came about in the joint statement after the 2nd meeting of the Philippines-India Joint Commission on Bilateral Cooperation on Monday in Manila.

Usually, India does not refer to South China Sea by any other name and only its internationally-used nomenclature.

India's position has been carefully crafted and the latest position was articulated by the Prime Minister at the East Asia summit in Brunei Daressalam on October 10.

With Delhi keeping a close watch on China's military modernisation and muscle-flexing on the South China Sea, it has always maintained that sovereignty over areas of the South China Sea is disputed between many countries in the region.

India signs ‘West Philippine Sea’ statement - Indian Express
 
28.10.2013 CCG 2337 after receiving a major face-lift:

b730784fe1d398712bd24724847dc369.jpg
 
http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/stor...sean-do-for-a-south-china-sea-code-of-conduct

On 14–15 September 2013, senior diplomats from China and the 10 ASEAN countries gathered in Suzhou, China, to discuss many subjects, most notably the process of hammering out a “code of conduct” (CoC) for the South China Sea.

For many, the talks have provided a degree of reassurance about improved freedom and safety of navigation in the hotly disputed sea — after all, a large percentage of the world’s trade, including shipments of oil, passes through the South China Sea. Some regional powers also saw the event as an opportunity to keep a closer eye on China; and nobody wants a conflict or even a quasi-military confrontation to disrupt what are generally regarded as peaceful – and lucrative – channels of trade.

But those who expect the ASEAN–China discussions to result in some kind of breakthrough that will lead quickly to a resolution are bound to be disappointed. There are several reasons for this, all having to do with fundamental differences between China and ASEAN on a variety of issues pertaining to a proposed CoC for the South China Sea.
The first is that, while ASEAN keeps calling for the “early conclusion” of a CoC, China has insisted on going slow. Beijing has been demanding the full and effective implementation of the 2002 Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea (DoC) before the conclusion of a CoC. (The DoC itself calls for “the adoption of a code of conduct in the South China Sea.”)

At their last formal meeting, on 30 June 2013, the ASEAN foreign ministers said they looked forward to “formal consultations between ASEAN and China at the SOM [senior officials’ meeting] level on the COC with an aim to reach an early conclusion of a Code of Conduct in the South China Sea.” On the other hand, shortly after the ASEAN and Chinese foreign ministers had agreed to engage in “official consultations” on the code “within the framework of the implementation of the DOC”, Xinhua news agency quoted Wang Yi, China’s new foreign minister, as warning against rushing work on the CoC.

Another issue is the coverage of the proposed CoC. Vietnam insists on the inclusion of the Paracel Islandsin any discussion on the South China Sea, for example, but China refuses to discuss the topic. In any case, China has not sufficiently elaborated on the nature of its nine-dash line by providing exact coordinates. So, where would the proposed CoC apply? How would it be enforced? The difficulty of these questions and the intractability of the disagreements around them forced the downgrading of the initial CoC to a DoC in 2002.

Another problem is the Chinese insistence on conducting bilateral discussions with individual claimants, all of which are ASEAN member states, and none of which is anywhere near matching China’s military power. Moreover, some of the Spratly Islands are claimed by more than two parties. How can there be “bilateral” negotiations in such cases?

ASEAN as a group has long been in talks with China and other parties about the South China Sea; in March 1995, as a reaction to Philippine complaints about China’s occupation of Mischief Reef, all ASEAN foreign ministers issued a statement expressing their “serious concern over recent developments which affect peace and stability in the South China Sea.” But most fundamental is the disagreement about how to reconcile the claimants’ national interests and the rule of international law. Although claimants in the South China Sea often justify their claims in high-minded terms, history shows that these same countries pursue their claims for strategic and commercial reasons.

On the other hand, there is international law, with which all countries must comply and which is usually regarded as a refuge of weak states. Which should prevail when they come into conflict – national interest or the rule of law?

This is a difficult question. When pursuing its perceived national interest, a country’s ability to compromise is often reduced. Negotiations are made more complicated by the influence of increasing numbers of people. This, in turn, is aided by a combination of government policy and revolutionary technologies. It is a reality that negotiators have to take into account.

Nevertheless, the ASEAN–China consultations on the proposed CoC would function better if each party clarified what its national interests really are, and if assurances were given that those interests would be protected in any future compromise. They would also be more effective if mutual trust were strengthened, so that disputes over claims do not erupt into violent conflict.

This is the most that official consultations on a CoC for the South China Sea can achieve; but they are already considerable triumphs. It must be remembered that neither ASEAN nor any ASEAN–China forum is an adjudicating body that can ‘resolve’ sovereignty or other jurisdictional conflicts. However, everybody has an interest in regional peace and stability, the maintenance of the rule of law in international relations, the freedom and safety of navigation and overflight, and the cohesion of ASEAN.
 
China, Malaysia to hold first joint military drills


china_malaysia.jpg


Chinese Defence Minister Chang Wanquan holds a welcoming ceremony for Malaysia's visiting Defence Minister Hishammuddin Hussein. Photo: Xinhua



The People's Liberation Army and the Malaysian military will hold their first-ever joint exercises next year, the Malaysian defence minister said yesterday, despite their rival claims to the South China Sea.

The announcement by Hishammuddin Hussein, who is in Beijing to meet military leaders, follows President Xi Jinping's visit to Kuala Lumpur earlier this month, in which the two countries pledged closer ties.

"Malaysia and China are expected to launch our first joint exercise in 2014 after the memorandum of understanding on defence co-operation was signed in 2005," Hishammuddin said in a statement.

The statement gave no details on the planned drills such as their location, scale, or which military branches would be involved. They would be the first-ever drills between the two countries' armed forces.

Hishammuddin, who met his counterpart, General Chang Wanquan , also said he invited Chang to visit Malaysia's South China Sea naval base of Mawilla 2 on Borneo.

The visit would be aimed at launching a "direct-contact" relationship with China's fleet in the South China Sea.

The resource-rich water body has become a potential military flashpoint in recent years as Beijing has pressed its claim to nearly all of it. Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines, Vietnam and Taiwan also have various claims - some overlapping - to the sea, a vital thoroughfare for world trade and shipping traffic.

The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations, of which Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines and Vietnam are members, has sought to present a united front against China.

It was not immediately clear how Malaysia's warming defence ties with China would be received in other Asean capitals. While the Philippines and Vietnam have been involved in tense confrontations with China over the issue, Malaysia has sought to keep a lower profile.


http://www.scmp.com/news/china/article/1343727/china-malaysia-hold-first-joint-military-drills
 
Just as I though last year, China begins to negotiate with other claimants of SCS disputes bilaterally, as she always insisted that's what she'll do in the past. I'm also very sure Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei will be more than satisfied through these processes.
 
Or disenfranchise only by International law and the international process that this problem that china made for itself can be solve with complete resolution and understanding among the Nations involved if china continue to insist on its medieval ways it will have other years of humiliation on its history
 
Or disenfranchise only by International law and the international process that this problem that china made for itself can be solve with complete resolution and understanding among the Nations involved if china continue to insist on its medieval ways it will have other years of humiliation on its history
He who is powerful makes the laws. Try again kiddo.

Phillipines have been humiliated throughout her history. Used by virtually every powers around the world like a disposable pawn in a chess game.
 
He who is powerful makes the laws. Try again kiddo.

Phillipines have been humiliated throughout her history. Used by virtually every powers around the world like a disposable pawn in a chess game.

Keep your nazi mentality to your head am talking about international law here jerk off and really so what did you call the opium wars and the boxer rebellion, the Sino Japanese war, World War2 etc as far as humiliation goes you people had your @$$ handed to a million times over ha that makes you more pathetic then us because your independent nation only in paper while trying to regain our Independence by sword and words ha jokes on you people
 
Aquino rebalances his China position


MANILA - After months of diplomatic confrontation, Philippine President Benigno Aquino is seeking to re-engage China by dialing down bilateral tensions and promoting the language of dialogue and cooperation. Significantly, the move comes in the wake of US President Barack Obama's recent cancellation of a scheduled tour of Asia, including a planned trip to Manila to hammer out a new bilateral security pact.

Downplaying local criticism of China's purported ambivalence towards reaching a multilateral resolution to the ongoing territorial disputes in the South China Sea, Aquino has opted to welcome Beijing's agreement in principle to negotiate a binding code of
conduct (CoC) through the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

Contradicting his own cabinet members, namely Secretary of Defense Voltaire Gazmin, Aquino has vigorously denied earlier accusations that China has placed concrete blocks at the contested Scarborough Shoal, purportedly as a prelude to establishing military fortifications in the area.

At the same time, his government is conditionally supporting negotiations between major Filipino and Chinese companies to jointly develop hydrocarbon resources in the Reed Bank, a contested feature off the coast of the Philippines' island province of Palawan.

Since the formal announcement of the US's so-called "pivot" to Asia in late-2011, the Philippines has ever more confidently stepped up its efforts to defend its maritime territorial claims against China. In turn, Beijing has escalated its paramilitary maneuvers in the Western Pacific and largely shunned the negotiation of a CoC to govern the ongoing disputes. As tensions have spiked, Sino-Philippine relations have reached their lowest point in decades.

Until now, the Philippines' South China Sea policy has been largely determined by the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), led by the energetic and sometimes controversial Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert Del Rosario. He has been praised domestically by increasingly nationalistic constituencies for his vigorous attempts to rally international support against China's rising assertiveness in the South China Sea.

Del Rosario has also emerged as one of the more determined regional players, alongside leaders in Tokyo and Singapore, to welcome the larger American strategic footprint in Asia promised by the "pivot" policy. That has bestowed a measure of legitimacy to Washington's regional designs to redeploy as much as 60% of its naval assets to the region, but also opened Del Rosario to criticism in China and elsewhere that he is overtly pro-American and anti-China.

Many Filipinos support the government's attempts to push back against Chinese claims in the South China Sea, with civil society organizations staging increasingly larger rallies to express their solidarity with Filipino troops defending contested maritime features while branding China as a regional "bully". After decades of living in Washington's shadow, many nationalist figures who contributed to the eviction of US military bases in Subic and Clark in the immediate post-Cold War period now see a new opportunity to unify the country against China's perceived threat to Philippine territorial integrity.

The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), long ignored and underfunded by their political masters, now also has external justification to modernize deterrent capabilities and for a boost to annual budget allocations. Confronting China has paid considerable political dividends for Aquino, an often emotive "David vs Goliath" narrative that resonates deeply in the predominantly Catholic country. Critics, however, believe that the government’s current stance smacks of a moralistic battle devoid of calculated strategic thinking.

Beneath this emotionally charged surface, there is a vibrant debate - not least among top policy-makers, academics, and opinion-makers - over how best to defend the country's territorial integrity. For the critics of Aquino's current approach, the preferred policy, notwithstanding China's contribution to the militarization of the disputes, would have been much more cognizant of Beijing's strategic sensitivities and domestic political dynamics - from the rise of popular nationalism to the growing influence of hawkish elements within and associated with the People's Liberation Army's (PLA) Navy.

The alternative view - in contrast to the Del Rosario faction's emphasis on a combination of aggressive diplomacy and expanded military cooperation with strategic allies like the US and Japan - accentuates the importance of bilateral economic ties with China, the relative futility of the Philippines' legal challenge to Beijing's "9-dashline doctrine" at The Hague without a mechanism to enforce any verdict, and the counter-productive upshot of overreliance on foreign strategic allies.

For his critics, Del Rosario's assertive nationalism is laudable to the extent that it reflects the growing anxiety among many Filipinos vis-a-vis China. His stance, they believe, channels a popular exasperation with Beijing's apparent decision to undermine its decades-long "charm offensive" characterized by generous foreign aid and investment to regional countries for the marginal strategic advantage of exerting sovereignty over a group of uninhabited islands and rocks in the South China Sea.

The government's current approach, critics contend, has only served to embolden Chinese hawks to tighten the screws on Manila, step up military operations in the contested waters, and shun constructive diplomacy. At the same time, there is seemingly little evidence to suggest that either Washington or Tokyo will decisively come to the Philippines' rescue in the event of an armed confrontation with China over contested maritime territories.

Questionable commitment

Obama's absence at the recent Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) and ASEAN summits has added momentum to local calls for re-engagement with China. The fourth round of Philippines-US negotiations in early October aimed at expanding Washington's rotational military presence in the country failed to provide a major breakthrough, with top Filipino negotiators pointing to "major gaps in the critical provisions" of the new proposed framework agreement.

"There's more work needed to be done on these provisions that will define this agreement. Both parties recognize that we have to work on them with more deliberation," said Defense Undersecretary Pio Lorenzo Batino after the inconclusive round of talks. Foreign Affairs Assistant Secretary Carlos Sorreta, the spokesperson of the Philippine negotiating panel, also noted a lack of agreement over "major details of the substantive issues", with the necessity to "make sure that this agreement would be mutually beneficial."

Although the exact details of the ongoing negotiations are unknown, with critics lambasting their lack of transparency and raising concerns about the constitutionality of the process, news reports have suggested that disagreements center on the nature and duration of "pre-positioning" of US defense equipment and "ownership" of the equipment to be prepositioned and proposed facilities to be installed by the US at Clark and Subic.

How American forces will specifically aid their Filipino counterparts in maritime defense activities in the South China Sea, the "added-value" of a new agreement beyond the Visiting Forces Agreement that already facilitates annual and sustained joint exercises, as well as what type of equipment may be leased to Filipino forces on a rotational basis, have all apparently vexed the negotiations. Obama's scheduled, then canceled, October 11-12 visit to Manila was supposed to iron out these substantial differences.

Treading a line between "assertive deterrence" and "pragmatic engagement", Aquino has frequently reconfigured Philippine foreign policy during his three years in office. From 2010-2011, Aquino empowered the Del Rosario faction to re-draw the DFA's China strategy, which was largely focused on enhancing bilateral trade and investment relations during the previous Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo administration.

When Filipino and Chinese forces squared off over the Scarborough Shoal in mid-2012, Aquino sanctioned "backdoor diplomacy" - effectively bypassing the DFA - to avoid a direct armed confrontation. When it became clear that China would not disengage from the contested shoal, Aquino shifted back into deterrence mode by supporting the DFA's push to step up defense cooperation with the US and file a formal legal complaint against China at the United Nations.

The policy motivated an outpouring of nationalistic support for a more assertive diplomacy but also resulted in deeper tensions in the South China Sea, with Beijing buttressing its military maneuvers in the contested areas and rebuking the Philippines' decision to seek international legal arbitration. Diplomatic channels effectively collapsed, with Chinese leaders refusing to meet their Filipino counterparts. Bilateral ties arguably hit a new nadir in August when Beijing withdrew an earlier invitation to Aquino to attend a China-hosted trade fair.

With stalled negotiations on a new security deal with the US and Obama's recent no-show in Manila, Aquino has sought to dial down tensions and explore alternative channels of cooperation with China. Most significantly, perhaps, his government is exploring the idea of joint development of certain energy-rich maritime areas it contests with China. Beijing has in recent weeks made similar joint development overtures towards Vietnam and Brunei.

The Philippine-owned Forum Energy and Chinese state-owned oil company China National Offshore Oil Corporation are now negotiating a joint-exploration venture in the hydrocarbon-rich Reed Bank, site to an estimated 16.6 trillion cubic feet of natural gas and 416 million barrels of oil. The talks have provided Manila with an opportunity to re-open communication channels with Beijing and temporarily shelve sovereignty issues in order to purse mutual economic interests - injecting a constructive atmosphere into bilateral relations which will be crucial to any future territorial agreement.

With Washington driving a hard bargain on a new security pact, Aquino seems increasingly keen to engage rather than confront Beijing. China's growing regional prominence and America's perceived strategic absence has added urgency to a tactical reconsideration in Manila, especially as ASEAN focuses its attention on fostering economic ties and integration (rather than territorial disputes) with China. But as Aquino pursues a more conciliatory tack, it's not clear yet his overtures will be reciprocated by a peeved Beijing.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/SEA-01-051113.html


As the old saying goes: There'll be no peace if you can't live peacefully with your immediate neighbors. Aquino is learning.
 
Keep your nazi mentality to your head am talking about international law here jerk off and really so what did you call the opium wars and the boxer rebellion, the Sino Japanese war, World War2 etc as far as humiliation goes you people had your @$$ handed to a million times over ha that makes you more pathetic then us because your independent nation only in paper while trying to regain our Independence by sword and words ha jokes on you people

LOL. You love to resort to labeling people and name calling as that is the basis of most of your arguments. I'll say it one more time and don't bother replying, I'm through schooling you.

Little fish do not mess with big fish.

You can name all those Zero-Wing-modified-twisted events where China was humiliated in the past, but the bottom line is our country is stronger than before and still intact. At least most of our population do not have surnames like Cortez, Santiago, Ramirez, Cordeiro, etc like you people. Wonder how you guys have such foreign Spanish surnames? :lol: 
Aquino rebalances his China position


MANILA - After months of diplomatic confrontation, Philippine President Benigno Aquino is seeking to re-engage China by dialing down bilateral tensions and promoting the language of dialogue and cooperation. Significantly, the move comes in the wake of US President Barack Obama's recent cancellation of a scheduled tour of Asia, including a planned trip to Manila to hammer out a new bilateral security pact.

Downplaying local criticism of China's purported ambivalence towards reaching a multilateral resolution to the ongoing territorial disputes in the South China Sea, Aquino has opted to welcome Beijing's agreement in principle to negotiate a binding code of
conduct (CoC) through the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

Contradicting his own cabinet members, namely Secretary of Defense Voltaire Gazmin, Aquino has vigorously denied earlier accusations that China has placed concrete blocks at the contested Scarborough Shoal, purportedly as a prelude to establishing military fortifications in the area.

At the same time, his government is conditionally supporting negotiations between major Filipino and Chinese companies to jointly develop hydrocarbon resources in the Reed Bank, a contested feature off the coast of the Philippines' island province of Palawan.

Since the formal announcement of the US's so-called "pivot" to Asia in late-2011, the Philippines has ever more confidently stepped up its efforts to defend its maritime territorial claims against China. In turn, Beijing has escalated its paramilitary maneuvers in the Western Pacific and largely shunned the negotiation of a CoC to govern the ongoing disputes. As tensions have spiked, Sino-Philippine relations have reached their lowest point in decades.

Until now, the Philippines' South China Sea policy has been largely determined by the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), led by the energetic and sometimes controversial Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert Del Rosario. He has been praised domestically by increasingly nationalistic constituencies for his vigorous attempts to rally international support against China's rising assertiveness in the South China Sea.

Del Rosario has also emerged as one of the more determined regional players, alongside leaders in Tokyo and Singapore, to welcome the larger American strategic footprint in Asia promised by the "pivot" policy. That has bestowed a measure of legitimacy to Washington's regional designs to redeploy as much as 60% of its naval assets to the region, but also opened Del Rosario to criticism in China and elsewhere that he is overtly pro-American and anti-China.

Many Filipinos support the government's attempts to push back against Chinese claims in the South China Sea, with civil society organizations staging increasingly larger rallies to express their solidarity with Filipino troops defending contested maritime features while branding China as a regional "bully". After decades of living in Washington's shadow, many nationalist figures who contributed to the eviction of US military bases in Subic and Clark in the immediate post-Cold War period now see a new opportunity to unify the country against China's perceived threat to Philippine territorial integrity.

The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), long ignored and underfunded by their political masters, now also has external justification to modernize deterrent capabilities and for a boost to annual budget allocations. Confronting China has paid considerable political dividends for Aquino, an often emotive "David vs Goliath" narrative that resonates deeply in the predominantly Catholic country. Critics, however, believe that the government’s current stance smacks of a moralistic battle devoid of calculated strategic thinking.

Beneath this emotionally charged surface, there is a vibrant debate - not least among top policy-makers, academics, and opinion-makers - over how best to defend the country's territorial integrity. For the critics of Aquino's current approach, the preferred policy, notwithstanding China's contribution to the militarization of the disputes, would have been much more cognizant of Beijing's strategic sensitivities and domestic political dynamics - from the rise of popular nationalism to the growing influence of hawkish elements within and associated with the People's Liberation Army's (PLA) Navy.

The alternative view - in contrast to the Del Rosario faction's emphasis on a combination of aggressive diplomacy and expanded military cooperation with strategic allies like the US and Japan - accentuates the importance of bilateral economic ties with China, the relative futility of the Philippines' legal challenge to Beijing's "9-dashline doctrine" at The Hague without a mechanism to enforce any verdict, and the counter-productive upshot of overreliance on foreign strategic allies.

For his critics, Del Rosario's assertive nationalism is laudable to the extent that it reflects the growing anxiety among many Filipinos vis-a-vis China. His stance, they believe, channels a popular exasperation with Beijing's apparent decision to undermine its decades-long "charm offensive" characterized by generous foreign aid and investment to regional countries for the marginal strategic advantage of exerting sovereignty over a group of uninhabited islands and rocks in the South China Sea.

The government's current approach, critics contend, has only served to embolden Chinese hawks to tighten the screws on Manila, step up military operations in the contested waters, and shun constructive diplomacy. At the same time, there is seemingly little evidence to suggest that either Washington or Tokyo will decisively come to the Philippines' rescue in the event of an armed confrontation with China over contested maritime territories.

Questionable commitment

Obama's absence at the recent Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) and ASEAN summits has added momentum to local calls for re-engagement with China. The fourth round of Philippines-US negotiations in early October aimed at expanding Washington's rotational military presence in the country failed to provide a major breakthrough, with top Filipino negotiators pointing to "major gaps in the critical provisions" of the new proposed framework agreement.

"There's more work needed to be done on these provisions that will define this agreement. Both parties recognize that we have to work on them with more deliberation," said Defense Undersecretary Pio Lorenzo Batino after the inconclusive round of talks. Foreign Affairs Assistant Secretary Carlos Sorreta, the spokesperson of the Philippine negotiating panel, also noted a lack of agreement over "major details of the substantive issues", with the necessity to "make sure that this agreement would be mutually beneficial."

Although the exact details of the ongoing negotiations are unknown, with critics lambasting their lack of transparency and raising concerns about the constitutionality of the process, news reports have suggested that disagreements center on the nature and duration of "pre-positioning" of US defense equipment and "ownership" of the equipment to be prepositioned and proposed facilities to be installed by the US at Clark and Subic.

How American forces will specifically aid their Filipino counterparts in maritime defense activities in the South China Sea, the "added-value" of a new agreement beyond the Visiting Forces Agreement that already facilitates annual and sustained joint exercises, as well as what type of equipment may be leased to Filipino forces on a rotational basis, have all apparently vexed the negotiations. Obama's scheduled, then canceled, October 11-12 visit to Manila was supposed to iron out these substantial differences.

Treading a line between "assertive deterrence" and "pragmatic engagement", Aquino has frequently reconfigured Philippine foreign policy during his three years in office. From 2010-2011, Aquino empowered the Del Rosario faction to re-draw the DFA's China strategy, which was largely focused on enhancing bilateral trade and investment relations during the previous Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo administration.

When Filipino and Chinese forces squared off over the Scarborough Shoal in mid-2012, Aquino sanctioned "backdoor diplomacy" - effectively bypassing the DFA - to avoid a direct armed confrontation. When it became clear that China would not disengage from the contested shoal, Aquino shifted back into deterrence mode by supporting the DFA's push to step up defense cooperation with the US and file a formal legal complaint against China at the United Nations.

The policy motivated an outpouring of nationalistic support for a more assertive diplomacy but also resulted in deeper tensions in the South China Sea, with Beijing buttressing its military maneuvers in the contested areas and rebuking the Philippines' decision to seek international legal arbitration. Diplomatic channels effectively collapsed, with Chinese leaders refusing to meet their Filipino counterparts. Bilateral ties arguably hit a new nadir in August when Beijing withdrew an earlier invitation to Aquino to attend a China-hosted trade fair.

With stalled negotiations on a new security deal with the US and Obama's recent no-show in Manila, Aquino has sought to dial down tensions and explore alternative channels of cooperation with China. Most significantly, perhaps, his government is exploring the idea of joint development of certain energy-rich maritime areas it contests with China. Beijing has in recent weeks made similar joint development overtures towards Vietnam and Brunei.

The Philippine-owned Forum Energy and Chinese state-owned oil company China National Offshore Oil Corporation are now negotiating a joint-exploration venture in the hydrocarbon-rich Reed Bank, site to an estimated 16.6 trillion cubic feet of natural gas and 416 million barrels of oil. The talks have provided Manila with an opportunity to re-open communication channels with Beijing and temporarily shelve sovereignty issues in order to purse mutual economic interests - injecting a constructive atmosphere into bilateral relations which will be crucial to any future territorial agreement.

With Washington driving a hard bargain on a new security pact, Aquino seems increasingly keen to engage rather than confront Beijing. China's growing regional prominence and America's perceived strategic absence has added urgency to a tactical reconsideration in Manila, especially as ASEAN focuses its attention on fostering economic ties and integration (rather than territorial disputes) with China. But as Aquino pursues a more conciliatory tack, it's not clear yet his overtures will be reciprocated by a peeved Beijing.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/SEA-01-051113.html


As the old saying goes: There'll be no peace if you can't live peacefully with your immediate neighbors. Aquino is learning.

A test for CCP.. If they willingly and fully cooperate they are weak and already infiltrated. Time for them to go.
 
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