The U.S. Doesn’t Need the Philippines
America is a curious
great power. It cowers before international lightweights, begging the
least significant nations to let it defend them. Such as the
Philippines.
President Duterte is not a reliable ally. The U.S. should not allow such an unpredictable regime to be a trigger for war.
President Rodrigo Duterte
has gained notoriety for the official murder of thousands of drug users
and dealers. He then publicly insulted President Obama for criticizing
this murderous policy.
United States credibility
suffers when a nation long subsidized and defended by America shows such
ostentatious disrespect. The Philippine president shouldn’t be treated
like a co-equal and ally if he doesn’t behave like one.
Moreover, the Philippines
needs America far more than America needs the Philippines. Manila spends
less than 1 percent of its gross domestic product on its military and
its best ships are U.S. cast-offs. It doesn’t help defend the United
States from anyone.
Rather, Manila expects
Washington’s protection even though the archipelago matters little for
the United States. America retains the Pacific as a barrier and faces no
serious threats to its homeland.
Of course, Washington sees
domination of East Asia as an American birthright. Base access
obviously helps the U.S. attempt to enforce its will. However,
convenience does not translate into interests substantial enough to risk
war.
The region matters far
more to nearby China, which understandably does not want to be
contained. It also costs Beijing far less to deter U.S. intervention
than it does for America to project power: missiles and subs are less
costly than aircraft carrier groups. With no one threatening free
navigation, Washington must decide what kind of risk it is willing to
take on behalf of what remain primarily other nations’ territorial
interests.
Insisting on defending the
Philippines irrespective of its actions is particularly dangerous.
Manila relies on American support rather than its own military in
confronting China and could drag the United States into a conflict
easily.
Washington should drop the
“mutual” defense treaty and joint patrols. Maintaining base access is
good insurance but does not require a security guarantee, especially
over contested territory, such as Scarborough Shoal. Moreover, such
access is not worth paying any price: America lost no influence when
Subic Bay and Clark Airfield closed decades ago.
President Duterte is not a
reliable ally. The United States should not allow such an unpredictable
regime to be a trigger for war.
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