By Nikko Dizon
Philippine Daily Inquirer
1:35 am | Sunday, December 2nd, 2012
MANILA, Philippines—The escalating conflict in the West Philippine
Sea (South China Sea) has brought some good learning opportunities for
the Philippines—from revisiting the country’s defense policies to
introducing the public to a weighty concept called “national security,”
security experts said.
“Our reawakening always starts with a conflict. We have to thank
China because its recent movements and strategies in the West Philippine
Sea have made us look at our defense policies anew,” said Chester
Cabalza, a National Defense College of the Philippines professor.
The Philippines has long been confronted with the territorial
dispute in the West Philippine Sea but has had limited capabilities to
address this security issue, Cabalza said.
Moreover, the country has been focusing on an internal armed
conflict for decades that external defense, such as the tug-of-war over
territories in these waters, has been a secondary preoccupation for the
government, he said.
China’s new border patrol policy that would allow its police to
board and search ships that “illegally enter” what it considers its
territory in the South China Sea “greatly impacts” on the Philippines,
Cabalza said.
Relying on words
Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin has said the Philippines should
protest China’s plan while Rep. Rodolfo Biazon, chair of the House
committee on national defense, urged President Aquino to convene the
National Security Council as “China’s move will definitely escalate
tensions in the area.”
The Philippines’ strategy has been to use international legal
instruments because “that’s the most we can do,” Cabalza, a fellow at
China’s National Defense University, said in a phone interview.
“We cannot contain the maritime strength of China because we lack
the capability… We are in a stage of denial, that’s why we are heavy on
words. A diplomatic protest is the most we can do,” he added.
As for the United States helping, Cabalza said that while the US
has always been the Philippines’ “shield,” the country cannot rely much
on the US on this particular issue.
“We can’t get their commitment as our knight in shining armor in
this conflict because the US also does not want to risk their economic
interest with China,” he said.
Wake-up call
China’s most recent muscle flexing to lay
claim to the disputed territories in the South China Sea is, therefore, a
“wake-up call” for the Philippines, Cabalza said.
“If there is a crisis, it is high time [we] amend some policies,” he said.
For Dr. Gloria Jumamil-Mercado, dean of the
graduate school of the Development Academy of the Philippines who has a
doctorate in China Studies, the public should be made aware of the West
Philippine Sea territorial dispute in the context of national security.
Mercado, a former senior adviser to the
National Security Adviser, said Filipinos understandably focus on more
fundamental issues like poverty.
“Who really cares among the country’s 90
million people about what’s happening in the West Philippine Sea? If a
person is hungry, he would not care about China,” she said in a phone
interview.
“But people have to understand that [the
territorial dispute] is a national security issue because it impacts on
our territorial integrity and because the economic issues in that area
would ultimately impact on the welfare of the people,” Mercado said.
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