MANILA, Philippines — President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines ordered his country’s military on Thursday to deploy in areas of the South China Sea that are claimed by the Philippines. The step was a significant departure from Duterte’s previous policy of not antagonizing China, which claims most of the sea.
MANILA, Philippines — President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines ordered his country’s military on Thursday to deploy in areas of the South China Sea that are claimed by the Philippines. The step was a significant departure from Duterte’s previous policy of not antagonizing China, which claims most of the sea.
Duterte said during a visit to a military headquarters on Palawan Island that he would personally raise the Philippine flag on Pag-asa Island on June 12, the country’s Independence Day.
Pag-asa, also known as Thitu, is one of the Spratly Islands, an archipelago of about 14 islets and dozens of reefs and shoals scattered near the middle of the South China Sea. China, Taiwan, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and the Philippines have overlapping claims in the archipelago, which has no native population. They are west of Palawan Island.
The Philippines occupies nine of the roughly 50 islands and reefs that it claims in the Spratlys, including Pag-asa. In recent years, China has moved aggressively to advance its own claims in the sea by building shoals into artificial islands and putting military and other facilities on them. Vietnam and Taiwan also occupy some islands and reefs in the archipelago.
“We tried to be friends with everybody,” Duterte said, “but we have to maintain our jurisdiction now, at least the areas under our control.”
Duterte said he had instructed the military to “put structures and the Philippine flag” on its islands and reefs, and to repair the runway on Pag-asa, the second-largest of the Spratly Islands with an area of about 91 acres.
“What’s ours now, at least let’s get them and make a strong point there that it is ours,” he said.
It was not clear, however, whether Duterte intended the military to go beyond its nine current islands and reefs to occupy others that are now vacant. The Philippines did so in the 1990s when it intentionally grounded an obsolete World War II-era transport ship in Ayungin Shoal, also called Second Thomas Shoal. The Philippine navy continues to staff that ship with rotating crews to mark the country’s territorial claim.
Analysts said Duterte’s reversal of stance on the South China Sea appeared to have been calculated, but its ultimate purpose was not apparent.
“It is surprising and perplexing,” said Jay Batongbacal, a maritime law expert at the University of the Philippines who tracks the South China Sea dispute.
“It’s suddenly and radically opposite to his previous refrain of not taking provocative action and cultivating good relations with China,” Batongbacal said. “Either he is merely playing to the gallery or is about to provoke a serious crisis.”
He added: “If he is serious about occupying vacant features, then that’s an escalation. China will respond, possibly with force.”
Duterte, who took office last June, began his tenure by trying to ease tensions with China that had built up under his predecessor, Benigno Aquino. Arguing that the Philippines could not match China militarily, Duterte said he was prepared to cooperate with the Chinese government in developing the disputed area, which is strategically located near major shipping lanes and might possess mineral resources.
One of his first moves was a state visit to China, where he asked for billions of dollars in grants and investments. More recently, the Chinese ambassador to Manila, Zhao Jianhua, visited Duterte in Davao city, the president’s hometown. A spokesman for Duterte said afterward that the meeting yielded progress on the South China Sea, with agreement on a range of cooperative issues. Further talks are scheduled for May, with an agenda that includes plans to establish a “bilateral mechanism” to handle the territorial dispute.
The Chinese Embassy in Manila did not respond to calls requesting comment on Thursday.
© 2017 The New York Times Company