BEIJING: Pursuing an agenda of fanning conflicts surrounding the South China Sea and Taiwan questions and containing China, US Vice President Kamala Harris was in the Philippines for a three-day visit after attending the APEC meeting in Thailand and met with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr on Monday, becoming the highest-ranking American official to visit the country since Marcos took power in June.
But for officials in Manila and other countries in Southeast Asia, who loathe being caught in a big power rivalry, the US peddling of the “China threat” in the region will make them realize who is the real saboteur of regional security and stability, and alienate them further from the US, Global Times report said.
Harris’ visit is seen by Chinese observers as a glimpse into US policy on China after the leaders of the two countries met in Indonesia last week. They believed that while the leaders’ meeting ushered in a “remission” of conflict, Harris’ visit, along with US politicians’ recent remarks, serves as a reminder that Washington’s antagonism and hostility toward China remain unchanged. They believed the next two years will be a “window of opportunity” for both if they can translate positive signs into momentum of pushing forward bilateral ties, before relations are thrown into uncertainty again when the next US presidential election comes.
During her meeting with Marcos on Monday, Harris said the US has an “unwavering” commitment to the Philippines.
“We stand with you in defense of international rules and norms as it relates to the South China Sea,” Harris told Marcos at the start of talks in the presidential palace in Manila, the Straits Times reported. “An attack on the Philippine armed forces, public vessels or aircraft in the South China Sea would invoke the US mutual defense commitment… That is our unwavering commitment to the Philippines,” Harris said, according to the report.
Harris is the highest-ranking American official to visit the Philippines since Marcos took power in June. She also met with her Philippine counterpart, Sara Duterte, daughter of the former president Rodrigo Duterte.
On Tuesday, she will fly to Palawan province, which lies along the South China Sea, to meet fishermen, villagers, officials and the coast guard. Palawan province is also home to the Antonio Bautista Air Base in Puerto Princesa, the center of the Philippine military command. She will be the highest-ranking US leader to visit the frontier island at the forefront of the disputed waters, media reported.
When asked about Harris’ trip to the Philippines and to the military base, Mao Ning, spokesperson of China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said, “We don’t oppose US interaction with regional countries. But such interaction should promote regional peace and stability, not damage other countries’ interests.”
Harris’ visit aims to reinforce Washington’s Indo-Pacific strategy, and demonstrate US support for the Philippines and other Southeast Asian allies, said Chinese experts. “Although China has not publicly been mentioned during her visit yet, the US vice president seeks to fan disputes surrounding the South China Sea in this region, and remind its allies that they will not be safe without support from Washington,” Li Haidong, a professor from the Institute of International Relations at the China Foreign Affairs University, told the Global Times.
At his meeting with Marcos on November 17 in Bangkok, Thailand, Chinese President Xi Jinping said that on the South China Sea, the two sides must stick to friendly consultation and handle differences and disputes properly.
Jose Manuel Romualdez, the Philippine ambassador to the US, pointed to another meaning behind the US vice president’s visit by disclosing to Reuters that Marcos and Harris in their meeting “will touch on the Taiwan situation,” adding that the Philippines wants to play a role in peaceful co-existence between the US and China.
The Philippines is geographically crucial for Washington’s military interference in the Taiwan question, which is why the US is sparing no effort in courting the Philippines into cooperating on this issue, Zhu Feng, a professor of international relations at Nanjing University, told the Global Times on Monday.
Despite being an ally of the US, the Philippines is shying away from becoming involved in the Taiwan question and from publicly supporting the US moves on this issue, said Zhu, describing it as Manila’s effort to seek balance between Beijing and Washington.
In addition to the Philippines, conflicts over the Taiwan question have gripped many Southeast Asian countries. Joko Widodo, president of Indonesia, which just hosted G20, told the Economist that he was “very worried” about the possibility of a conflict over Taiwan, not least because it could destroy the region’s hopes for development and prosperity.
Relations between China and the US have been strained after US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s provocative visit to Taiwan island in August. According to the Economist, many Southeast Asian strategists also deplored the visit, calling it “needlessly provocative.”
The more the US tries to push conflicts between Southeast Asian countries with China over the South China Sea issue and Taiwan question, the clearer it will be to those countries that the US is the real saboteur of regional stability, said Li. Sadly, the Biden administration seems blind to the fact that those countries desperately want to steer away from conflicts; if it pushes harder, those countries will distance themselves from the US, Li said.