Obama did not blink on
Miriam's VFA brouhaha
By Alex P. Vidal
LOS ANGELES, California – Was it a case of bad timing?
Several
days after Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago filed a joint resolution seeking
the termination of the RP-US Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA), the Philippine
government has not received any official reaction from the White House.
The lady
senator had threatened to file the resolution while newly reelected President
Barack Obama was about to embark on a three-nation tour of Asia where he dodged
the Philippines recently.
Apparently,
Obama was unfazed by Defensor-Santiago’s threat even as observers viewed his
recalcitrance as a sign that his administration is willing to let go of that
vital joint military project.
Or the timing
of Defensor-Santiago's resolution could be bad as experts consider the long-raging
rivalry between China and five neighbors for control of strategic and
resource-rich waters in the Scarborough Shoal in South China Sea to be more
urgent than the VFA fiasco.
Obama made
it clear during the campaign period he was hell-bent in slashing the military
budget as part of his administration’s "peaceniks" policy.
During his
first term, President Obama disclosed a “new military strategy” that would cut
the Pentagon budget by hundreds of billions of dollars over the next decade.
BILLION
CUTS
The new
military strategy includes $487 billion in cuts over the next decade. An
additional $500 billion in cuts could be coming if Congress follows through on
plans for deeper reductions. The announcement comes weeks after the U.S.
officially ended the Iraq War and after a decade of increased defense spending
in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States, reported
the USA Today.
Obama said
that the military will indeed be leaner, but the U.S. will maintain a budget
that is roughly larger than the next 10 countries' military budgets combined.
"I
just want to say that this effort reflects the guidance I gave throughout this
process," Obama said. "Yes, the tide of war is receding. But the
question that this strategy answers is what kind of military will we need after
the long wars of the last decade are over. And today, we're moving forward,
from a position of strength."
Obama
added: "Some will no doubt say the spending reductions are too big; others
will say they're too small," Obama said. "It will be easy to take
issue with a particular change. But I would encourage all of us to remember
what President Eisenhower once said — that 'each proposal must be weighed in
the light of a broader consideration: the need to maintain balance in and among
national programs.' "
Obama has
vowed to “strengthen our presence in the Asia Pacific, and budget reductions
will not come at the expense of this critical region.”
SECOND
Defensor-Santiago’s
Joint Resolution, her second attempt since 2010, accused the US of
non-compliance and violation of Philippine law and international norms and
customs on the protection and preservation of the environment.
The
resolution came in the heels of the controversy involving a US Navy contractor
that allegedly dumped hazardous wastes in Subic Bay. A number of senators have
called for an investigation on the allegation. It was also in prime news in the
Philippines while President Obama’s tour in Asia was in progress and when he
recently attended the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and
leaders of Southeast Asia at the Peace Palace in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
The senate
resolution also sought to direct the secretary of the Department of Foreign
Affairs to give notice of termination to the United States. "If adopted,
the joint resolution, although victimized by the President's veto power, will
become a historic compulsive force that can still gather together the broken
pieces of national sovereignty shattered by the infirmity of the political
leadership," Santiago said in the measure.
RATIFY
The VFA
was signed in February 1998 and was ratified by the Philippine Senate in May
1999. It is not a mutual security agreement but a support deal to the Mutual
Defense Treaty (MDT).
In August
2010, Santiago also filed a joint resolution calling for the termination of the
VFA. It was never passed and remained
pending in the committee. In her first resolution, Santiago said the US does
not recognize the VFA as a treaty because its Congress never ratified the
agreement, which the Philippine Senate did in 1999.
Defensor-Santiago
was supported by Senator Joker Arroyo and Teofisto Guingona III who argued that
the country had supposedly not benefited from the agreement.
I'm all for cancelling the VFA ... It's caused nothing but trouble.
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