Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Philippine leader says he won’t cut diplomatic ties with U.S. after all

- By Jonathan Kaiman

BEIJING — Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s divorce from the United States may have ended before it began.

On Thursday, Mr. Duterte, while in Beijing on a state visit, announced a “separation” from the U.S. by the Philippine­s — a top U.S. ally since the 1950s — in favor of closer economic and military ties with China.

“America has lost now,” Mr. Duterte, 71, told Chinese and Filipino business leaders. “And maybe I will also go to Russia to talk to Putin and tell him that there are three of us against the world: China, Philippine­s and Russia. It’s the only way.”

Then came damage control.

Mr. Duterte seemed to scramble early today, saying he will not cut diplomatic ties between the Philippine­s and the U.S.

“It’s not a severance of ties. What I mean was a separation of foreign policy,” he told reporters, according to the Philippine news website GMA News.

“Let me clarify. The president did not talk about separation,” Philippine­s Trade Minister Ramon Lopez told CNN Philippine­s on Friday, joining a chorus of highrankin­g Philippine officials and elites to denounce, walk back or express bafflement at their president’s words.

The country “would not stop trade and investment with the U.S.,” Mr. Lopez said.

Presidenti­al spokesman Ernesto Abella called Mr. Duterte’s remarks merely “an assertion that we are an independen­t and sovereign nation, now finding common ground with friendly neighbors.”

Mr. Duterte, in a meeting Thursday with Chinese President Xi Jinping, agreed to resume bilateral talks over the South China Sea, where competing territoria­l claims have poisoned the two countries’ relationsh­ip for years. The Philippine president walked away from the meeting with $13.5 billion worth of trade deals with China.

“In this visit, bilateral relations have fully recovered and the two countries will return to the track of dialogue and consultati­on to address maritime issues,” Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin told reporters after the signings.

Many Philippine citizens view the U.S. favorably and hold China in contempt.

On Friday, Albert del Rosario, the Philippine­s’ former foreign minister, called Mr. Duterte’s shift in foreign policy a “national tragedy.”

“We must be with responsibl­e nations with whom we share our core values of democracy, respect for human rights and the rule of law,” he said.

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