4 minute read

Editorial

In the previous administration, PDEA officials had lamented that tons of shabu were entering the country under the noses of BOC personnel. These days, the bureau has been under fire for what appears to be the continuing smuggling of agricultural products including onions, going by the results of recent raids.

Related to agricultural commodities, Malacañang has also restored Leocadio Sebastian to his post as undersecretary of the Department of Agriculture. Sebastian resigned in August last year after he approved the importation of 300,000 metric tons of sugar amid a shortage that saw prices of the commodity soar by about 100 percent from December 2021 levels.

Advertisement

The importation was not cleared with President

Commentary

FOLLOWING the recent visit of U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin III to the Philippines, the government unveiled plans to designate four new Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (Edca) sites. This announcement was immediately met with protests from leftist groups that raised the issue of the Philippines being dragged into a possible conflict over Taiwan between China and the U.S. due to the former’s provocative actions in the region. The protests expressed fears that our country would be used as a staging ground for U.S. military intervention in the region, and called for the abolition of Edca which was described as a manifestation of subservience to U.S. interests.

To allay such concerns, Defense Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. issued a statement saying that the implementation of Edca would not only boost Philippine security, but also help spur economic investments while preserving and protecting maritime and natural resources. So, is an expanded Edca a benefit or a liability to the

Marcos, the concurrent agriculture secretary, and certain quarters insisted there was no shortage that would justify importation. As prices surged, however, not only of sugar but also of processed foods that use sugar particularly soft drinks and juices, the shortage became real enough for the government to approve in September the importation of 150,000 MT of white refined sugar. Experts said the importation was too little, too late; regular retail prices still range from P92 to a whopping P138 a kilo.

Sebastian, who was later cleared in the sugar mess, is now in charge of the DA’s rice industry development program. This comes amid warnings that the country could face another rice crisis this year. Sebastian, an agricultural scientist, had served for nearly a decade as director of the Philippine Rice Research Institute.

Experts have cited structural weaknesses and problems across the agricultural value chain. The personnel movements must be part of an effort to address problems besetting the agriculture sector and national food security. Let’s hope the personnel changes lead to positive results. (Philstar.com) country’s national interest and security?

Looking at the positions and arguments posed by both sides, it appears that it is both a benefit and a liability. It may be recalled that the Edca was signed in 2014 to address China’s aggression in the West Philippine Sea and to respond to natural disasters.

In his recent statement, Galvez noted that it is an important component of our country’s right to develop and improve its defense capabilities. We do, after all, have a maritime territorial dispute with China and, while our efforts to modernize our military is laudable, it is doubtful that the Philippines in this lifetime would be able to achieve military parity or sufficient capability to deter Chinese aggression on its own.

Hence, the importance of an alliance with the U.S. in our national defense strategy, where Edca is part and parcel of the framework.

But it is one thing to defend against Chinese aggression because that is our fight, and we should be willing to pay the price to protect our territory and uphold our sovereignty. However, it is a whole other matter to be dragged into a conflict that is inimical to our interest, such as a war over Taiwan that will directly involve the U.S. in armed hostilities against Chinese forces. In that scenario, our commitment as a treaty ally of the US becomes a liability because our geographic location makes those Edca sites ideal staging areas for U.S. operations.

Even if we are not expected to participate in the conflict, we are very likely to be pressured to support the effort by allowing access to those sites. How China will react to that is anybody’s guess, but it will definitely respond. It doesn’t have to be a military strike; China has many tools at its disposal that could make things difficult for our country.

Ideally, we can all hope that war doesn’t break out and that a tense peace can be maintained in perpetuity. But hope does not make for a reliable and effective policy or strategy, especially when China is adamant about reintegrating Taiwan with the mainland and is willing to go to war to attain that goal.

While calling for the abrogation of Edca as well as the Mutual Defense Treaty and the Visiting Forces Agreement may allow us to avoid getting sucked into a possible armed conflict over Taiwan, what happens to our defense posture and strategy in the West Philippine Sea? We will essentially be on our own in dealing with China in that scenario. I wonder what the Filipino fishermen who have been harassed by the Chinese Coast Guard and prevented from fishing in our waters have to say about that. Maybe we can also just hope that China would be nice enough to let us be? Going back to the question of whether an expanded Edca would be a benefit or a liability, it now becomes a matter of determining which one outweighs the other in terms of the risks involved and the opportunities presented. At this point, the benefit prevails as there is a need to enable both the U.S. and China to cancel out each other’s advantages, so they would refrain from embarking on something that will destabilize the region as the cost to them will be quite high.