Duterte in key visit to Russia

Duterte in key visit to Russia
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte delivers a speech in Tokyo in this file photo. (AP)
Updated 22 May 2017
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Duterte in key visit to Russia

Duterte in key visit to Russia

MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte flew to Russia on Monday to seek arms and steer his nation’s foreign policy further away from longtime ally the US.
The five-day trip will cement a dramatic improvement in relations with Russia since Duterte came to power last year and began unraveling his country’s decades-long alliances with the US, which he accuses of hypocrisy and bullying.
“Russia must cease to be at the margins of Philippine diplomacy. Overdependence on traditional partners has limited our room to maneuver in a very dynamic international arena,” Duterte told reporters before leaving.
“This is a strategic oversight that has led to many missed opportunities for our country. I am determined to correct this.”
The trip will also be personal for Duterte, who has described Russian President Vladimir Putin as his “favorite hero” and proclaimed a bond because of mutual passions such as guns and hunting. The pair are due to meet on Thursday.
Since assuming the presidency, Duterte has sought to build strong alliances with China and Russia while moving away from the US, the Philippines’ former colonial ruler and most important military ally.
He has scaled down the number and scope of annual military exercises with the US, barred Filipino forces from joint patrols in the disputed South China Sea and called for the withdrawal of US troops from the Philippines.
US military ties have been loosened even though China is expanding its presence into Philippine-claimed waters in the South China Sea.
Duterte said last week that Chinese President Xi Jinping had threatened to go to war with the Philippines over the territorial row.
But Duterte, a self-described socialist, has been determined to reduce the Philippines’ reliance on the US and build much closer ties with China and Russia.
“My visit underscores the independence of the Philippines’ foreign policy and the firm resolve to broaden the horizons of friendship and cooperation with other nations,” he said on Monday.
China and Russia have supported or at least not criticized Duterte’s controversial war on drugs, which has left thousands of people dead and led to warnings by rights groups that he may be orchestrating a crime against humanity.
Duterte has railed against the US, particularly when Barack Obama was president, for criticizing the drug war.
On a state visit to China last year he announced the Philippines’ “separation” from the US.
“I’ve realigned myself in your ideological flow 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,” he said at that time.
Duterte and Putin first met on the sidelines of an Asia-Pacific summit in Peru last November. Since then, two Russian Navy flotillas have visited Manila.
“The Russians are with me, I shall not be afraid,” Duterte said while touring the Russian Navy’s guided missile cruiser Varyag during a port visit to Manila last month.
Duterte said last week one of the top priorities of his trip to Russia was to secure precision-guided bombs to use on militants in the southern Philippines.
He had also previously said he hoped the Philippines would soon be able to start acquiring other Russian weapons.
The Philippines and Russia established diplomatic ties 41 years ago but until Duterte took office relations remained relatively low-key.
This was partly due to Manila’s alliance with the US.
Philippine-Russian trade last year totalled just $226 million, according to government data, while Philippine-US trade was worth more than $18 billion last year.
Duterte’s visit to Moscow will be a “propaganda victory for Putin and a soft-power coup for Russia,” analyst Richard Javad Heydarian told AFP.
“It will be their way of poking the eye of America.”