Philippine envoy confident Duterte will back revamped US defence pact

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte unilaterally cancelled the Visiting Forces Agreement in 2020. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

MANILA (REUTERS) - A two-decades old defence pact between the Philippines and the United States has been revamped and its new terms submitted to President Rodrigo Duterte for his consideration, Manila's ambassador to Washington told Reuters.

The Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA), which provides rules for the rotation of thousands of US troops in and out of the Philippines for war games and exercises, will end in August if Mr Duterte decides to terminate the deal.

Mr Duterte unilaterally cancelled the VFA last year in an angry rebuke after an ally was denied a US visa, but twice suspended its termination to create what Philippine officials say is a window for better terms to be agreed.

"We are confident he (Duterte) will see that there's marked improvement in the terms of agreement," ambassador Jose Manuel Romualdez said in a virtual interview.

Mr Romualdez did not specify what revisions had been made, but said the terms now agreed on were "acceptable" and "mutually beneficial".

Manila has in the past been unhappy about issues such as a lack of jurisdiction over US personnel guilty of crimes and damage to the environment during maritime drills.

Ties between the US and its former colony have been complicated by MrDuterte's rise to power in 2016 and his frequent condemnation of US foreign policy and embrace of China.

He has said the US should pay more if it wants to maintain the VFA.

The Philippines is by far the largest recipient of US military assistance in the Indo-Pacific region, having received 33 billion pesos (S$914 million) worth since 2015, the US Embassy in Manila has said.

Mr Romualdez said the Philippines expects to get US$40 million (S$53 million) in US foreign military financing in its next fiscal year.

The long-standing close ties between the militaries of the two countries have boosted the capability of Philippine forces while giving the US an important foothold in a region where China's power and influence are growing.

"It is critical for our soldiers to be able to operate together with an ally like the US," said Mr Romualdez.

The Philippines also expects to receive a portion of the 80 million doses of coronavirus vaccines that the Biden administration has said it will distribute globally, he said.

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