THIS is it! Malacanang is officially set to abrogate the Visiting Forces Agreement between our country and the US.
Late last week, presidential spokesman Salvador Panelo, whose job has been usurped by a senator during the threat of a virus contagion from China, faced reporters to say that the President has instructed his tokayo Executive Secretary Medialdea to tell top diplomat Teodoro Locsin to send the notice of termination to the US government.
A day after, however, Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana contradicted Panelo’s pronouncement, going as far as calling it “fake news.”
“This is fake news. Sec. Locsin has not seen the order yet. According to Medialdea! None. Nada. Zilch. Awan. Wala! Anggapo,” reporters quoted Lorenzana as saying in a chat group.
Medialdea, for his part, confirmed that he has yet to receive the President’s instruction. Online news portal Rappler quoted the executive secretary as saying: “As of date [sic] I have not received any instruction to relay any message to anyone.”
On the same day, Panelo stuck to his guns saying that if Medialdea has not yet received the instruction “does not mean the info I shared to media is untrue.”
All this to and fro betray the real score behind the seriousness of this administration’s decision to abrogate the VFA. But I know where these people are coming from.
Locsin, who has this penchant for telling people on Twitter to just go and copulate with a duck, has explained last Thursday before the Senate committee on foreign relations that the country stands to lose a lot in foreign aid should the VFA be terminated.
He even requested the solons for an executive session to further discuss the matter. During the meeting, Locsin presented four direct benefits derived from the agreement.
One, he said, is that the agreement ensures operability of other Philippine-US defense arrangements of cooperation. The second benefit is the agreement allows the US to provide a “total-package approach” which meant that all items in the aid to the country would be compatible with systems and equipment already in place in our national defense.
Third and fourth are that the agreement promotes interoperability between the forces of the two countries, including its law enforcement agencies and the agreement allows for the continued support in facing the non-traditional security threats which include human trafficking, cyber attacks, and illegal drugs through training and exchange visits, respectively.
Make no mistake about it but the country stands to lose at least P10 billion in aid from the American should the agreement be abrogated. Locsin pointed this out during with the senators. A thing I cannot understand since wasn’t it Locsin the first stooge of this administration to jumped in and said that they will do barely hours after the President brandished the threat of the agreement’s termination as a response of the nullification of his stooge senator’s visa?
Lorenzana’s dilly-dallying over the abrogation of the agreement, however, is understandable. He stands to lose a lot in terms of American toys of war should the abrogation push through.
To this, I dare say: Don’t circumvent your commander-in-chief, general. Do what the President ordered. Remember, a senator’s US visa is at stake here. Do it, abrogate the agreement now. Pfft.