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The United States and the Philippines have had strong diplomatic ties for decades.
But you would never guess that from listening to Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte.
Since taking office in June 2016, Duterte has unleashed an aggressive campaign against
the United States, threatening to halt joint military exercises and even calling President
Obama a quote ‘son of a whore’.
Duterte said bilateral ties are no longer benefitting the Philippines, and that he plans
to [quote] ‘break up with America’.
So what led up to this point?
How did their relationship get so complicated?
Well, ties between the US and the Philippines largely stem back to the late 1800’s.
At the time, the Philippines was a colony of Spain, and was fighting for independence.
When American troops arrived during the Spanish-American War, Philippine rebel troops fought alongside
them, eventually defeating the Spanish in 1898.
However instead of granting the Philippines’ freedom, the US claimed it as its own territory,
and declared war against Philippine revolutionary forces.
American troops killed hundreds of thousands of philippine civilians in a series of alleged
war crimes.
In one particularly heinous instance, US troops ransacked a residential area killing ‘anyone
who was more than 10 years old.’
After three years of fighting, the US won, and placed the Philippines under a civilian
government.
And over time, the Philippine’s attitude toward the US significantly improved, as the
US fostered economic development and introduced public education, elections and social programs.
By the mid 1930’s, the Philippines had become largely autonomous, and the US agreed to grant
it full independence within a decade.
However those plans were interrupted with World War 2, during which Japan invaded and
occupied the Philippines.
American and Philippine troops jointly defeated the Japanese and, in 1946, the Philippines
gained full independence.
Around the same time, it signed a mutual defence treaty with the US, part of which allowed
the country to maintain more than a dozen military bases there.
Today, the US and the Philippines are largely tied together by their shared adversary: China.
The Philippines and China both hold claims on the resource-rich South China Sea, and,
in the last several years, China has aggressively pursued island-building on these territories.
Feeling threatened by China’s land-grabbing, the Philippines has allowed the US to increase
its military presence in the country, including naval and aerial patrols.
In general, there is a tremendous amount of goodwill between the two countries.
According to a 2015 Pew Poll, the Philippines is the most pro-America country in the world,
with 92 percent of its population viewing the US favorably.
Experts say this is, in part, because so many Filipinos have immigrated to the US over the
last century.
There are an estimated four million Filipino-Americans, making them the one of the largest Asian minority
populations.
The US has a pointed interest in keeping this relationship strong, as the Obama Administration
continues its strategic effort to bolster diplomatic and security ties with its Asian
allies.
However President Duterte’s direct insults of Obama and threats to end the US and Philippine
defense partnership could mark a new chapter in their complicated history.
