Duterte asks US on sea feud with China: 'Are you with us?'

In this Friday, June 10, 2016, file photo, a protester has her cheek painted with a slogan outside the Chinese Consulate during a protest against China's occupation and island-building in the disputed Spratly Island group in the South China Sea, in Makati city's financial district east of Manila, Philippines. A case brought by the Philippines against China in an international tribunal deciding the claim, represents a diplomatic dilemma for far-flung nations as Washington and Beijing rally support for their respective positions on the use of international arbitration in South China Sea disputes. AP Photo/Bullit Marquez, File

MANILA, Philippines — The Philippine president-elect said Tuesday he recently asked the US ambassador whether Washington will support the Philippines in case of a possible confrontation with China in the disputed South China Sea.

Rodrigo Duterte suggested in a speech in a business forum in Davao city that a 1951 Mutual Defense Treaty between the allies does not automatically oblige Washington to immediately help if the Philippines gets into a confrontation with China over a territorial conflict.

Duterte said he asked US Ambassador Philip Goldberg in a recent meeting, "Are you with us or are you not with us?" adding that Goldberg responded, "Only if you are attacked."

The treaty says each country will "act to meet the common dangers" if one is attacked. Filipino officials have asked in the past whether the US would help if the Philippines gets into a confrontation with China over disputed territories in the South China Sea.

The US takes no sides in the long-unresolved territorial disputes. Goldberg hasn't commented publicly on his meeting with Duterte.

The long-simmering disputes involving China, the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei have escalated after Beijing transformed seven disputed reefs into islands, including three with aircraft runways, in the South China Sea. Some fear China can use the islands militarily to reinforce its claims and intimidate rival claimants.

Under outgoing President Benigno Aquino III, the Philippines challenged the validity of China's vast claims under the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea before an international arbitration tribunal, which is expected to hand down a ruling soon.

The move by Aquino's administration has strained relations with Beijing.

Duterte said he would wait for the tribunal's ruling before deciding his move but added he would not confront militarily superior China and risk losing Filipino troops.

"Why would I go to war?" he asked. "I will not waste the lives of people there."

Duterte pointed out the benefits of nurturing friendly relations with Beijing, including a Chinese offer of financing railway projects in the Philippines.

The longtime mayor of Davao city, who starts his six-year term on June 30, said he would send his designated transport secretary, Arthur Tugade, to China "not to talk about war, not to talk about irritations there, but to talk about peace and how they can help us."

Apparently referring to the US, Duterte asked, "Can you match the offer? Because if you cannot match the offer, I will accept the goodwill of China."

Duterte has said he would be a left-leaning president and allowed communist guerrillas to recommend allies who were designated to at least two key posts in his Cabinet. Early this month, he said he would chart an independent foreign policy "and not be dependent on the United States," the Philippines' longtime ally.

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