COLUMN-OPINION: The forces behind US Senate bill targeting PH BY DAN STEINBOCK

BY DAN STEINBOCK

DAN STEINBOCK

THE new US Senate bill targeting the Philippines and some other countries is fueled by controversial political and financial agendas that have caused turmoil since the 1980s.

For some time, US Senators Richard Durbin (Democrat, Illinois) and Patrick Leahy (Democrat, Vermont) have been pushing for an amendment in the 2020 State and Foreign Operations Appropriations Bill by the US Senate Appropriations Committee. Essentially, the amendment would deny entry into the US of Philippine government officials involved in the detention of Philippine opposition Senator Leila de Lima..

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Last week, the US Senate panel approved the amendment. Durbin considers de Lima’s detention a “politically motivated imprisonment.” According to the Philippine government, de Lima was arrested and detained in 2017 for allegedly asking money from drug convicts to fund her Senate campaign and for allowing the drug trade to continue in the national penitentiary while she was the justice secretary. She claims the cases against her were “politically motivated.”

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Reportedly, the US Senate amendment also called for the same action against officials of the Egyptian government for the “wrongful detention” of a US citizen and government officials of Turkey, Egypt or Saudi Arabia.

In the Philippines, the provision can be seen as part of the continuing political backlash following the 2016 Duterte election triumph, and the consequent meltdown of the Liberal Party (LP). Usually heavy losses trigger reassessment, which can rejuvenate a political party and renew its leadership. Yet, that did not happen. As the LP failed to attract voters in the Philippines, some of its leaders began pressure campaigns in the US and European Union, to raise their diminished political capital at home.

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In the past year, these campaigns have included frequent-flyer visits to Washington. In April, they resulted in the condemnation of human rights violations in the Philippines by Senator Durbin, along with Senators Edward Markey (Democrat, Massachusetts), Marco Rubio (Republican, Florida), Marsha Blackburn (Republican, Tennessee) and Chris Coons (Democrat, Delaware). The same resolution also called on the Philippine government to drop all charges against Maria Ressa and Rappler.

What’s behind the stated concerns for human rights and democracy?

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Politics of campaign finance
LP figures appeal to US senators. These US senators rely on campaign finance. The senators behind the Philippines amendment, in particular, get their political money mainly from lobbyists, defense contractors, finance and especially large individual donors, according to congressional research.

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In turn, the financial heavyweights that drive US politics — Soros and his Open Society Foundations, Koch brothers, Adelsons, Mercers, Steyer, Singer and others — have their own economic agenda, which is often predicated on geopolitics.

With an estimated net worth of $1.5 to $3 million, Richard Durbin is the influential Senate Democratic whip, who has been haunted by allegations of conflicts of interest. Leahy is a senior senator, who was first elected in 1974, while Ed Markey is a senior Democratic senator, who has been challenged by Joe Kennedy 3rd for his Massachusetts Senate seat. Both Leahy and Markey have a net worth of $2 to $4 million. Former beauty pageant participant Marsha Blackburn is a junior senator and ultra-conservative Tea Party Republican,who vice-chaired Trump’s presidential transition team and nominated him for a Nobel Peace Prize for talks with North Korea. Democratic junior Senator Chris Coons has a net worth of $8 to $12 million.

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The ultra-conservative Marco Rubio has claimed that De Lima has been in prison on “bogus charges.” Former Philippine senator Trillanes, who began his political career with a failed coup d’etat attempt in 2003, already met with Rubio in fall 2017. Having previously criticized President Duterte’s war on drugs, Rubio said the two also discussed corruption, human rights, and particularly the US-Philippine alliance.

After the failed 2016 presidential campaign, Rubio has recently profiled himself as a conservative human rights defender and democracy promoter. He is for regime change in Venezuela, Hong Kong and China, Iran and Russia. His financial debacles are notorious. With a net worth of less than $500,000, but outsized political ambitions, critics claim he is dependent on and thus useful to ultra-rich donors, particularly his key funder — the notorious Paul Singer.

There are no free lunches. What kind of economic returns do these funders expect from their political investments?

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Vulture capitalists
With a net worth of $3.5 billion, Paul Singer sees himself as a philanthropist, who promotes the rule of law, democracy and LGBTQ rights. His hedge fund Elliott Management Corp. (EMC) specializes in distressed debt acquisitions. As a pioneer “vulture capitalist,” he buys up sovereign bonds on the cheap and then goes after countries for unpaid debts.

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After the 1970s energy crises, many fragile economies borrowed far more than they could repay. In the 1980s, that led some 50 economies to default or to restructure their debt. In Latin America, it caused a lost decade, but it also penalized Poland, South Africa and parts of Southeast Asia, such as Vietnam and the Philippines.

In vulture capitalists’ business, such crises are considered great opportunities, despite the great economic losses and human tragedies in the target countries.

In the mid-1990s, Singer purchased sovereign debt from nations in or near default, such as Peru and Argentina, and Congo-Brazzaville. Next the International Monetary Fund (IMF) rushed in to “help,” imposing budget cuts and heavy austerity measures, forcing the governments to renegotiate what they owed.

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In the past, Singer has targeted countries mainly in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa. As prosperity levels are rising in Asia, Singer seems to be looking at targets in the East.

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Distressing implications
In the Philippines, many see the US senators’ bill as the net effect of the US visits by a slate of opposition leaders, who no longer enjoy significant support in the Philippines and thus lean onto Washington to boost their deflated political capital in Manila.

Second, the Senate provision is a part of a larger package that calls for same action against officials of Turkey, Egypt, or Saudi Arabia over “wrongful detention of locally employed staff of a US diplomatic mission or a US citizen or national.” The provision protects US citizens and dual citizens, such as Ressa and some other key figures.

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Third, according to US Sen. Lindsey Graham, head of the Senate state and foreign operations appropriations subcommittee, the bill seeks to fund “diplomatic and development efforts worldwide, provide security assistance for our allies around the globe.” Projecting US power across the globe, the bill would seem to go far beyond US sovereignty.

In the process, the accumulated evidence against de Lima’s violations, Ressa’s tax challenges and abuses in other cases has been shunned, critics argue.

One net effect is that the ongoing political moves may be paving new ways for controversial financial interests to exploit rising Asian prosperity.

Dan Steinbock is the founder of Difference Group and internationally recognized expert of the multipolar world economy. He has served at the India, China and America Institute (US), Shanghai Institute for International Studies (China) and the European Union Center (Singapore). For more, see http://www.differencegroup.net/

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