President Marcos Jr To Forge Stronger Relations With US

On Sunday, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. stated that his planned meeting with US President Joe Biden is critical to advancing his country's national interests and strengthening the "very important alliance" between Manila and Washington.

Presidents Marcos Jr and Joe Biden
Adoga Stephen By Adoga Stephen - Editor-In-Chief
4 Min Read

On Sunday, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. stated that his planned meeting with US President Joe Biden is critical to advancing his country’s national interests and strengthening the “very important alliance” between Manila and Washington.

Marcos left Manila on Sunday for the first state visit to Washington by a Philippine leader in nearly a decade, following a series of high-level engagements in the previous year, including a meeting with Biden on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York in September and a visit to the Philippines by US Vice President Kamala Harris in November.

Marcos said: “My visit to the United States and more especially my meeting with President Joe Biden is essential to advancing our national interests and strengthening that very important alliance.”

His visit coincides with rising geopolitical tensions over self-ruled Taiwan and concerns over China’s behavior in the disputed South China Sea. It also takes place against the backdrop of strengthening Philippine-US defense ties, as seen by the largest-ever joint military drills in April and a recent extension of US access to Philippine facilities.

Marcos emphasized his commitment to strengthening Philippine-US ties “in a wide range of areas that not only address concerns of our times but also those that are critical to advancing our core interests,” listing food security, climate change, cybersecurity, and economic resilience as examples.

The Philippines would reaffirm its “commitment to fostering our long-standing alliances as an instrument of peace and as a catalyst of development in the Asia-Pacific region,” Marcos added, while also pushing “for greater economic engagement” with the US.

Although the Filipino leader has sought good relations with both China and the United States, ties with the latter are only now being restored after years of distance under former President Rodrigo Duterte, who distanced Manila from Washington in favor of Beijing.

“He’s taking time out and I think… the optics of that are just massive, especially considering the last administration,” Stephen Cutler, former FBI legal attaché to Manila, told Arab News. “So, I think this is going to be good.”

Cutler added that Marcos’ visit provides an opportunity to discuss matters other than defense in Philippine-US relations.

“The relationship with the United States and the issues that the Philippines faces go far beyond only or mere military security.

“One of the things that the president’s visit will allow him to do is to establish some really good, I hope, relationships with the US businesses that have the ability to add jobs in that field here in the Philippines,” he added.

According to national surveys, job creation is one of the top priorities for Filipinos.

Marcelino Libanan, minority leader at the Philippine House of Representatives, said: “We are all counting on the president’s trip to pave the way for additional American direct investment inflows that we need to support our economic recovery and generate new employment.”

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Stephen studied Mass Communication at the Lagos State Polytechnic, Ikorodu (now Lagos State University of Science and Technology), where he acquired requisite training for the practice of journalism. He loves the media, and his interest mostly lies in print medium, where his creative writing skill makes him a perfect fit.