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It was 20 years after the formation of the Soviet Union before the Philippines consider establishing ties. [[Salvador P. Lopez]] proposed a review of relations with the Soviet Union and its allies, reduced dependence on the United States and an Asian policy that would take into account China's emergence as a power of Asia. The administration of [[Diosdado Macapagal]] rejected the proposals.<ref name=lopez>Salvador Lopez, New Directions in Philippine Foreign Policy (Quezon City: U.P. Law Center 1975), 18.</ref>
It was 20 years after the formation of the Soviet Union before the Philippines consider establishing ties. [[Salvador P. Lopez]] proposed a review of relations with the Soviet Union and its allies, reduced dependence on the United States and an Asian policy that would take into account China's emergence as a power of Asia. The administration of [[Diosdado Macapagal]] rejected the proposals.<ref name=lopez>Salvador Lopez, New Directions in Philippine Foreign Policy (Quezon City: U.P. Law Center 1975), 18.</ref>


During the presidency of Filipino president Ferdinand Marcos, the relations between the Philippines and the Soviet Union reached their peak. In a Foreign Policy statement released in January 1967, Marcos acknowledged the need to pursue the establishment of Philippine ties with the Soviet Union and the [[People's Republic of China]]<ref>Manila Times, 25 January 1967, 22A</ref> more vigorously. Also in the same month, Foreign Affairs secretary [[Narciso Ramos]] spoke of possible relaxation on the ban against trading with socialist states.<ref>Benjamin Domingo, The Making of Filipino Foreign Policy (Manila, Foreign Service Institute, 1983), 224.</ref> As part of Marcos' foreign policy, the Philippines sent missions to the Soviet Union, [[Poland]], [[Czechoslovakia]], [[Romania]], [[East Germany]] and [[Bulgaria]].
During the presidency of Filipino president [[Ferdinand Marcos]], the relations between the Philippines and the Soviet Union reached their peak. In a Foreign Policy statement released in January 1967, Marcos acknowledged the need to pursue the establishment of Philippine ties with the Soviet Union and the [[People's Republic of China]]<ref>Manila Times, 25 January 1967, 22A</ref> more vigorously. Also in the same month, Foreign Affairs secretary [[Narciso Ramos]] spoke of possible relaxation on the ban against trading with socialist states.<ref>Benjamin Domingo, The Making of Filipino Foreign Policy (Manila, Foreign Service Institute, 1983), 224.</ref> As part of Marcos' foreign policy, the Philippines sent missions to the Soviet Union, [[Poland]], [[Czechoslovakia]], [[Romania]], [[East Germany]] and [[Bulgaria]].
Formal diplomatic relations between the two countries was established on June 2, 1976.<ref name=ussr /><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.philippines.mid.ru/relations.html |title=Embassy of the Russia Federation to the Republic of Philippines |publisher=Philippines.mid.ru |access-date=2013-09-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130915044442/http://www.philippines.mid.ru/relations.html |archive-date=2013-09-15 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
Formal diplomatic relations between the two countries was established on June 2, 1976.<ref name=ussr /><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.philippines.mid.ru/relations.html |title=Embassy of the Russia Federation to the Republic of Philippines |publisher=Philippines.mid.ru |access-date=2013-09-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130915044442/http://www.philippines.mid.ru/relations.html |archive-date=2013-09-15 |url-status=dead }}</ref>



Revision as of 23:47, 1 July 2021

Philippines–Soviet Union relations
Map indicating locations of Philippines and Soviet Union

Philippines

Soviet Union

The Philippines–Soviet Union relations refer to the former bilateral ties between the Republic of the Philippines and the now-defunct Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

Efforts to strengthen diplomatic relations between the two countries were hindered by mutual distrust between the two countries, with the Philippines being a key ally of the United States, the Soviet Union's main rival in the Cold War. Anti-communist sentiment among many Filipinos was also an obstacle.[1]

Overview

Since 1967, the Philippines became more active in improving ties with the Eastern Bloc countries. Even as the Philippines began to soften ties with the Soviet Union and its allies, the Philippines remained cautious and suspicious toward the Soviet Union approaching the union with a "backwards-forward" style of diplomacy. The Philippines was wary of the Soviet Union due to ideological differences and past links to underground movements.[2]

The Soviet Union also showed mistrust towards the Philippines due to its strong ties with the United States. Any development that would lead towards the erosion of the ties between the Philippines and the United States was welcomed by the Union, but the Soviet Union itself admitted that those developments would be limited.[2]

History

It was 20 years after the formation of the Soviet Union before the Philippines consider establishing ties. Salvador P. Lopez proposed a review of relations with the Soviet Union and its allies, reduced dependence on the United States and an Asian policy that would take into account China's emergence as a power of Asia. The administration of Diosdado Macapagal rejected the proposals.[3]

During the presidency of Filipino president Ferdinand Marcos, the relations between the Philippines and the Soviet Union reached their peak. In a Foreign Policy statement released in January 1967, Marcos acknowledged the need to pursue the establishment of Philippine ties with the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China[4] more vigorously. Also in the same month, Foreign Affairs secretary Narciso Ramos spoke of possible relaxation on the ban against trading with socialist states.[5] As part of Marcos' foreign policy, the Philippines sent missions to the Soviet Union, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Romania, East Germany and Bulgaria. Formal diplomatic relations between the two countries was established on June 2, 1976.[2][6]

Economic ties

The Soviet Union composed of 1–2 per cent of the Philippines total trade. The two states granted each other most favoured nation status on custom duties, internal taxes and the issuance of import and export taxes.[7]

The most exported products of the Philippines were food products, manufactured goods and alcohol products such as beer, rum and gin while the Soviet Union exported industrial equipment, minerals, tools, machinery, coal and oil to the Philippines.[2]

During the 1972–1984 period the Philippines recorded a favourable balance of trade with the Soviet Union but from 1985 onwards the Philippines exports of traditional products to the Soviet Union were insufficient.[2]

A feasibility study was conducted in 1982 as part of a joint venture of the Philippines and the Soviet Union to construct a 1 million ton per year cement plant that would significantly add to the current annual output level of 4 to 4.5 million tons the Philippines to export cement. The project was discontinued due to financial constraints. It would have been the first Soviet industrial project in the Philippines.[2]

Factors affecting bilateral relations

The Philippines has long been plagued by poverty and agrarian issues, which caused the country's rise of communist and secessionist movements. The Philippines is a Catholic majority nation which is an important factor because the Catholic Church is against Communism which associates it to atheism, violence and dictatorship.[2] Filipinos were also hostile to atheists, and up until 1986 atheism was a crime worth 10 years in jail.[2] The United States and Japan's economic aid to Southeast Asian nations, complicates relations. The Red Scare and the intensified insurgency made the Filipinos suspicious towards the Soviet Union.[1]

The Soviet Union remained distrustful of the Philippines due to its ties with the United States, with the Philippines assisting the United States in both the Korean War and the Vietnam War which the Soviet Union was involved too.

Alleged Soviet sponsored terrorism

Reports of the New People's Army and radical labour groups being sponsored by the Soviet Union circulated.[8] The Philippine Senate urged an investigation of Soviet aid to labour groups and insurgents, and the sighting of submarines allegedly belonging to the Soviet Union. The Soviet Ambassador to Manila, Vadim Shabalin denied Soviet involvement and such allegations were "flagrantly distorting" to the Soviet Union's foreign policy towards the Philippines.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b Asiaweek, 10 August 1986
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Thambipillai, Pushpa, and Daniel Mutuszewski ed. The Soviet Union and the Asia-Pacific Region: Views from the Region. New York: Praeger Publishers, 1989.
  3. ^ Salvador Lopez, New Directions in Philippine Foreign Policy (Quezon City: U.P. Law Center 1975), 18.
  4. ^ Manila Times, 25 January 1967, 22A
  5. ^ Benjamin Domingo, The Making of Filipino Foreign Policy (Manila, Foreign Service Institute, 1983), 224.
  6. ^ "Embassy of the Russia Federation to the Republic of Philippines". Philippines.mid.ru. Archived from the original on 2013-09-15. Retrieved 2013-09-04.
  7. ^ Brillante, 135-140
  8. ^ Manila Bulletin, 11, 15–16 July 1987.