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US keeps mum on Duterte’s ‘Bye-bye America’ threat

The US has vowed to work with the Philippine president to address any concerns after he threatened to terminate a pact that allows US troops to visit the Philippines.

President Rodrigo Duterte was enraged after a US government aid agency deferred a vote on a renewal of a major development assistance package for the Philippines over concerns about extrajudicial killings in Duterte’s war on illegal drugs, which has left thousands dead, reported Gulf News.

Although no decision on the aid package has been taken, Duterte on Saturday launched an expletives-laden tirade, telling the US to “prepare to leave the Philippines, prepare for the eventual repeal or the abrogation of the Visiting Forces Agreement,” the report said

He was referring to a 1998 accord that governs American forces visiting the Philippines for joint combat exercises. The pact has helped the Philippines contain a violent Muslim insurgency in the south and train and equip Filipino forces facing an assertive China in disputed South China Sea waters.

“You know, tit for tat … if you can do this, so [can] we. It ain’t a one-way traffic,” Duterte reportedly said, adding tauntingly, “Bye-bye America.”

The US Embassy in Manila reportedly said in a statement overnight that Washington will work closely with the Duterte administration to address any concern it may have. It did not elaborate.

The White House didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment, but spokesman Josh Earnest has said previously that the White House would not react publicly each time Duterte made an offhand remark.

Seventy-one-year-old Duterte, who describes himself as a left-wing politician, has made similar threats before and after taking office in June, but he and his officials have walked back on many of his public statements, causing confusion.

Duterte said Russia can be a very important ally. “They do not insult people, they do not interfere,” he added.

The Philippines had been slated for another aid package after its previous five-year, $434 million (Dh1.5 billion) poverty reduction program was successfully completed in May under Duterte’s predecessor, Benigno Aquino III, the report said.

A spokeswoman for the Millennium Challenge Corporation, Laura Allen, reportedly said on Thursday that it would continue to monitor events in the Philippines before the next board review in March 2017.

The US decision is among the first signs of how concerns about the rule of law and human rights under Duterte could entail economic costs, reported Gulf News.

The US government, along with European Union (EU) and UN officials, has raised concerns about Duterte’s crackdown on illegal drugs, which has left more than 2,000 suspected drug users and dealers dead in purported gun battles with police. More than 3,000 other deaths are being investigated to determine if they were linked to illegal drugs, the report said.

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