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#WestPhilippineSea #SenateSession41 #RodanteMarcoleta #GeopoliticsPH #PhilippineSovereignty #WPSRealityCheck #SouthChinaSeaIssue #PHNationalInterest #KalasagNgPilipinas #PhilSheild 🇵🇭 The chamber settled into a tense quiet as Senator Rodante Marcoleta rose from his seat, papers in hand but speaking more from conviction than from notes. His tone was steady, deliberate — the kind of voice that signals a message meant not just for the Senate, but for the entire nation. He began by grounding the issue in geopolitical reality, not slogans. He reminded the chamber that the West Philippine Sea dispute is not a simple story of “small versus big,” but a complex intersection of regional power competition, resource security, and strategic military positioning in Southeast Asia. Marcoleta emphasized that the Philippines sits at the crossroads of major global interests — the United States, China, ASEAN neighbors, and even external actors like Japan and Australia. He argued that any discussion about the West Philippine Sea must acknowledge this broader landscape, because ignoring it leads to emotional decisions instead of strategic ones. He pointed out that while the Philippines has legal victories — including the 2016 arbitral ruling — the geopolitical environment is shaped not only by law but by power, alliances, and long-term national strategy. He warned that the country must avoid being used as a pawn in great‑power competition, stressing that “sovereignty is not defended by rhetoric alone, but by a clear understanding of the forces at play.” Marcoleta then shifted to the reality on the ground: the presence of foreign vessels, the pressure on Filipino fishermen, and the increasing militarization of surrounding waters. He framed these not as isolated incidents but as part of a larger pattern of regional assertiveness. Yet he also cautioned against oversimplifying China as the sole actor shaping the region. He noted that multiple countries — including the United States — have strategic interests in the same waters, and that the Philippines must navigate these interests with caution, independence, and foresight. His opening statement ended with a call for strategic unity: a national policy that is consistent, realistic, and grounded in both international law and geopolitical awareness. He urged the Senate to approach the issue not with fear or anger, but with a sober understanding of the Philippines’ place in the evolving Indo‑Pacific landscape.