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- WORLD, Page 67World NotesTHE PHILIPPINESNew Tack on The Bases
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- The prelude to the latest round of talks on the future of
- the huge U.S. Navy and Air Force bases in the Philippines was
- routine: communist insurgents blew up a Voice of America
- transmitter, while right-wing military rebels were blamed for
- detonating a bomb at a Manila bank.
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- But when the two sides finally sat down together at the
- Central Bank building in the capital, U.S. negotiator Richard
- Armitage offered a new tack. Instead of focusing on
- Washington's inability to pay more than the current $481
- million a year in rent, Armitage declared, "The days of a very
- large presence of U.S. sailors and airmen in the Philippines
- are coming to an end. What remains for us to determine is the
- rate at which this presence will be reduced."
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- The new U.S. tactic is to play for time: Armitage argued for
- a 10-year phase-down and continued U.S. access to Clark air
- base and Subic Bay naval base. In reply, Manila's negotiators
- called for the return of Clark by late next year, after which
- the Aquino government says it hopes to turn the facility into
- a civilian airport.
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