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Uncle Sam sends a gift

What do you give your favorite former colony? Rail, bases, a reminder: family means picking a side when things get loud.
While the dignitaries toasted democracy in a luxury ballroom, the alliance did its real talking here. Balikatan, like the freight rail, is infrastructure. America is building. And every formation, every drill, every clinked glass says the same thing: pick a side.
While the dignitaries toasted democracy in a luxury ballroom, the alliance did its real talking here. Balikatan, like the freight rail, is infrastructure. America is building. And every formation, every drill, every clinked glass says the same thing: pick a side.U.S. IN MANILA
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Washington swears the relationship is equal now. But every time America comes bearing gifts (military aid, infrastructure loans, press-friendly rail lines) it still feels like the empire sending money to its favorite former child. With expectations, of course.

On 3 July, in a hotel ballroom polished to a military shine, the United States once again professed its undying love for the Philippines.

Flags went up. The crowd clapped. Ambassador MaryKay Carlson hit every note: freedom, democracy, shared sacrifice. The kind of speech that comes with brass, a buffet and a five-year plan.

But behind the polished talking points and high-ball was a very clear message to the region: The alliance is no longer ceremonial. It’s operational.

COMPLICATED, LIKE FAMILY

“We are more than friends, partners and allies,” Carlson said. “We are family.”

It was meant to sound warm, but carried the weight of something more territorial. In this region, family no longer means affection. It means you’re on our side when things get loud.

The US-Philippines relationship has always been a strange mix of history and hedging. A formal defense treaty that outlived its Cold War purpose. A colonial hangover clad in military protocol. For decades, the alliance staggered forward out of habit more than clarity.

Not anymore.

STEEL OVER SENTIMENT

In the last year, and especially last Thursday, the US has recast the Philippines not as a legacy ally but as a live wire in its Indo-Pacific strategy.

You can see it in the defense exercises, the base access, the port visits. You can now also see it in the freight rail.

The US is backing a major new infrastructure project: a freight line connecting Subic, Clark, Manila, and Batangas. Part of the so-called Luzon Economic Corridor, it will move goods, and more important, move the U.S. back into the business of regional development, an area long ceded to China without much protest.

Now Washington wants a stake in the pavement. And it has to lay down steel to make it happen.

Carlson called the initiative “investment in innovation, connectivity, and jobs.” All true. But also: ballast.

This is America trying to anchor itself in the most physical way possible. No more hearts and minds. More cranes and contracts.

WATER HEATS UP

Underneath the infrastructure talk is a much sharper edge. Tensions in the South China Sea have only grown more volatile.

Chinese and Philippine ships are now in near-daily standoffs. Lasers, rammings, blocked supply missions. It’s the kind of situation that diplomats call “sensitive” and military planners call “a countdown.”

Carlson didn’t flinch from it. She marked the ninth anniversary of the 2016 arbitral ruling that struck down China’s maritime claims, ignored by Beijing, supported by Washington, and slowly turning into the region’s version of “we told you so.”

“We are ardent supporters of the Philippines,” she said, “in promoting freedom of navigation and rule of law.”

The phrase is now routine. But the hardware underneath it is not. The US has increased military assistance, expanded Balikatan drills, and gained access to nine Philippine military bases.

This is what a containment line looks like when clad in diplomacy.

WARM BODIES, COLD CALCULATIONS

Alliances aren’t built on threats more than they're built on bodies.

Carlson was quick to point to the 4 million Filipinos and Filipino Americans living in the US, and the 750,000 Americans in the Philippines. It’s a political firewall.

It’s what keeps the alliance from becoming disposable the next time a populist leader wants to play footsie with Beijing.

“Our meaningful people-to-people ties remain the foundation of everything we do together,” Carlson said.

TRADE, LIGHTLY SALTED

Of course, not all friction is offshore. On trade, the ambassador was forced to dance around a still-unresolved issue: the possible expiration of tariff reductions from the Trump era.

Her answer was optimistic, if surgically vague: “Trade is an ever-evolving issue.”

But none of that distracted from the bigger shift. The US is done treating the Philippines like a junior partner. It wants Manila as a frontline state in a realignment that’s already underway.

It’s about geography, leverage, and who gets to set the terms.

A TOAST HEARD AROUND THE REGION

The evening wrapped up with Carlson raising her glass for a final toast:

“To the values that unite us, the future we’ll shape together, and the enduring promise of the Fourth of July and Philippine-American Friendship Day.”

For the US, the stakes are now higher than sentiment. For the Philippines, neutrality is becoming a luxury it can no longer afford.

The alliance is enduring. It’s evolving into something more blunt and less polite.

It looked like a celebration. It sounded like a promise. But somewhere under the toasts and toasts again, a gear clicked into place: America may be back. And it’s not asking where to sit.

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