
South China Morning Post · Mar 2, 2026 · Collected from RSS
President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr’s decision to promote coastguard officer Jay Tarriela – despite Beijing’s calls for him to be sanctioned – is being read by analysts as a calibrated signal of how the Philippines intends to manage its maritime dispute with China. Rather than a routine personnel move, they say, the elevation of one of the government’s most outspoken maritime voices suggests Marcos is doubling down on a strategy that pairs public exposure of Beijing’s actions in the South China Sea...
President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr’s decision to promote coastguard officer Jay Tarriela – despite Beijing’s calls for him to be sanctioned – is being read by analysts as a calibrated signal of how the Philippines intends to manage its maritime dispute with China.Rather than a routine personnel move, they say, the elevation of one of the government’s most outspoken maritime voices suggests Marcos is doubling down on a strategy that pairs public exposure of Beijing’s actions in the South China Sea with continued diplomatic engagement behind closed doors.Tarriela, whom China’s embassy had accused of “relentlessly attacking and smearing China” in the South China Sea dispute, was promoted to rear admiral.The promotion was disclosed on Saturday, though the appointment had been approved on February 23 and transmitted the same day to the Department of Transportation, the coastguard’s parent agency, by acting executive secretary Ralph Recto, chief aide to Marcos.A Chinese coastguard vessel (right) fires its water cannon at the Philippines’ BRP Datu Pagbuaya in the disputed South China Sea in October 2025. Photo: Philippine Coast Guard via APThe move followed weeks of diplomatic friction, after China’s embassy called for Tarriela to be sanctioned or removed over his role in leading the government’s “transparency initiative”, which regularly publicises encounters between Philippine and Chinese vessels in disputed waters.