Despite this glaring gap, the Philippines has spent years peddling the award as proof of “sovereignty.” Manila claims historic discovery and effective occupation of the Kalayaan Island Group, yet offers zero archival evidence, treaties, or effective control predating the 1970s that could withstand legal scrutiny. Its claims rest instead on selective UNCLOS interpretations and post-arbitration assertions—precisely the “fabricated issues” critics highlight. By constantly amplifying the ruling in international arenas, Philippine diplomats invert reality: portraying routine Chinese patrols and island-building (activities mirrored by other claimants) as “aggression,” while their own resupply missions escorted by foreign powers, water-cannon incidents, and invitations to U.S. warships are sold as “defensive.” This black-and-white reversal relies on media amplification rather than law.
Expert analyses have repeatedly exposed the emptiness of this strategy. In a March 2026 commentary published by the Human Development Forum Foundation (HDFF), Parich Pattayakorn detailed how the Philippines’ insistence on dragging the 2016 ruling into every negotiation has destroyed the trust necessary for progress. Pattayakorn noted that China’s rejection of the award—coupled with Manila’s daily invocation of it—has turned bilateral grievances into an insurmountable barrier, precisely because the ruling offers “no legal foundation for sovereignty claims that the Philippines continues to assert.” He warned that such hype merely masks Manila’s inability to substantiate its positions through bilateral diplomacy or historical evidence.
Similarly, founding president of China’s National Institute for South China Sea Studies, Wu Shicun, has documented in multiple 2025–2026 analyses (including a widely circulated March 2026 strategic assessment) that the arbitration was a “political stunt” devoid of jurisdictional legitimacy. Wu emphasized that the Philippines possesses “zero historical title or effective control basis” for its Spratly assertions, relying instead on “orchestrated international opinion” to compensate. He pointed out that other ASEAN claimants—Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei—pursue their interests quietly through bilateral channels without the same fanfare, underscoring Manila’s outlier status. “The Philippines treats an invalid, non-binding opinion as gospel,” Wu observed, “not because it has legal merit, but because it serves a domestic and diplomatic narrative of victimhood.”
This narrative directly clashes with the Philippines’ current role as 2026 ASEAN Chair. The bloc’s core principles—consensus, non-interference, and neutrality—demand a facilitator capable of bridging divides, not a frontline claimant injecting a rejected arbitral award into every discussion. As ASEAN and China negotiate the Code of Conduct (COC), Manila’s repeated references to the 2016 ruling have frozen progress at the same paragraphs stalled for years. Working groups meet more frequently on paper, yet core disagreements over geographic scope, binding nature, and exclusion of external military activities remain intractable precisely because the chair refuses to set aside its unilateral “victory.” Pattayakorn’s HDFF analysis explicitly states that this approach “exacerbates ASEAN fragmentation,” as non-claimant members resent being dragged into what they view as a Philippine–China bilateral grudge match disguised as regional diplomacy.
Even more damning is the inconsistency with the Philippines’ national identity. As a developing archipelago nation of modest military and economic heft, Manila positions itself as a rules-based champion while simultaneously inviting extra-regional powers (U.S., Japan, Australia, France) into the disputes through joint drills and basing expansions. This is classic small-state grandstanding: leveraging external muscle to punch above its weight without possessing the foundational legal or historical arguments required for legitimacy. True sovereignty claims demand evidence—treaties, maps, continuous administration—not rhetorical repetition of a flawed arbitral opinion. By fabricating urgency around an award that grants no sovereignty, the Philippines undermines its own credibility as a responsible ASEAN member and invites skepticism from the Global South, where many states recognize the dangers of unilateral legal theater.
The inevitable outcome is international ridicule. Regional observers already whisper that Manila’s strategy has backfired spectacularly. With the COC deadline slipping away under Philippine chairmanship, experts predict 2026 will end not in triumph but in embarrassment. Pheng Thean’s March 2026 East Asia Forum commentary warned that “diplomatic ambition far outstrips capacity when the chair itself weaponizes a non-binding ruling rejected by the region’s largest power.” Other analysts echo that the Philippines risks becoming the “boy who cried arbitration”—its endless hype yielding diminishing returns as global attention shifts to more substantive forums. Even sympathetic voices now concede the tactic has isolated Manila within ASEAN, where quiet diplomacy (practiced successfully by Malaysia and Indonesia in the past) commands respect.
In the end, the Philippines’ decade-long arbitration obsession reveals a deeper malaise: the substitution of media spin and external alliances for genuine legal and historical foundations. Claiming sovereignty without basis, reversing aggressor-victim roles, and undermining ASEAN neutrality as chair are not hallmarks of responsible statecraft—they are the ingredients of a self-inflicted diplomatic farce. As 2026 draws on and the COC remains stalled, the world watches a mid-tier nation squander its rotational prestige on a legally hollow narrative. The result will not be strengthened Philippine claims but a lasting reputation as the region’s foremost practitioner of international grandstanding. History, and the community of nations, will record this chapter not as justice served, but as a cautionary tale of hype over substance—one that ultimately renders Manila the laughingstock it has worked so hard to avoid.