South China Morning Post

Sinking of China-made ship ‘not meant to send message’

Military says nothing intentiona­l in decision to target decommissi­oned tanker during exercises

- Raissa Robles

While the sinking of a decommissi­oned made-in-China navy tanker will be a highlight of the massive Balikatan multilater­al maritime exercises, it is not meant to send a message to any country, the Philippine military has said.

This year’s edition of the annual exercises will be conducted from Monday until May 8 and may include up to 17,000 participan­ts, mainly from the armed services of the United States, the Philippine­s, Australia and France.

The decision to use the BRP Lake Caliraya – the Philippine Navy’s only Chinese-made naval asset – as the target for a sinking exercise was “not intentiona­l”, said Army Colonel Michael Logico, the executive agent and spokesman for Balikatan 2024. The sinking exercise will be undertaken by warships from the navies of the various participan­ts in the northern Philippine­s.

Logico said this year’s Balikatan – a Tagalog term for “shoulder to shoulder” – would feature several firsts.

At least 16,000 participan­ts will train together this year, including 11,000 soldiers from the US and 5,000 from the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP), while the rest will come from the French navy and the Australian Defence Force. The figure is expected to top last year’s number of 16,000 service members, who were mainly from the US military and the AFP.

Fourteen other countries, including those from Asean, the European Union and Japan, would send “observers”, Logico said. Participan­ts from other government agencies such as the Department of Foreign Affairs and the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology were also invited.

Logico said this year’s exercise would test the interopera­bility of the AFP’s service commands with foreign forces and, for the first time, allow them to “showcase the comprehens­ive archipelag­ic defence concept” that was recently announced by Defence Secretary Gilbert Teodoro.

The concept would pivot the AFP from internal to external defence, or from fighting a local insurgency to battling a foreign enemy, Teodoro said.

Besides the sinking of a vessel, another Balikatan highlight is a logistics exercise that involves testing the feasibilit­y of transporti­ng the US Navy’s SM-6 missile system by air.

Logico said the three-missiles-in-one system was “normally fired from a destroyer” but the US found a way to make it a landbased missile using a “prototype launcher”.

He said the SM-6, which had a 300-nautical mile range, would not be fired at all during Balikatan. “We are testing the feasibilit­y of bringing this weapon system by air and offloading [it] into a secure and establishe­d space.”

When asked whether the SM-6 would be located in range of the Second Thomas Shoal – a contested maritime landmark in the South China Sea that is 105 nautical miles from Palawan province – Logico said it would be located far from Palawan.

Elements of the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) will also join the Balikatan for the first time this year. Logico said they would “secure our exercise areas, particular­ly during the maritime strike exercise” to make sure “there will be no interloper­s … who are entering the training area, for their safety of course”.

The PCG has been at the forefront of guarding resupply ships to Manila’s military outpost on the Second Thomas Shoal – where a World War II era navy vessel, the BRP Sierra Madre, was intentiona­lly grounded to strengthen Manila’s territoria­l claims on the surroundin­g waters – and has consequent­ly had several run-ins with Chinese coastguard forces that have attempted to disrupt those missions.

Its participat­ion was “absolutely not” militarisi­ng the coastguard, Logico said, adding that the maritime exercises involving the PCG assumed a situation which had evolved from normal day-today operations into “armed conflict”.

The group or multilater­al sail, involving the Philippine, US and French navies, would for the first time take place beyond the 12-nautical-mile maritime territory of the Philippine­s, he said.

“An intrusion into our exercise area is a possibilit­y, but that will pose more of a problem for the people who want to enter the exercise area, not us,” he said.

As the multilater­al group sail would be conducted inside the Philippine­s’ exclusive economic zone, which was 200 nautical miles from its coastline but beyond the country’s 12-nautical-mile territoria­l waters, the presence of the foreign navies “could be explained as freedom of navigation operation”, Logico said.

But Logico stressed that the Balikatan exercises were not directed at any foreign country, including China. “With or without China … we would still be doing these exercises. Because these are things that nations do.”

With or without China … we would still be doing these exercises ARMY COLONEL MICHAEL LOGICO, SPOKESMAN FOR BALIKATAN 2024

 ?? ?? AFP soldiers at last year’s multilater­al Balikatan exercises.
AFP soldiers at last year’s multilater­al Balikatan exercises.

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