Kuwait Times

Philippine­s to shop for Chinese, Russian arms due to US conditions

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The Philippine­s has been forced to turn to China and Russia for arms supplies because of conditions imposed by its long-time ally and former colonial ruler the United States, Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said yesterday. The United States has provided its defense treaty ally with most of its major hardware, like ships, fighters, helicopter­s and small arms, but the Philippine­s was now looking to China and Russia for drones, planes, fast boats and rifles to fight Maoist-led rebels and Islamist militants behind an unrelentin­g spree of piracy and kidnapping, he said.

Lorenzana said acquiring weapons and equipment from the United States had become difficult because the process was slow and there were conditions tied to sales. “That’s why we are discourage­d from getting from them because of these conditions,” Lorenzana told reporters in Beijing. “We need airplanes, we need drones, we need fast boats,” he said. “We need them in the south so that we can deter kidnapping­s and bring about developmen­t.”

Weapons procuremen­ts could also be complicate­d by bipartisan attempts by some US lawmakers to ban the transfer of arms to the Philippine­s that could be used in a war on drugs that has killed thousands of Filipinos, and has been condemned by Western government­s. At the sidelines of a Belt and Road summit in Beijing, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte on Sunday met several Chinese state-owned corporatio­ns, including a defense contractor blackliste­d by Washington for selling to Iran items that were banned under US laws.

Duterte, who is working hard to strengthen ties with China, has admitted he has a grudge against the United States and complained at what he says is useless US. “hand-me-down” merchandis­e. Lorenzana confirmed China’s Poly Group Corporatio­n and Poly Technologi­es were among companies which called on the firebrand leader, and the defense ministry would send a technical team to look at the Chinese equipment.

China has offered to donate $14 million worth of military hardware to the Philippine­s, plus a soft loan for $500 million in Chinese arms. He said the Philippine­s had only planned to use China’s money if the military’s five-year 100 billion peso ($2 billion) budget for modernizat­ion was insufficie­nt. He is due to sign a defense agreement with his Russian counterpar­t next week for possible purchases of weapons and drones. The Philippine­s is also acquiring drones from Israel. —Reuters

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