New Straits Times

MORE ACCESS TO ARMY BASES

Philippine­s gives US entry to four more centres under 2014 deal

- MANILA Reuters

THE Philippine­s has granted the United States expanded access to its military bases, the countries said yesterday, amid mounting concern about China’s increasing assertiven­ess in the disputed South China Sea and tensions over self-ruled Taiwan.

Washington would be given access to four more locations under an Enhanced Defence Cooperatio­n Agreement (EDCA) dating to 2014, statements from the defence ministries of both countries said.

“The Philippine-US alliance has stood the test of time and remains ironclad. We look forward to the opportunit­ies these new sites will create to expand our cooperatio­n together,” the statements said.

The US had announced it was allocating more than US$82 million towards infrastruc­ture investment­s at the five sites under the EDCA.

The EDCA allows US access to Philippine military bases for joint training, pre-positionin­g of equipment and the building of facilities such as runways, fuel storage and military housing, but not a permanent presence.

US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin was in Manila for talks as Washington seeks to extend its security options in the Philippine­s to deter any move by China against self-ruled Taiwan.

The statements did not specify where the new locations would be. The former Philippine military chief had said the US had requested access to bases on the northern land mass of Luzon, the closest part of the Philippine­s to Taiwan, and on the island of Palawan, facing the disputed Spratly Islands in the South China Sea.

There was no immediate comment from the Chinese embassy in Manila.

Austin met Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr at the presidenti­al palace yesterday before meeting his counterpar­t, Carlito Galvez, where he assured the leader “we stand ready to help you in any way we can”.

Marcos, who since his landslide victory in the presidenti­al elections in May has twice met US President Joe Biden, reiterated he could not see a future for his country without its longtime treaty ally.

“I have always said, it seems to me, the future of the Philippine­s and for that matter the Asia Pacific will always have to involve the US,” Marcos told Austin.

Austin’s visit follows a threeday trip by US Vice-President Kamala Harris to the Philippine­s in November, which included a stop on Palawan.

There, Harris said Washington would stand by the Philippine­s in the face of intimidati­on and coercion in the South China Sea.

Outside the military headquarte­rs, dozens of protesters chanting anti-US slogans and called for the EDCA to be junked.

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr (centre) and United States Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin (seated, third from left) holding a discussion at the Malacanang presidenti­al palace in Manila yesterday.
REUTERS PIC Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr (centre) and United States Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin (seated, third from left) holding a discussion at the Malacanang presidenti­al palace in Manila yesterday.
 ?? EPA PIC ?? Protesters burning a United States flag at a rally to express opposition to a visit by US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin, outside a military camp in Quezon City, the Philippine­s, yesterday.
EPA PIC Protesters burning a United States flag at a rally to express opposition to a visit by US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin, outside a military camp in Quezon City, the Philippine­s, yesterday.

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