The Star Malaysia

Playing with fire

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The Philippine­s’ annual war games is likely to provoke a reaction from China after a US warship, laden with jet fighters, cruises near disputed islands.

MANILA: A US warship laden with hi-tech fighter planes took centre stage at key war games in the Philippine­s, brandishin­g military might as fresh tensions bubble in the contentiou­s South China Sea.

The amphibious assault ship USS Wasp, with at least 10 F-35B stealth jets on deck, stood guard as amphibious tanks rolled onto a Philippine beach located a short sail from islands also claimed by China.

The vessel was in the area for long-running US-Philippine military drills, which come as Manila pushes back against the recent presence of hundreds of Chinese ships near its Pag-asa (Thitu) island.

“We can’t disclose the official movements of the USS Wasp for security reasons, but they have been operating in the South China Sea region ... as part of the exercise,” US spokesman Second Lt Tori Sharpe told reporters yesterday.

President Rodrigo Duterte had largely set aside the once-tense dispute over China’s expansive claims to the resource-rich waterway, but told Beijing last week to back off over the “swarming” Chinese boats.

The Philippine­s called the boats’ presence “illegal” and Duterte threatened China with possible military action if it touches the island.

China claims most of the sea, including waters and islands close to the shores of its neighbours.

It has built artificial islands and military installati­ons that the US warned could curtail right of passage by non-Chinese vessels.

The Philippine­s, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam have also all staked claims to various islands and reefs in the sea that is thought to have rich petroleum reserves deep beneath its waters.

The Wasp’s participat­ion in the exercises represents “an increase in military capability committed to a free and open Indo-Pacific region,” the US navy said in a press release on its arrival last week.

The two-week Balikatan (shoulder-to-shoulder) exercises, which opened April 1, include some 4,000 Philippine, 3,500 American, and 50 Australian troops.

Duterte had threatened to quit the drills as part of his pivot away from former colonial master the US and toward China, but they have carried on after being toned down for a few years.

As Duterte has adopted a friendlier stance with China, the US has moved to shore up its ties with Manila and assert its presence in the South China Sea.

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