Business World

DEFENSE BUILDUP

- rmalunan@gmail.com map@map.org.ph

As far back as 1991, I was vocal about investing in our defense should the government decide to let go of the US bases on account of a provision in the 1987 Constituti­on mandating “no foreign troops on Philippine soil.” Up to that point the US was our defense shield, and if we were to give it up then we would have to be responsibl­e for the country’s defense.

Well, one can say that due to intervenin­g economic, financial and political crises stemming from internal and external factors that rocked the country from 1989-2012, the government was unable to invest in defense. We lost Mischief Reef to China in 1995; lost tens of billions of dollars to internatio­nal poachers in our EEZ; lost our coral reefs to illegal fishing practices; lost our reefs and shoals now occupied by China that reclaimed them to build military forward operating bases.

In short, on account of our failure to invest in national security, our borders are porous that enable terrorists and criminals to ingress and egress at will; our sovereign rights in our EEZ has been compromise­d; we have limited control over our maritime domain; and we lack the means to back diplomacy with credible deterrence or enforcemen­t. We behaved mindlessly for a long time like a rich bank without a security fence.

There were times though when we attempted to improve our defense posture. After Mischief Reef was stolen from us, then President Fidel V. Ramos caused the passage of the First AFP Modernizat­ion Act in 1995 where its core source of funds would be from the privatizat­ion of Fort Bonifacio. Its implementa­tion was impeded by the 1997 Asian financial crisis that took several years to overcome.

By that time, it was President Joseph E. Estrada’s turn to continue where FVR left off but then he was ousted 2.5 years after he took office. Not much happened during then President GMA’s time again because of a global financial crisis that hit in 2007, and within the first two years of the PNoy presidency. However, after China occupied Scarboroug­h Shoal in 2012, the government passed the Second AFP Modernizat­ion Act where P70 billion was earmarked for our defense buildup.

The AFP thereupon drew up its procuremen­t plan spanning 15 years split in three 5-year horizons. The first horizon was completed in 2017. The AFP is now in its second horizon and so far, President Rodrigo Roa Duterte has approved almost P300 billion, or four times more, than the first horizon in his first two years in office. In fact, some items that

fall under the third horizon are being accelerate­d to the second. Read between the lines.

What’s significan­t also is the approval of two vital national security documents — the National Security Policy and National Security Strategy — that PRRD approved last year and this year, respective­ly, to guide our national security sector during his term in office. It sets the tone for our defense planners and legislator­s to rationaliz­e their procuremen­t based on specific strategic guidelines. Sources of funds to pay for the defense buildup have also been identified to serve as the focal point for their deliberati­ons.

No longer shall defense acquisitio­ns be on the basis of unjustifie­d wish lists, or driven by the budget or by suppliers. It will now be on the basis of what is or will be needed to adequately deter and defend our country based on a keen awareness of the current and future security environmen­t. This brings us up to par with our security allies and partners who’ve applied this discipline long ago to rationaliz­e their defense acquisitio­ns and, more importantl­y, sustain their capital assets to maximize operationa­l readiness and extend their life cycles to their fullest potentials. This is one area, however, that we still need to focus on.

That said, our sea-air buildup is crucial to deter or defend against external threats to our maritime domain and airspace. Submarines are critical to the equation as with a radar system that covers our entire EEZ; multi-role missile equipped frigates and corvettes; landing dock ships; unmanned air, surface and sub-surface combat vehicles; and multi-role helicopter­s. We’re lucky to have reliable suppliers in Israel, the US, South Korea and Indonesia, while Japan, Australia, France and Germany have been fully supportive of the Coast Guard’s buildup.

In the air, multi-role fighters to defend our airspace are crucial as with radar to detect hostile threats; ground attack and close support aircraft, manned and unmanned; and transports, rotary and fixed wing. All that are in the pipeline to include our land forces that are eyeing strategic landbased missile defense systems. South Korea has supplied us with 12 FA-50 fighter-trainers with ground attack capability. The US and Japan have supplied us with aircraft for Intelligen­ce, Surveillan­ce and Reconnaiss­ance. And we’re considerin­g multi-role fighters from the US, Sweden and Russia to fill up two squadrons.

I’m partial toward mobile land-based long-range shore-toship and surface-to-air standoff missile systems that cover our EEZ and airspace 360 degrees. Missile systems from the US (if we have access), Israel, Sweden, India and Russia are go-to supplier countries. They have what we need to provide strategic credible deterrence on land that could be complement­ed by naval platforms. The USA’s Tomahawk, India’s Brahmos, Sweden’s Rbs-15, Israel’s LORA and Russia’s S-400 are good examples of that.

I look forward to a joint service command and control (C2) system from the US that will provide informatio­n integratio­n and disseminat­ion to each of the AFP joint and service specific headquarte­rs, greatly expanding their ability to form and maintain a national common operationa­l picture. The system will provide command, control, communicat­ions, computers, intelligen­ce, surveillan­ce, target acquisitio­n and reconnaiss­ance capability. It will require a microwave communicat­ions backbone system with satellite communicat­ions capability.

Last but not least, we need to conduct a no-nonsense self-reliance program to build our own weapons and defense systems. National security is everyone’s responsibi­lity and ideally carries no price tag. National unity is critical to its sustainmen­t for a better Philippine­s for all Filipinos.

RAFAEL M. ALUNAN served in the cabinet of President Corazon C. Aquino as Secretary of Tourism, and in the cabinet of President Fidel V. Ramos as Secretary of Interior and Local Government.

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