Bangkok Post

Manila, Washington hope to resume drill

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MANILA: Philippine and US defence chiefs yesterday expressed hopes to resume the joint “Balikatan” military exercise that was cancelled last year, as they discussed the situation in the South China Sea.

Philippine Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana and US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin III also discussed in a telephone conference recent developmen­ts in regional security, according to a statement issued by Mr Lorenzana’s department.

“Both are looking forward to the conduct of Exercise Balikatan,” the statement said.

Their conversati­on comes just days after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Philippine Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin, also in a phone call, expressed their shared concerns about Chinese vessels, which Manila believes are manned by militia, in the South China Sea.

The Philippine­s has protested against the presence of the Chinese boats inside its 320-kilometre exclusive economic zone at Whitsun Reef in the strategic waterway, repeatedly asking China to move the vessels away.

Chinese diplomats, however, have said the fishing boats were just sheltering from rough seas and no militia were aboard.

Mr Austin, during the telephone conference, reiterated the importance of the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) between the two countries, while Mr Lorenzana committed to discussing the matter with President Rodrigo Duterte. In February, Mr Duterte said he had not made a decision yet on the future of the two-decadeold troop deployment agreement with the United States.

The VFA provides the legal framework under which US troops can operate on a rotational basis in the Philippine­s.

Relations between the US and its former Asian colony have been complicate­d since 2016 when Mr Duterte, who has repeatedly made statements condemning US foreign policy while befriendin­g China, rose to power.

Mr Duterte has said the US must pay more if it wants to maintain the VFA, which he unilateral­ly cancelled last year in an angry response to an ally being denied a US visa.

The VFA’s withdrawal period has been twice extended, creating what Philippine officials say is a window for better terms to be agreed. Mr Lorenzana likewise sought the assistance of Mr Austin in expediting the delivery of doses of the Covid-19 vaccine developed by US company Moderna.

 ??  ?? Lorenzana: Worried about security
Lorenzana: Worried about security

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