Philippine leader says a death could trigger U.S. pact amid China tension
The Philippines will invoke its defense treaty with the United States if a Filipino soldier dies because of a foreign attack, President Ferdinand MarMarcos cos Jr. said, in remarks that come amid growing tension with China.
“I think Secretary Austin explained it very well. If any Filipino serviceman is killed by an attack from any foreign power, then that is time to invoke the Mutual Defense Treaty,”
told foreign correspondents in Manila on Monday, referring to his conversation with U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin last week at the Pentagon.
Marcos’s comments come in the aftermath of a joint summit with President
Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in Washington last week. They offer clarity on the circumstances that may draw in the U.S. — a treaty ally of the Philippines — as tension between Manila and Beijing intensify over the disputed South China
Sea.
In the latest confrontation between the two countries, in March, two Chinese coast guard ships blasted water cannons at a Philippine boat, injuring three Filipino navy personnel and severely damaging the vessel. China is claiming rights over nearly all of the resourcerich waterway.
Biden last week renewed defense commitments to Asian allies worried about an increasingly aggressive China.
Since taking power in 2022, Marcos has asserted the country’s claims in the contested waters and boosted security ties with the U.S. and Japan.
The U.S. last year won access to four more Philippine sites under the 2014 Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement, which initially covered five military bases.
The new sites are near Taiwan and the South China Sea.
Marcos on Monday said that the Philippines has “no plan” to grant the
U.S. access to more bases but that his government is working to conclude talks for “reciprocal access agreement” with Japan that would facilitate mutual military visits.
The Philippine leader has also sought to parlay the nation’s deepening defense relations with the U.S. and its allies into broader economic benefits. An area being looked at is oil and gas exploration in the South China Sea, where the Philippines may invite U.S. companies to participate.
While the Southeast Asian nation and China agreed in January last year to resume talks on joint exploration, they are not on the same page on whose law would govern such projects. “It really comes down to that issue: which law will apply,” Marcos said.
“As far as the Philippines is concerned, if those prospective reserves are within the exclusive economic zone — conflict area or otherwise — then any exploration should be conducted by the Philippines,” Marcos said. The country may explore in non-conflict areas in the meantime.