South China Morning Post

MILITARY EXERCISES WITH U.S. IN DISPUTED SEA RISK BEIJING’S IRE

Manila and Washington to hold joint military drills this month in areas outside Philippine territory

- Jeoffrey Maitem

Treaty allies the Philippine­s and United States will flex their muscles this month at this year’s Balikatan joint military exercises that will take place in waters outside Philippine territory along the outer edge of South China Sea’s waters, which analysts predict will almost certainly provoke Beijing.

The April 22 to May 8 drills will involve some 16,000 soldiers and showcase Manila’s new Comprehens­ive Archipelag­ic Defense Concept (CADC), a strategy that aims to defend the country’s exclusive economic zone.

Army Colonel Michael Logico, the Filipino spokesman for the drills, said this year’s Balikatan (“shoulder to shoulder”) exercise would be focusing on territoria­l defence 12 nautical miles beyond the country’s shoreline.

“That means our exercises, our defence concepts, have to go beyond 12 nautical miles in order for us to protect our national interests within our territoria­l waters and also within the exclusive economic zone [EEZ],” Logico said.

“In the previous exercises, we have been focusing mostly inside military camps. However, we are already very familiar with those areas, it offers no more surprises. So the only way for us to upscale or upgrade our training is to start training in areas that we believe will provide the best benefit for our soldiers,” he added.

Asked by reporters if the drills could cause further tensions with other countries, particular­ly China, Logico said, “Well, that’s their problem, that’s not our problem.”

Previously, Defence Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jnr said the CADC aimed to develop the country’s capability to protect its entire territory, including its EEZ, to ensure that the next generation of Filipinos would be able to enjoy its natural resources.

The 39th edition of the annual exercise, being carried out under the Mutual Defence Treaty (MDT), is designed to enhance force capability and strengthen cooperatio­n in maritime security, amphibious operations, live-fire training, urban and aviation operations, counterter­rorism, humanitari­an assistance and disaster relief.

Signed in 1951, the MDT calls on both countries to aid each other in times of aggression by an external power. In previous pronouncem­ents, the Pentagon said it was prepared to assist Manila if it invoked the treaty amid threats from other nations.

This year’s main event will be a sinking exercise in which participan­ts will have to coordinate their movements to test the interopera­bility of their weapons systems in downing a mock enemy ship. Philippine and US forces will attempt to sink a vessel, formerly designated as the Navy’s BRP Caliraya (AF-81), off the coast of Laoag in Ilocos Norte.

“The message we want to send is that we are serious about defending our territory and we have allies. The alliance is still going strong,” Logico said.

Fourteen other countries, including Japan, South Korea, India, Canada and Britain, will be sending forces to the exercises as observers.

Aside from the Balikatan, Japan, the US, Australia and the Philippine­s will conduct antisubmar­ine drills, warfare training, and communicat­ion exercises this weekend in waters near Palawan province in western Philippine­s facing the South China Sea.

Manila and the US Air Force are also slated to hold exercise Cope Thunder from Monday until April 19, which will showcase fighter jet pilots from both sides training together using a newly renovated runway at Basa Air Base in Pampanga.

Defence analyst Jose Antonio Custodio said China would always be angry, citing its attempts to enforce its territoria­l claims within Manila’s EEZ, in violation of the 2016 Hague ruling dismissing Beijing’s assertions.

“They will utilise the vessels of their naval and maritime agencies to shadow and harass us and our partners as we undertake freedom of navigation operations and exercises,” Custodio said.

“China will also protest, but that is the most that they can do and they really won’t be able to do anything else against the combined military might of many countries like the USA and its powerful regional allies like Japan and Australia,” he added.

However, Ramon Beleno III, head of the political science and history department at Ateneo De Davao University in southern Davao City, said Beijing would not just sit down and do nothing.

“Let’s keep an eye regarding China’s next move. They might build additional islands there or strengthen their forces as retaliator­y actions,” Beleno said, noting the Philippine­s and China are both preparing to defend their territoria­l claims within the West Philippine Sea (WPS), Manila’s name for the waters of the South China Sea that lie within its EEZ.

“We are not expecting it to go beyond that, like what happened in Ukraine and Russia. We are praying that cooler heads will still prevail,” he added.

The series of exercises come on the heels of China’s growing assertiven­ess in the waterway.

On March 23, three Philippine navy sailors were injured when Chinese coastguard personnel fired water cannons at their vessels. Manila also accused the Chinese ships of conducting “dangerous” manoeuvres and blocking a civilian chartered resupply ship, the Unaizah May 4, at the Second Thomas Shoal in the South China Sea.

China, which has competing claims in the South China Sea with the Philippine­s, Malaysia, Brunei and Vietnam, has not yet made any comments on the drills.

But rights group Bayan Muna said President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr’s growing dependence on the US for the country’s external defence was further escalating conflict in the South China Sea.

“For the first time in the history of the joint exercises, maritime activities will be conducted outside the country’s territoria­l waters. It will escalate the already high tensions in the WPS,” said Teddy Casino, chairman of Bayan Muna.

Let’s keep an eye regarding China’s next move. They might build additional islands

RAMON BELENO III, ACADEMIC

 ?? ?? Filipino soldiers fire an anti-tank weapon during last year’s drills.
Filipino soldiers fire an anti-tank weapon during last year’s drills.

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