Millennium Post (Kolkata)

US, Japanese, Philippine coast guard ships stage law enforcemen­t drills

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ABOARD BRP CABRA: US, Japanese, and Philippine coast guard ships staged law enforcemen­t drills in waters near the disputed South China Sea on Tuesday as Washington presses efforts to reinforce alliances in Asia amid an increasing­ly tense rivalry with China.

Witnessed by journalist­s onboard a Philippine coast guard patrol boat, the BRP Cabra, the drills focused on a scenario involving the interdicti­on and boarding of a vessel suspected of carrying weapons of mass destructio­n off the Bataan Peninsula, Philippine coast guard spokespers­on Commodore Armand Balilo said.

Shots rang out as heavily armed coast guard personnel rapidly boarded the vessel from a speedboat and herded the crew members toward the stern. A helicopter hovered as US and Japanese coast guard ships helped rescue crew members who jumped off the target vessel during the mock assault.

“We are not just all display,” Philippine coast guard deputy spokespers­on John Ybanez said. “All these exercises that we do will help us help each other in possible scenarios in the future.”

The US Coast Guard deployed one of its most advanced cutters, the 418foot (127-meter) Stratton, in the June 1-7 exercises hosted by the Philippine­s, Washington’s oldest treaty ally in Asia.

The Stratton has been conducting exercises in the region to share expertise in search and rescue and law enforcemen­t, the US Coast Guard said.

“This first trilateral engagement between the coast guards of these nations will provide invaluable opportunit­ies to strengthen global maritime governance though profession­al exchanges and combined operations,” the Stratton’s commanding officer, Capt. Brian Krautler, said at the start of the exercises.

“Together we’ll demonstrat­e profession­al, rules-based standards of maritime operations with our steadfast partners to ensure a free and open Indo-Pacific.”

Japan deployed a large coast guard ship, the Akitsushim­a, while four Philippine coast guard vessels joined the exercises.

The Biden administra­tion has been strengthen­ing an arc of military alliances in the Indo-Pacific to better counter China, including in the South China Sea and in any future confrontat­ion over Taiwan, the self-governing island which Beijing regards as a Chinese province.

Washington lays no claims to the strategic South China Sea, where China, the Philippine­s, Vietnam, Malaysian, Taiwan and Brunei have been locked in tense territoria­l stand-offs for decades.

But the US says freedom of navigation and overflight and the peaceful resolution of disputes in the busy waterway are in its national interest.

Philippine officials say such joint exercises with US forces do not target any country. But China has warned that increased US security deployment­s in Asia target Beijing’s interests and undermine regional stability.

The US Pacific Command said over the weekend that a US guided-missile destroyer and a Canadian frigate were intercepte­d by a Chinese warship in the Taiwan Strait. The Chinese vessel overtook the American ship and veered across its bow at a distance of 150 yards (about 140 metres) in an “unsafe manner”, it said.

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