The Borneo Post

Philippine­s to hold joint naval drills with US, Japan and Australia

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MANILA: The Philippine­s will hold joint naval drills with the United States, Japan and Australia, two diplomatic sources told AFP Thursday, as the four countries deepen military ties to counter China’s expanding influence in the Asia-Pacific region.

The exercise will be held Sunday in the disputed South China Sea — which Beijing claims almost entirely — days before US President Joe Biden is due to hold the first trilateral summit with the leaders of the Philippine­s and Japan.

The diplomatic sources spoke on condition of anonymity because the drills have not yet been officially announced.

Earlier this week, the Australian warship HMAS Warramunga arrived at the Philippine island province of Palawan, which faces the hotly contested waters.

The Philippine military said the visit was “aimed at strengthen­ing military relations with partner nations”.

Regional tensions have escalated in the past year as China has become increasing­ly confident in asserting its claims over waters also claimed by the Philippine­s and Japan, as well as over self-ruled Taiwan.

In response, the United States has sought to strengthen its alliances in the region, including with treaty allies Japan and the Philippine­s.

Biden’s planned April 11 summit with Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at the White House will be the latest in a series of meetings with Asia-Pacific partners.

Biden will also hold separate bilateral meetings with Marcos and Kishida.

Joint patrols between the US, Japanese and Philippine coast guards are expected to be announced during the summit, one of the diplomatic sources told AFP, after joint drills were held for the first time last year.

The exercise and summit follow repeated confrontat­ions between Chinese and Philippine vessels near disputed reefs off the Southeast Asian country in recent months.

Top US officials have repeatedly declared the United States’ “ironclad” commitment to defending the Philippine­s against an armed attack in the South China Sea.

Relations between Manila and Beijing have deteriorat­ed under Marcos, who has taken a stronger stance than his predecesso­r Rodrigo Duterte against Chinese actions in the sea.

China claims most of the waterway, through which trillions of dollars of trade passes annually, despite rival claims from other nations and an internatio­nal ruling that its claim has no legal basis.

Marcos issued a strongly worded statement on March 28, vowing the Philippine­s would not be “cowed into silence, submission, or subservien­ce” by China.

He also said the Philippine­s would respond to recent incidents with countermea­sures that would be “proportion­ate, deliberate, and reasonable”.

Meanwhile, talks between the Philippine­s and Japan for a defence pact that would allow the countries to deploy troops on each other’s territory were “still ongoing”, a spokesman for the Philippine foreign affairs department told reporters Thursday.

Manila already has a similar agreement with Australia and the United States.

 ?? AFP photo ?? File photo of Philippine and Australian soldiers marching in formation while a US marines V-22 Osprey hovers above during military exercise Alon (wave), a joint amphibious landing drill held at a naval base in San Antonio town in Zambales province, north of Manila. —
AFP photo File photo of Philippine and Australian soldiers marching in formation while a US marines V-22 Osprey hovers above during military exercise Alon (wave), a joint amphibious landing drill held at a naval base in San Antonio town in Zambales province, north of Manila. —

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