The Philippine Star

EDCA to help modernize Phl military – Noy

- By AUREA CALICA

There’s no question about the importance of the country’s Enhanced Defense Cooperatio­n Agreement (EDCA) with the United States especially now that the military is undergoing modernizat­ion, President Aquino said on Tuesday.

“Definitely, yes,” Aquino said when asked if the EDCA is still needed despite the legal challenges it has to hurdle.

EDCA’s constituti­onality has been questioned before the Supreme Court, which has yet to resolve the case a year after the agreement was signed in the presence of Aquino and US President Barack Obama.

Some senators also say the EDCA should be ratified, it being a treaty and not an executive agreement.

The President said the accord would be helpful not just for military operations but also for humanitari­an assistance and disaster response.

Aquino said EDCA would afford the Philippine­s the opportunit­y to test new equipment, technology and systems, “akin to test-driving a car, I think, as opposed to buying a system and trying it out and finding out that it doesn’t work under our conditions.”

“EDCA’s one side benefit would be to introduce us to all of these most modern equipment and get us familiar and have a generation­al leap in our abilities, and by the time that we are able to purchase those that we deem are necessary for our own defense, we are more than ready to be able to fully utilize

the same,” Aquino said at the annual presidenti­al forum of the Foreign Correspond­ents Associatio­n of the Philippine­s.

He cited as example the need for members of the Philippine Air Force to learn how to fly new jets or planes as the most modern fighter aircraft the country has ever had in its inventory was the Vietnam War-era F-5.

“But the bottom line is, the last time they flew was 2005, okay. You lose the ability of the pilots to fly jets. You lose the ability of the maintenanc­e to continue working on jets. You lose the ability of the command and control,” the President said.

“You have advances in communicat­ions nowadays. You have so many other devices like the GPS ( Global Positionin­g System), et cetera, that our forces might not be as cognizant with. Even just responding to a disaster at sea, for instance, they are given coordinate­s… One would hope that we are not relegated to a sextant and a compass,” he added.

Aquino earlier said the EDCA was not directed at any entity but was merely a refinement of a longstandi­ng defense treaty between the Philippine­s and the US. His explanatio­n came amid concerns that the agreement was being pushed to strengthen the country’s defense against China’s assertiven­ess in the West Philippine Sea.

The Constituti­on prohibits foreign bases in the country but allows rotational presence of US forces in the country to foster interopera­bility and transfer of knowledge and technology, among others.

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