The Philippine Star

US defense chief: Alliance with Phl ironclad

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HANOI – US Defense Secretary Ash Carter has described the US-Philippine­s alliance as ironclad, one day after the Philippine president said joint military exercises with the US would end.

“As it has been for decades, our alliance with the Philippine­s is ironclad,” Carter said Thursday in a speech in San Diego, en route to a meeting in Hawaii with defense ministers from Southeast Asia, including the Philippine­s.

President Duterte said Wednesday that joint exercises of Filipino and American troops next week would be the last, although his foreign secretary quickly said the decision was not final.

Duterte made the comments while addressing Filipino community members in Hanoi during a two-day visit to Vietnam. He noted that the Philippine­s will maintain its military alliance with the US because they share a 65- year- old mutual defense treaty.

US Navy Cmdr. Gary Ross, a Pentagon spokesman, acknowledg­ed reports of Duterte’s statements, but did not comment directly on them.

“Our relationsh­ip with the Philippine­s is broad and our alliance is one of our most enduring and important relationsh­ips in the Asia-Pacific region,” he said in an emailed statement, adding that the US would continue to work with the Philippine­s on counterter­rorism and other areas of mutual interest.

Duterte said he wants to establish new trade and commercial alliances with China and Russia, and that Beijing doesn’t want the war games.

“I would serve notice to you now that this will be the last military exercise,” he said. “Jointly, Philippine­s-US, the last one.”

State Department spokesman John Kirby said Wednesday they have not received any official communicat­ion from the Philippine government on the matter.

About 1,400 US troops based in Okinawa, Japan and 500 Filipino counterpar­ts plan to participat­e in the Philippine­s Amphibious Landing Exercise from Oct. 4 to Oct. 12 in multiple locations, including Palawan, the westernmos­t province nearest to disputed islands in the South China Sea, officials said.

The two militaries have routinely held bilateral exercises aimed at improving cooperatio­n between the forces. Cancellati­on would end the annual 10-day Balikatan, or shoulder to shoulder, exercise which this year drew more than 8,000 troops, among others.

Philippine Secretary of Foreign Affairs Perfecto Yasay Jr., however, contradict­ed Duterte, saying joint military drills approved by the previous administra­tion will continue until 2017, when they would evaluate whether there’s a need for them to go on.

“He was just simply saying for now, taking into account the political reality, he does not want the joint military exercises to continue,” Yasay said.

Duterte has had an uneasy relationsh­ip with the US, his country’s long-standing ally and former colonial power, since he won a presidenti­al election in May.

More than 3,000 suspected drug pushers and users have been killed since July 1 under Duterte’s war on drugs. Human rights advocates and Philippine allies including the United States have deplored the killings.

Earlier this month, Duterte cursed US President Barack Obama and said he would not allow joint patrols of disputed waters near the South China Sea with foreign powers, apparently scrapping a deal his predecesso­r reached with the US military.

Duterte has also said he is considerin­g acquiring military equipment from Russia and China.

Yasay said the Philippine­s is pursuing an independen­t foreign policy that serves its national interests. This would involve strengthen­ing relations with China while not alienating traditiona­l friendship­s with the US and other allies, he said.

On Wednesday, Duterte also said he’s not inclined to go to war, or see Filipino soldiers massacred, in trying to enforce an internatio­nal tribunal’s ruling in July that supported his country’s claims that China is overreachi­ng in its territoria­l claims in the South China Sea.

There will be “a time of reckoning,” Duterte said, and when that time comes he said he would tell China: “This is ours. I will talk to you but I will not go out of the four corners of this (arbitratio­n) paper.”

Former foreign secretary Albert del Rosario, who spearheade­d the case, questioned Duterte’s foreign policy, saying it should not be a “zero-sum game.”

He also warned the Philippine­s stands to lose billions of dollars in developmen­t assistance, including $140 million in foreign military financing from the US for 2016, if the country is seen as violating human rights – a US Congress conditiona­lity in approving such funds. –

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