Bangkok Post

Quartet hold drills in South China Sea

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>> WASHINGTON: The United States, Australia, Japan and the Philippine­s are holding joint naval and air drills in the disputed South China Sea today, their defence chiefs said in a statement, as they deepen ties to counter China’s growing assertiven­ess in the region.

The exercise will take place in the disputed waterway — 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.

“Our combined defence/armed forces will conduct a Maritime Cooperativ­e Activity within the Philippine Exclusive Economic Zone on April 7, 2024,” they said in a joint statement yesterday.

They said it would demonstrat­e the allies’ “collective commitment to strengthen regional and internatio­nal cooperatio­n in support of a free and open Indo-Pacific”.

The drills named the “Maritime Cooperativ­e Activity” will include naval and air force units from all four countries, the joint statement said.

The four defence chiefs said they would “strengthen the interopera­bility of our... doctrines, tactics, techniques, and procedures.”

There were no details on what the drills would precisely include.

The Japanese embassy in Manila said in a statement that “anti-submarine warfare training” would be included in the drills.

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

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

China has blamed the Philippine­s for raising tensions in the hotly contested waterway, where Beijing and Manila have a long history of maritime territoria­l disputes.

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

South China Sea.

“These activities with our allies Australia, Japan, and the Philippine­s underscore our shared commitment to ensuring that all countries are free to fly, sail, and operate wherever internatio­nal law allows,” US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin said in the joint statement.

“Our operations together support peace and stability at the heart of our shared vision for a free and open region.”

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

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 Department of Foreign Affairs told media.

In an interview he gave on Thursday, Mr Kishida said that Tokyo, Washington and Manila “will work together to proceed with trilateral cooperativ­e projects”.

 ?? ?? GROWING CONCERN: Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos waves to photograph­ers after inspecting a high mobility artillery rocket system as part of the US-Philippine­s Balikatan joint exercise, in this April 26, 2023 file photo.
GROWING CONCERN: Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos waves to photograph­ers after inspecting a high mobility artillery rocket system as part of the US-Philippine­s Balikatan joint exercise, in this April 26, 2023 file photo.

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