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Sunday, November 24, 2024

PH-US starts war games in WPS; 8,000 taking part

US and Philippine troops stormed ashore from the disputed South China Sea on Wednesday for military exercises that President Rodrigo Duterte had promised to scrap, but quietly allowed to carry on.

The decades-old tradition appeared headed for the history books last year as a newly elected Duterte pivoted toward China—and away from long-time Philippine ally the US.

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But the number of troops taking part in the drills has increased by a third from last year to 8,000, a return to the figures seen in years past when the exercises served as a thinly veiled deterrent to a rising China.

Meanwhile, a maritime law expert said Wednesday Duterte’s planned visit to the Philippine Rise or Benham Rise next week would be “unfortunate.”

Jay Batongbacal, director of the UP Institute for Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea, said the continental shelf was not a hotly contested area and the government should instead work on asserting its rights on the West Philippine Sea.

“The fact that it’s happening now while these issues are flaring up again in the West Philippine Sea sort of gives our people a bad impression,” he told ANC’s Beyond Politics.

The reason for Duterte’s change of heart on the two-week drills codenamed “Balikatan”, or “Shoulder-to-Shoulder”, may be down to what experts see as careful efforts by the Philippine military to restrain their unpredictable president. AFP 

“The fact it’s being done under this administration means they [the Duterte administration] now have a better understanding of the security equation,” political analyst Victor Andres Manhit told AFP.

Though the bulked-up Maneuvers—including a live-fire component that was dropped last year—took place on a naval base just 180 kilometers east of the Filipino-claimed Scarborough Shoal that China has controlled since 2012, the drill’s leaders barely mentioned Beijing.

“We are an island nation. That’s why we need to improve our capabilities on amphibious operations,” Major-General Emmanuel Salamat told reporters.

“We’re not concerned about Scarborough. We’re concerned about what we’re doing here.”

China claims most of the South China Sea, a strategic waterway believed to harbor significant oil and natural gas deposits, but this was ruled illegal in 2016 after Duterte’s predecessor Benigno Aquino filed suit before an international maritime tribunal.

Duterte has since reversed course and set the ruling aside, along with the long-simmering friction over competing claims to the waters, in order to court Chinese trade and investment.

He has also cut two major annual naval exercises with the US and last year reduced the Balikatan contingent to 5,400 US and Filipino troops.

The decision came at a low point for US-Philippine relations, when Duterte called the American ambassador to Manila “gay” and served notice that the 2017 edition would “be the last military exercise” with the United States.

US Marine Lieutenant-Colonel Daniel Gaskell, who took part in the landing exercise Wednesday, sidestepped the media questions on Duterte’s anti-US claims.

“We are welcome here, walking in the airport, throughout your country, [but also] by the Filipino armed forces who we’ve interacted with,” he said.

“So we’re really happy to be here,” Gaskell added.

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