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		Japan joins U.S.-Philippine humanitarian 
		drills amid China sea dispute 
		
		 
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		[August 14, 2015] 
		SUBIC BAY, Philippines (Reuters) - 
		Japan has joined U.S.-led maritime humanitarian exercises off the 
		Philippines for the first time, as concerns mount among the three allies 
		about China's growing assertiveness in the disputed South China Sea. 
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			 A Japanese navy replenishment ship was in Subic Bay, a former U.S. 
			naval base, to refuel a U.S. Navy floating hospital en route to 
			Vietnam for the seven-nation humanitarian mission. 
			 
			It was the first time a Japanese navy ship has taken part in the 
			humanitarian assistance and disaster relief drills although a 
			flotilla of Japanese training vessels, including a submarine, makes 
			annual port calls in Manila. 
			 
			Rear Admiral Charles Williams, commander of U.S. Seventh Fleet's 
			Task Force 73, said humanitarian assistance and disaster relief 
			exercises were becoming a regular component of military exercises in 
			the Philippines. 
			 
			"You are seeing in exercises ... a shift from strictly bilateral 
			engagement to multilateral, which is why you see the Japanese here 
			today," Williams told journalists aboard USNS Mercy, one of two U.S. 
			hospital ships. 
			  
			  
			 
			China claims most of the South China Sea, through which $5 trillion 
			in ship-borne trade passes every year. The Philippines, Vietnam, 
			Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei also have overlapping claims. Japan and 
			China also have conflicting claims in the East China Sea. 
			 
			Williams said the presence of Admiral Katsutoshi Kawano, head of 
			Japan's Self-Defence Forces, "speaks volumes about their commitment 
			to the region and their commitment to being part of a multilateral 
			engagement". 
			 
			Kawano met early this week with his Philippine counterpart, General 
			Hernando Iriberri, and Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin in Manila, 
			where he expressed interest in holding joint amphibious landing 
			exercises and operations with Philippine marines. 
			 
			
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			In a meeting with Gazmin, Kawano also expressed interest in sharing 
			information in the South China Sea and capacity building, 
			particularly in humanitarian assistance and disaster relief. 
			 
			Williams said humanitarian assistance and disaster relief operations 
			were "a great avenue toward increasing maritime stability and 
			security in this region", part of Washington's rebalance to Asia 
			policy. 
			 
			China hit back on Monday at U.S. criticism that it restricts 
			navigation and overflights in the South China Sea. U.S. Secretary of 
			State John Kerry also said China's construction of facilities on 
			man-made islands for "military purposes" was raising tension and 
			risked "militarization" by other claimant states. 
			 
			(Reporting By Manuel Mogato: Editing By Nick Macfie) 
			
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