Philippines turned down US help amid South China Sea tensions - military
chief
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[July 05, 2024]
By Karen Lema
MANILA (Reuters) - The Philippines has turned down offers from the
United States to assist operations in the South China Sea, after a
flare-up with China over missions to resupply Filipino troops on a
contested shoal, its military chief said.
Tensions in the disputed waterway have boiled over into violence in the
past year, with a Filipino sailor losing a finger in the latest June 17
clash that Manila described as “intentional-high speed ramming” by the
Chinese coast guard.
The US, a treaty ally, has offered support but Manila prefers to handle
operations on its own, Armed Forces Chief General Romeo Brawner told
Reuters late Thursday.
“Yes, of course, they have been offering help and they asked us how they
could help us in any way,” he said.
“We try to exhaust all possible options that we have before we ask for
help.”
Manila and Washington are bound by the 1951-Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT),
a military pact that can be invoked in the case of armed attacks on
Philippine forces, public vessels, or aircraft in the South China Sea.
Confrontations between the Philippines and China in Asia's most
contested waters have increased in frequency over the past year as
Beijing has pressed its claim to the waterway and Manila continued
missions to bring supplies to soldiers living aboard a rusty, aging
warship that it grounded on a contested shoal.
Some observers, including former deputy US National Security Adviser
Matt Pottinger, have called for direct US naval support for the resupply
missions.
But Philippine National Security Adviser Eduardo Ano said the
Philippines wanted them to be a “pure Philippine operation”.
“This is our legitimate national interest, so we don’t see any reason
for them (the US) to come in,” Ano told Reuters.
Ano, who spoke to his U.S counterpart Jake Sullivan last month to
discuss shared concerns over China’s "dangerous and escalatory actions",
said the MDT was “far from being invoked”.
"We (the Philippines and China) agreed that there will be some easing
tension, but we will assert our rights, we will not compromise our
national interest, and we will continue to fight and claim what is
ours,' Ano said.
Neither official specified what support the US had offered.
Greg Poling, a South China Sea expert at Washington's Center for
Strategic and International Studies think-tank, told Reuters he believed
the US was open to naval escorts for the resupply missions to the
stranded vessel. Washington has already provided some limited support,
he said.
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Chinese Coast Guard vessels fire water cannons towards a Philippine
resupply vessel Unaizah May 4 on its way to a resupply mission at
Second Thomas Shoal in the South China Sea, March 5, 2024.
REUTERS/Adrian Portugal/File Photo
A Philippine official said last year Manila was consulting the US
Army Corps of Engineers on how best to stabilise the BRP Sierra
Madre, which was grounded on the contested Second Thomas Shoal,
Poling said, while US aircraft have been filmed providing overwatch
of the ship on multiple occasions.
The Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Hague ruled in 2016 that
Beijing's expansive South China Sea claims via its nine-dash line
had no basis under international law, but that has not stopped
China, which rejects the ruling, from being more assertive in the
waterway.
It has deployed coast guard vessels to patrol those areas, alarming
the Philippines, rival Southeast Asian claimants and other states
operating in the South China Sea, including the US, which is wary
about China's growing military power and territorial ambition.
Military chief Brawner said the United States' offer of support,
made in discussions at his level, was not a direct response to the
June 17 incident but rather a reflection of the enduring military
alliance between the two countries.
"It is really because of our being treaty allies, so that offer has
been available to us for a long time not just because of the
incident," Brawner said.
"But we did not ask them yet because as per the orders of our
president we have to rely on ourself first."
The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Thursday was a federal holiday in Washington for the United States'
Independence Day.
While China claims nearly all the South China Sea, a major shipping
lane with about $3 trillion in trade passing through it annually,
Vietnam, Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei also claim parts.
(Reporting by Karen Lema. Additional reporting and editing by Poppy
McPherson and Michael Perry)
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