US-Philippines engagements help with 'agile' responses to China, says
Marcos
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[July 30, 2024]
By Simon Lewis and Karen Lema
MANILA (Reuters) -Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos Jr told U.S.
cabinet secretaries Antony Blinken and Lloyd Austin on Tuesday that
regular engagements between Manila and Washington were needed to ensure
"agile" responses to his country's maritime tensions with China.
Ties between Washington and its treaty ally Manila have dramatically
improved since Marcos replaced Rodrigo Duterte, who was openly hostile
to the U.S. and attempted to bring his country closer to China during
his six-year term.
Marcos greeted Secretary of State Blinken and Defense Secretary Austin
at the Malacanang Palace on Tuesday morning ahead of meetings with their
Filipino counterparts, the first such meetings hosted by the
Philippines.
"I'm always very happy that these communication lines are very open so
that all the things that we are doing together, in terms of our
alliance, in terms of the specific context of our situation here, in the
West Philippine Sea and in the Indo-Pacific, are continuously examined
and re-examined so we are agile in terms of our responses," Marcos said.
The Philippines has competing claims with China in the waters to its
west also known as the South China Sea. China claims 90% of the sea as
its sovereign territory.
Tensions in the disputed waterway have boiled over into violence in the
past year, with a Filipino sailor losing a finger in a June 17 clash
that Manila described as “intentional-high speed ramming” by the Chinese
coast guard.
Manila turned down U.S. offers of assistance for its operations at sea.
It reached a "provisional arrangement" with China this month to ease
tensions and manage differences, but the two sides appear at odds over
the details of the deal, which has not been made public.
State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said Blinken and Austin
discussed with Marcos "their shared commitment to upholding
international law in the South China Sea."
"The two secretaries underscored the United States’ ironclad commitments
to the Philippines under our Mutual Defense Treaty," Miller said in a
statement following the meeting.
COUNTERING CHINA
The meetings in Manila follow talks between Blinken and Austin and their
counterparts in Japan, another key U.S. ally in East Asia, where they
announced an upgrade of the U.S. military command in Japan and labeled
China the "greatest strategic challenge" facing the region.
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U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Philippine Army Chief of
Staff Romeo Brawner Jr. inspect honor guards during their arrival at
Camp Aguinaldo, in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines, July 30,
2024. REUTERS/Lisa Marie David
Blinken also met on Monday with foreign ministers from Australia,
India and Japan, a grouping known as the Quad, and decried China's
actions in the South China Sea.
The U.S. top diplomat met Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Laos
on Saturday and criticized Beijing for actions regarding Taiwan and
the Philippines.
China's foreign ministry hit back at Washington and Tokyo, for
attacking what it called China's "normal military development and
national defense policy" and accused the Quad of "artificially
creating tension, inciting confrontation and containing the
development of other countries".
The Pentagon has said U.S. officials will announce $500 million in
foreign military financing for the Philippines during the visit,
part of $2 billion in aid for Indo-Pacific countries the U.S.
Congress sees as "confronting Chinese aggression".
The Pentagon has also proposed spending $128 million on
infrastructure improvements at Philippine bases accessible to U.S.
forces under the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA).
There are now nine sites under EDCA, after Manila agreed last year
to add four new sites, including three in the north that are seen as
important in the event of China invading Taiwan, and one facing the
South China Sea.
The two countries have also been negotiating an intelligence sharing
deal known as a General Security of Military Information Agreement,
which they had aimed to reach by the end of 2023 but have not yet
concluded.
(Reporting by Simon Lewis and Karen Lema; Editing by Raju
Gopalakrishnan)
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