Philippines says US military to upgrade bases, defense deal intact

Philippines says US military to upgrade bases, defense deal intact
US Marines take part in an amphibious landing exercise as part of annual Philippine-US joint maneuvers on a beach at San Antonio in Zambales province, northern Philippines, on April 21, 2015. (AFP file photo)
Updated 26 January 2017
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Philippines says US military to upgrade bases, defense deal intact

Philippines says US military to upgrade bases, defense deal intact

MANILA: The United States will upgrade and build facilities on Philippine military bases this year, Manila’s defense minister said on Thursday, bolstering an alliance strained by President Rodrigo Duterte’s opposition to a US troop presence.
The Pentagon gave the green light to start the work as part of an Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA), a 2014 pact that Duterte has threatened to scrap during barrages of hostility toward the former colonial power.
“EDCA is still on,” Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana told a news conference.
EDCA allows the expansion of rotational deployment of US ships, aircraft and troops at five bases in the Philippines as well as the storage of equipment for humanitarian and maritime security operations.
Lorenzana said Washington had committed to build warehouses, barracks and runways in the five agreed locations and Duterte was aware of projects and had promised to honor all existing agreements with the US.
This week, Republican US Senator John McCain, who headed the US Senate’s Armed Services Committee, proposed $7.5 billion of new military funding for US forces and their allies in the Asia-Pacific.
The geopolitical landscape in Asia has been shaken up by Duterte’s grudge against Washington, his overtures toward erstwhile adversary China, and the election of US President Donald Trump, whose administration has indicated it may take a tough line on China’s activities in the South China Sea.
The Philippines has said it wants no part in anything confrontational in the strategic waterway and will not jeopardize promises of extensive Chinese trade and investment, and offers of military hardware, that Duterte has got since he launched his surprise foreign policy shift.
Lorenzana said the Philippines had asked China for two to three fast boats, two drones, sniper rifles and a robot for bomb disposal, in a $14 million arms donation from China.
The arms package would be used to support operations against Islamist Abu Sayyaf militants in the southern Philippines, he said.
“If these are quality equipment, we will probably buy more,” he said.
Lorenzana said Russia was offering hardware such as ships, submarines, planes and helicopters.
As with China, those offers have come as a result of a charm offensive by Duterte, who has praised Russia and its leadership. He last year said if Russia and China started a “new order” in the world, he would be the first to join.
Duterte was infuriated by US expressions of concern about extra-judicial killings in a campaign against drugs he launched after he took office in June.