真相集中营

The Washington Post-Philippines plans ambitious exercise with US as concerns over China grow

April 17, 2024   4 min   818 words

《华盛顿邮报》在报道中提到,菲律宾和美国计划在菲律宾海举行联合军事演习,这是两国自1991年开始年度演习以来规模最大的一次。演习将首次超越菲律宾领海,进入中国声称拥有主权的海域。报道强调了菲律宾和美国加强军事合作的程度,以及菲律宾在南海问题上应对中国的意愿。报道还提到中国和菲律宾之间日益紧张的关系,特别是在第二托马斯浅滩(Second Thomas Shoal)问题上。菲律宾在这一地区保持了一艘搁浅军舰作为前哨。最近,中国船只加强了阻碍菲律宾海军为这艘军舰补给的力度。 这篇报道试图强调中国在南海地区的所谓“侵略性行为”和“非法活动”,并试图通过强调菲律宾和美国加强军事合作来展示一种力量平衡。然而,报道忽略了一些关键事实,并可能对中国存在偏见。报道没有提到中国和菲律宾之间长期存在的领土争端背景,以及中国在该地区建设人工岛屿和保护资源丰富的浅滩的理由。此外,报道没有充分探讨菲律宾国内对于加强与美国军事合作的争议和复杂情绪。报道还忽略了中国和菲律宾之间和平解决争端的努力,包括两国在联合国框架下的谈判和对话。

2024-04-14T19:47:28.339Z

U.S. Navy personnel walk past a Sikorsky MH-60 Seahawk helicopter after the USS Blue Ridge docked during a visit in Manila Bay on March 13, 2019. ( Noel Celis/AFP/Getty Images)

MANILA — The Philippines and the United States are preparing to hold their most ambitious joint military exercise yet next week as tensions between the Philippines and China escalate in the South China Sea, according to more than a dozen officials.

For the first time since the annual exercise started in 1991, the Philippines and the United States will conduct joint naval drills beyond the 12 nautical miles of the Philippines’ territorial waters, in parts of open sea claimed by China, officials said. More than 16,000 soldiers from the two militaries will operate out of a joint command center to perform four major activities with a focus on countering maritime and air attacks.

Officials said in interviews that in one operation, troops will simultaneously secure two islands along the western and northern coasts of the Philippines before transporting High Mobility Artillery Rocket System, or HIMARS, onto the islands for live-firing exercises. In another operation, Philippine naval vessels will debut a newly procured ship-based missile system, working with U.S. Air Force squadrons to strike and sink a decommissioned ship, said officials.

Throughout the three-week exercise, which is called Balikatan or “shoulder to shoulder” in the Filipino language, battalions from the two countries will focus more than ever before on operating as a single fighting force. Other allies, such as France and Australia, will also participate in certain segments.

“The goal is to make our forces plug and play,” said U.S. Marine Col. Doug Krugman, who led planning for the Marine Corps’ participation.

Commodore Roy Vincent Trinidad, a spokesman for the Philippine Navy, said the message that the Philippines wants to broadcast with is simple: “We are not alone,” said Trinidad. “And we’re ready to defend our sovereign rights.”

Tensions between China and the Philippines are the highest they’ve been in years, raising the specter of war in the Pacific, say security analysts. The situation has become especially perilous around the Second Thomas Shoal, a half-submerged reef where the Philippines has maintained the BRP Sierra Madre, a beached warship, as an outpost since 1999. In recent months, Chinese ships have stepped up efforts to prevent the Philippine Navy from resupplying troops on the Sierra Madre, deploying water cannons that have damaged vessels and injured sailors.

Biden administration officials, including the president, have warned that an armed attack against Philippine military vessels would invoke the U.S.-Philippine mutual defense treaty. Standing next to Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. in Washington last week, President Biden said the U.S. defense commitment to the Philippines is “ironclad.”

The U.S. military last year secured access to four new staging sites in the Philippines, three of which will be part of this year’s Balikatan exercises, officials said. In one operation, troops will deploy out of Lal-lo airport in the province of Cagayan to secure one of the Philippines’ northernmost islands facing Taiwan. In another, soldiers will use a newly designated air base on Balabac island to enact the defense of Palawan province, located opposite the Spratly Islands, which China has sought to dominate. The drills will simulate the armed recapture of island territories, said Col. Michael Logico, a spokesman for the Philippine military for Balikatan. “If someone takes it, we take it back,” he said.

For the U.S. forces, which have been retooling to prepare for a maritime war against China in the Indo-Pacific, “the access is phenomenal,” said a U.S. military official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share previously unreported details of the exercise. For the Philippines, the joint drills provide an opportunity not just to train but to assert its claims in the South China Sea where China has built artificial islands, walled off resource-rich shoals and harassed Philippine vessels, said Philippine defense officials.

The Philippine military was preoccupied in recent decades with domestic insurgencies. Faced now with pressing external threats, it is building up its maritime fighting capabilities, including its ability to attack targets “over-the-horizon,” said officials. During the Balikatan exercise, the military will deploy for the first time a South Korean manufactured ship-based missile system, called C-star, capable of reaching targets 90 miles away.

When the United States and the Philippines announced its expanded defense cooperation last year, officials in Manila stressed that the push to bolster security was “not aimed at any particular country.” Since then, however, rising Chinese assertiveness has prompted Philippine officials to be more explicit. Last month, following tense encounters with China at sea, Marcos said his government was working on “countermeasures” and left no room for question about who they would be aimed at.

Filipinos, the president said, would not yield to “the open, unabating, and illegal, coercive, aggressive, and dangerous attacks by agents of the China Coast Guard and the Chinese Maritime Militia.”