CHINA HAS warned countries in Asia to be vigilant about the US "using" them, after American forces secured access to a further four military bases in the Philippines.
The United States already had access to five
military bases in the Philippines, and would be given access to four more
locations under the 2014 Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA),
US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Philippines Defence Secretary Carlito
Galvez said during a recent joint news conference at the Philippines'
military headquarters in Manila.
Mr Austin has led efforts to reinforce regional
security partnerships and update the arming and positioning of American and
allied forces in Asia in the face of China's increasing military strength and
its assertiveness regarding its claims to Taiwan and increasing parts
of the South China Sea.
Speaking from the Philippines, Mr Austin referred to
the decision as a "big deal" as he and his counterpart reaffirmed
their commitment to bolstering their alliance.
"Our alliance makes both of our democracies more
secure and helps uphold a free-and-open Indo-Pacific," said Mr Austin,
whose visit follows one by US Vice-President
Kamala Harris in November, which included a stop at Palawan Island in
the South China Sea.
Mr Austin said discussions included actions to
address "destabilising activities in the waters surrounding the
Philippines", and strengthening "mutual capacities to
resist armed attack".
"That's just part of our efforts to modernise our
alliance. And these efforts are especially important as the People's Republic
of China continues to advance its illegitimate claims in the West Philippine
Sea," he added.
China said greater US access to Philippines'
military bases undermined regional peace and stability.
The announcement from the Philippines follows Mr
Austin's announcement with South Korean leaders that the US would be
sending more fighter jets and bombers, and his January 11 declaration with
Japanese counterparts that the US would be shifting its deployment there
to make for a more nimble fighting force.
There have been other announcements from the Biden
administration on arms, exercises and pacts, including a 2021 decision to
provide nuclear-powered submarines to Australia.
China's threat to the international order was
"unprecedented", US and Japanese diplomats and defence
chiefs said after that deal.
"This behaviour is of serious concern to the
alliance and the entire international community, and represents the greatest
strategic challenge in the Indo-Pacific region and beyond."
Mr Austin thanked President Ferdinand Marcos Jr, whom
he briefly met in Manila, for allowing the US military to broaden its
presence in the Philippines, Washington's oldest treaty ally in Asia.
The Philippine Constitution prohibits the permanent
basing of foreign troops as well as their involvement in local combat.
However, the EDCA allows US access to Philippines'
military bases for joint training, pre-positioning of equipment and the
building of facilities such as runways, fuel storage and military housing, but
not for a permanent presence.
The United States has announced it is allocating
more than $US82 million ($115.85 million) for infrastructure at the bases.
The country used to host two of the largest
US Navy and Air Force bases outside the American mainland. Those bases
were shut down in the early 1990s, after the Philippines Senate rejected an
extension, but American forces later returned for large-scale combat exercises
with Filipino troops.
Ties between the United States and its former colony
were soured under the previous president, Rodrigo Duterte, who made overtures
towards China and was known for anti-US rhetoric and threats to downgrade
military ties.
Mr Marcos Jnr has met President Joe
Biden twice since the son of former dictator — who was also
called Ferdinand Marcos — won a landslide victory in an election last year
and reiterated he could not see a future for his country without its longtime
treaty ally.
"I have always said, it seems to me, the future of
the Philippines — and, for that matter, the Asia-Pacific — will always
have to involve the United States," Mr Marcos told Mr Austin. (ABC/wires)
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