U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the United States will come to the defense of the Philippines amid rising tensions with China over disputed territories in the South China Sea.
Blinken issued the pledge shortly after arriving in Manila for talks with Philippine Foreign Minister Enrique Manalo. He said the U.S. will stand by the Philippines and “our ironclad defense commitments, including under the mutual defense treaty,” referring to the 1951 treaty that binds each nation to come to the other’s defense in the event of war.
China has claimed sovereignty over nearly the entire South China Sea, ignoring competing claims by its regional neighbors, including the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam.
"These waterways are critical to the
Philippines, to its security, to its economy, but they're also critical to the
interests of the region, the United States and the world," Blinken said.
In response to Blinken’s remarks, Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian told reporters in Beijing the U.S. had no right
to interfere in maritime disputes between China and the Philippines.
Coast guard vessels from China and the Philippines
have clashed in recent weeks near disputed reefs in the South China Sea. Manila
says one of its ships was damaged and four crewmen injured during a mission to
deliver supplies and a fresh rotation of troops to a Philippine warship
intentionally grounded on the Second Thomas Shoal to maintain the archipelago’s
claims on the submerged reef.
In a second incident, a Philippines fisheries vessel
was challenged by Chinese coast guard ships while it was delivering fuel to
Philippine fishermen working near the Scarborough Shoal, a fisheries-rich atoll
that was seized by China in 2012, despite it being inside the Philippines'
200-nautical mile exclusive economic zone.
Shortly before Blinken’s arrival in Manila, the White
House announced that President Joe Biden will host a three-way summit with
Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos, Junior, and Japanese Prime Minister
Fumio Kishida at the White House next month.
White House Press Secretary Karine
Jean-Pierre said the three leaders will seek “a shared vision for a free and
open Indo-Pacific.”
“Our relationship, between the Philippines and the
United States is in high – it’s something, that’s with great importance too and
now we have your upcoming visit to Washington, to see President Biden also to
have a trilateral meeting with President, Prime Minister Kishida,” Blinken
said.
The ties between the Philippines and the United
States is a priority of Biden, according to Blinken.
“So important to us is even us we’re dealing with
those challenges, our focus, our engagement, our commitment to the Indo-Pacific
are at large, and to the relationship, the alliance between the United States
and the Philippines, in particular, is more than rock solid,” Blinken said.
Marcos said Blinken’s visit is much welcome amid “how
things are progressing in the rest of the world.”
Blinken noted that Biden sent him to Manila to
reaffirm the alliances between the Philippines and the US as he emphasized that
the relationship of the two countries is something that is with great
importance to the US.
He added that the “new horizon of cooperation”
between the Philippines, Japan and the US “is also incredibly promising” as it
is “building on the reach foundation” between the three countries. He
emphasized that the new cooperation will deal with the countries’ economic
development, climate change, food security and the “upholding international
law.”
China is a threat
Washington
said China is building up its military in ways that threaten U.S. and allied
interests in the Western Pacific and in the South China Sea in particular, the
deputy undersecretary of defense for acquisition and sustainment said.
For
example, its DF21 and DF26 missiles are capable of targeting ships in the area
and land targets, including Guam, a major resupply location for U.S. forces,
Alan R. Shaffer said.
Shaffer
spoke at the McAleese and Associates-sponsored Defense Programs Conference
here, along with Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John M. Richardson, Commandant
of the Marine Corps Gen. Robert B. Neller and Undersecretary of the Army Ryan
D. McCarthy.
China
is also building advanced, fifth-generation fighter aircraft and have expanded
their navy to around 300 ships, including an aircraft carrier, Shaffer said.
Battle
for Digital Supremacy
Much
of China’s military and industrial technology was developed through
intellectual property theft, he said, noting that there’s a strong resemblance
of their J-20 fighter’s canopy and landing gear to the F-35 Lightning II.
The
U.S. is in a fierce battle with China for digital supremacy, he said, referring
to artificial intelligence, machine learning and quantitative computing.
AI
has to do with powerful systems that can rapidly crunch a large amount of data,
search for patterns, abnormalities and targets, and learn on its own through
machine learning algorithms that are programmed into the software.
The
power of AI, Shaffer said, is that it quickly delivers warfighting options to
commanders that are easily understood. Winning in combat is no longer about
“the size of the biceps, it’s about the speed of decision-making,” he said.
For
example, an AI-enabled platform could also allow a commander to find and
terminate targets faster, Shaffer said.
One
area of concern with developing AI in this country is that there are companies
who don’t want to work with the Defense Department and would rather sell to
China. “That’s a problem,” he said.
China
is going forward with a plan to dominate the world in AI in the 2025 to 2030
time frame, Shaffer noted. “They have the people and resources to do that.”
5G
Network Warning
China
wants to control the world’s 5G network, Shaffer said. A 5G network would allow
a rapid transmission of huge amounts of communications data.
The
problem with using Chinese 5G equipment is that the Chinese could use it to
collect data and feed it to their intelligence apparatus, he said. Most
Americans probably are unaware of that threat, Shaffer said, and yet it is a
national security risk for the U.S and its allies and partners.
Other
areas the U.S. and China are in competition is in the space and cyber domains,
he said.
Dealing
With Threats
McCarthy
noted other threats from China, such as hypersonics and unmanned aerial
systems.
The
Army eliminated or reduced many programs that did not focus on these threats,
resulting in six modernization priorities: long-range precision fires,
next-generation combat vehicles, a future vertical-lift aircraft, protecting
the network, air and missile defense and soldier lethality.
It
also changed the way it trains. Three years ago, he said, “if you visited Fort
Irwin, you’d think you were in a village in Afghanistan.”
Fort
Irwin, California, is the location of the National Training Center, the Army’s
premier training site that can host brigade-sized units.
Mock
villages were built there to resemble those found in Iraq and Afghanistan, the
focus of counterinsurgency warfare over the preceding years. But today,
McCarthy said, NTC rotations include maneuver force-on-force training, which
simulate what it would be like to fight a peer competitor such as China or
Russia, he said.
Going
Back to the Future
Neller
said that over the past 18 years, Marines in Iraq and Afghanistan have not had
to deal with an enemy with aircraft, a maneuver force and cyber and space
capability.
Over
that time, he said, deployed Marines were well fed, didn’t worry that their
heat or electromagnetic signal would enable them to be targeted and had little
worry of being targeted by long-range precision fires.
That
would change in a peer fight against the Chinese or Russians, Neller said. As
such, the Marine Corps, like the Army, has changed the way it trains in its
premier training site at 29 Palms, California, he said.
Region
of Strategic Importance
Richardson
noted that fully a third of the world’s trade passes through the South China
Sea, an area where there are numerous islands contested by nations in the
region. China has occupied a number of those islands and built military
installations on them.





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