INTL Tokyo in talks with Manila over sending troops to the Philippines

jward

passin' thru
Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Defense
@IndoPac_Info
#Tokyo in talks with Manila over sending troops to the #Philippines



Possible deployment comes as two countries boost efforts to deter #China in #SouthChinaSea

Tokyo and Manila have discussed deploying Japanese forces in the Philippines, as the countries near agreement on several security pacts aimed at boosting regional deterrence against China.

Jose Manuel Romualdez, the Philippines ambassador to the US, said the Manila and Tokyo governments were close to signing a “reciprocal access agreement” that would also let their militaries train and exercise in each other’s countries.

Romualdez said the two countries had discussed deployment of the troops on a rotational basis — an arrangement similar to that under which the US maintains military forces in the Philippines despite the country’s constitutional prohibition of permanent deployments.

“That’s something that we’ve already discussed in the past and we will continue to look at that again as part of our co-operation between our countries,” Romualdez said.

News of the discussions will send a sharp message to China about how the US and its allies are increasingly worried about its military activity in the region — both around Taiwan and in other areas of the South China Sea.

Romualdez was speaking on Wednesday ahead of a landmark US-Japan-Philippines trilateral meeting that US President Joe Biden will host next week with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr and Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.

The ambassador said Manila was “considering all of the aspects of our relationship with Japan and certainly that’s one of them”.

He expected the two countries to conclude the RAA shortly after the trilateral summit, which will be held on April 12 in Washington. Marcos will also hold a bilateral meeting with Biden a day after the US and Japanese leaders have a summit that will include a high-profile state dinner at the White House.

Deployment of Japanese troops in south-east Asia would mark a major development for Tokyo and Manila, which have significantly strengthened co-operation with the US to counter China.

Christopher Johnstone, a Japan expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies think-tank, said: “If it comes to fruition, a presence of Japanese forces in the Philippines would send two powerful messages to China: that a regional, multilateral security architecture is forming in response to Beijing’s revisionist behaviour; and that Japan has become an accepted security provider in south-east Asia.

Both developments would have been unthinkable just a few years ago.”

Japan has over the past couple of years significantly boosted its defence posture, including sharply increasing its defence spending and buying US-made Tomahawk cruise missiles with a range capable of hitting targets in China.

The Financial Times reported recently that Biden and Kishida would next week reveal the biggest upgrade to the US-Japan military alliance in more than six decades.

The US has expressed increasing concern about aggressive Chinese activity towards Filipino vessels at the Second Thomas Shoal, a submerged reef in the South China Sea that has become a dangerous flashpoint again in recent months.

Washington and Manila have both strongly criticised China for dangerous activity — including targeting vessels with water cannons — intended to make it harder for the Philippines to resupply troops based on a ship known as the Sierra Madre that has been lodged on the reef for 25 years.

Any attack on the ship, which was deliberately marooned on the contested reef in 1999, could trigger the US-Philippines mutual defence treaty. Several people familiar with discussions inside the Biden administration said officials were increasingly worried that an incident at the reef could trigger a wider confrontation.

Speaking ahead of Biden’s call on Tuesday with Xi Jinping, president of China, one senior US official said the administration was more and more concerned Chinese activity around the Second Thomas Shoal “could lead us closer to unintended consequences”.

Romualdez said the US, Philippines and Japan were also close to reaching an agreement that would lead to their navies engaging in joint patrols in the South China Sea.

He said they were finalising the details, including on the frequency of the patrols and where they would be conducted.

The ambassador added the US and Philippines were also “very close” to reaching a military-intelligence sharing deal known as the General Security of Military Information Agreement. “I’m hoping that if it doesn’t happen during this summit, it will happen shortly after,” he said.

The Chinese embassy in the US said: “China always believes that state-to-state exchanges and co-operation should be conducive to enhancing mutual understanding and trust among countries in the region and safeguarding regional peace and stability, rather than targeting or undermining the interests of any third party.” The Japanese government declined to comment.

 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
I gotta get someone to rattle the rock I seem to sleep under so things like THIS don't disarrange my small clothes in the morning.
It might be nice to have seen that the JSDFs are now the West of Wake SDFs --- with accouterments.


Thinking a couple of MERDEs and at least one FESCES should follow there.
 

mecoastie

Veteran Member
This is interesting. It looks like Japan and the Philippines are worried that the US will not be too constructive if the Chinese decide to get aggressive in the South Pacific.
It’s a big ocean ffor us to cross. They know they could be on their own. It is amazing that both the Koreans and the Philippines are working with China on military matters.
 

OldArcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB
This is interesting. It looks like Japan and the Philippines are worried that the US will not be too constructive if the Chinese decide to get aggressive in the South Pacific.
That is an honest and realistic evaluation of our Commander in Thief, the child and woman groping and sniffing Arsehole in the Crack House… They , like ”We, the People,” are on our own, as our “leadership” sold us out generations ago. WE are the new Soylant Green.

OA
 

OldArcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB
My late father-in-law fought in the Battle of Manila, on his way from New Guinea to Tokyo Bay. He fought the Imperial Japanese Marines, and the Imperial Army, often fighting hand-to-hand. Can’t use the words he used to describe them here, but he acknowledged that they were, indeed, tough. Wonder what he’d have thought about this…

OA
 

jward

passin' thru
Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Defense
@IndoPac_Info
#US seeks to 'integrate' #Japan into defense industrial base

At summit, leaders to discuss co-development and co-production of munitions and platforms.

U.S. President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida will agree to explore closer cooperation between their nations' defense industries at their summit here April 10, a U.S. government source told Nikkei Asia.

The cooperation will not be limited to repairing U.S. naval ships at Japanese private shipyards but will also envision the co-development and co-production of munitions, planes and ships in the future.

View: https://twitter.com/IndoPac_Info/status/1775898188358308065
 

Terrwyn

Veteran Member
Almost hard to believe. You would think the Filipinos have a longer memory than that but I guess everyone that lived through WW2 is dead now. I bet they are turning over in their graves though.
 
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