Philippine Coast Guard Trains With US, Japan Using Japanese Patrol Ship

Philippine Coast Guard Trains With US, Japan Using Japanese Patrol Ship
Philippine Marines' amphibious assault vehicles maneuver next to a Philippine BRP Tarlac navy landing platform dock ship during a joint amphibious landing exercise with U.S. Marines at a beach facing the South China Sea in San Antonio town, Zambales province, on Oct. 7, 2022. Ted Aljibe/AFP via Getty Images
Aldgra Fredly
Updated:
0:00

The Philippine coast guard has begun training with its counterparts from Japan and the United States using a Japan-made patrol vessel, amid China’s increased assertiveness in the disputed South China Sea.

About 100 Philippine personnel and several U.S. and Japanese service members are participating in the drills that will run through Nov. 5. The training started early during the week of Oct. 24, but it wasn’t open to the media until Oct. 28.

Philippine personnel will practice towing a disabled ship in Manila Bay using a 97-meter (318-foot) patrol vessel supplied by Japan during the two-week training, Japanese news agency The Mainichi reported.
“Towing, for instance, is not an operation that we conduct regularly ... so in bringing in the Japanese coast guard and the U.S. Coast Guard, we are able to share our different ideas, share our different ways of doing things,” Lt. Bryce Matakas of the U.S. Coast Guard told The Mainichi on Oct. 28.
The drill also included arrests, small boat operations, damage control onboard the ship, and firefighting, as the Philippine coast guard aims to boost capabilities to protect its territories in the South China Sea.

Marcos Aims to Modernize Coast Guard

The joint drill followed Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s remarks on Oct. 19 in which he pledged to modernize the nation’s coast guard, citing its key role in safeguarding its maritime territory.
“As you fulfill your duty, know very well that you will never sail as a lone body in these unsettling waters,” Marcos said during the coast guard’s 21st anniversary, according to local reports.

“As your leader, I assure you that this administration will always be behind you, supportive of your efforts and initiatives to modernize the [Philippine coast guard] which will redound to better delivery of service to the nation.”

China has increased its influence in the South China Sea through its artificial islands and military buildup. It claims the majority of the South China Sea under its “nine-dash line,” despite competing claims from other nations.

The Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague ruled in favor of the Philippines in 2016. But the verdict has had little impact on China’s behavior, with Beijing continuing to pursue its claims to vast swaths of the sea.

Marcos had previously vowed to uphold The Hague’s 2016 ruling in the South China Sea dispute, saying that he wouldn’t allow China to encroach on “a single square millimeter of our maritime coast.”

The Philippines have filed more than 48 protests against China’s sea incursions under the Marcos administration. His predecessor, Rodrigo Duterte, filed 388 protests during his six years as president.

Chinese vessels continue to swarm Philippine waters despite the protests, prompting the coast guard to bolster maritime domain awareness and patrols, Philippine Defense Undersecretary Angelito de Leon said on Sept. 8.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in July that Washington is obligated to defend the Philippines if its forces, vessels, or aircraft come under attack in the disputed waters of the South China Sea.
Aldgra Fredly
Aldgra Fredly
Author
Aldgra Fredly is a freelance writer covering U.S. and Asia Pacific news for The Epoch Times.
Related Topics