Philippines, US hold joint air patrol over South China Sea, angering China
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A China Coast Guard ship sailing about 60 nautical miles west of the main Philippine island of Luzon on Jan 11.
PHOTO: AFP
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MANILA – The air forces of the Philippines and the US held joint patrols over the South China Sea on Feb 4, a move that angered China, which also conducted a “routine patrol” over a disputed shoal.
The Philippines and the US have ramped up security arrangements
The one-day exercise was being carried out in the West Philippine Sea, Philippine Air Force spokeswoman Maria Consuelo Castillo said, using Manila’s term for waters in the South China Sea that fall within its exclusive economic zone.
“The exercise aimed to enhance operational coordination, improve air domain awareness and reinforce agile combat employment capabilities between the two air forces,” Ms Castillo said in a statement.
Ms Castillo said two Philippine FA-50 fighter aircraft and two US B1-B bombers participated in the exercise, which included flying over Scarborough Shoal, where the Chinese air force also carried out what it called a routine patrol.
In a statement on Feb 4, China’s military accused the Philippines of joining patrols it said were organised by foreign countries to “undermine peace and stability in the South China Sea”.
China’s air force units would maintain a “high degree of alert, resolutely defend China’s territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests, and control any military activities that disrupt the South China Sea”, the Southern Theatre Command added.
China claims almost all the strategic waterway, a conduit for US$3 trillion (S$4.07 trillion) in annual commerce, despite overlapping claims by Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam.
At a briefing on Feb 4, the Philippine navy said it was “closely monitoring” three Chinese navy vessels within Manila’s maritime zones, including a Jiangkai-class guided missile frigate.
“The presence of PLA (People’s Liberation Army) Navy reflects the People’s Republic of China’s complete disregard for international law and undermines the peace and stability in the region,” navy spokesman John Percie Alcos said.
The official Xinhua news agency reported on Feb 3 that the passage of the Chinese fleet was consistent with international law, quoting a spokesperson from the PLA’s Southern Theatre Command.
An international arbitration tribunal ruled in 2016 that China’s claims, based on its historic maps, have no basis under international law

