US issues guidelines on defending the Philippines from South China Sea attacks
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The guidelines send a “warning” to China against targeting the Philippine coast guard.
PHOTO: AFP
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MANILA – The United States has laid out in clear terms the extent of its defence treaty commitments to the Philippines, issuing new guidelines that refer specifically to attacks in the South China Sea.
The six-page “bilateral defence guidelines” agreed in Washington on Wednesday follow a renewed push under President Ferdinand Marcos Jr to update the Philippines’ Mutual Defence Treaty with the US, at a time of increased tension and maritime confrontation with China.
The guidelines are a first since the treaty was signed in 1951 and follow scores of Philippine diplomatic protests in the past year over what it calls China’s “aggressive” actions and threats against its coast guard.
They say the bilateral treaty commitments would be invoked if either is attacked, specifically in the South China Sea, and also if coast guard vessels were the target.
They were also updated to include references to modern forms of warfare, including “grey zone tactics” that China is accused of using to assert its claims to sovereignty.
The guidelines did not mention China specifically.
“Recognising that threats may arise in several domains, including land, sea, air, space and cyberspace – and take the form of asymmetric, hybrid and irregular warfare and grey zone tactics, the guidelines chart a way forward to build interoperability in both conventional and non-conventional domains,” according to the Pentagon.
‘Warning’ to China
The South China Sea, a waterway vital to global trade, has become a major flashpoint in the increasingly testy relationship
The guidelines send a “warning” to China against targeting the Philippine coast guard, said Mr Rommel Ong, former vice-commander of the Philippine Navy and a professor at the Ateneo School of Government.
Mr Julio Amador, head of the Foundation for the National Interest, a Manila-based think-tank focusing on strategic and security issues, said of the security guidelines: “It’s clear that it will give China some pause.”
China’s Foreign Ministry on Thursday said it opposed the use of bilateral defence treaties to interfere in the South China Sea, which “should not be a hunting ground for external forces”.
The guidelines were released during a visit to Washington this week by Mr Marcos that included talks with US President Joe Biden.
Mr Marcos also met US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin, who told him “we will always have your back, in the South China Sea or elsewhere in the region”.
Ties with the US have deepened under Mr Marcos, who in February granted its military access to more of his country’s bases, prompting accusations from China that the deal was “stoking the fire” of regional tension. REUTERS

