US says military exercises with Philippines ‘purely defensive’, for force readiness
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The Typhon missile system at Laoag International Airport in the Philippines in September 2024.
PHOTO: REUTERS
BEIJING – US-Philippine military exercises are longstanding, “purely defensive” and intended to maintain force readiness and preserve regional security, a US State Department spokesperson said on Feb 15.
The spokesperson was responding in an e-mail to a request for comment after China’s Defence Ministry urged Manila on Feb 14 to withdraw US Typhon intermediate-range missiles.
The Typhon launchers, part of a US drive to amass an arsenal of anti-ship weapons in Asia, can fire multipurpose missiles to distances of up to thousands of kilometres.
Temporary deployments of US missile capabilities in the Philippines are responsive to growing threats, intended to maintain force readiness and preserve regional security and stability for all, the spokesperson said.
“These US systems are designed to be conventionally armed and are not designed to employ nuclear payloads,” the spokesperson said.
Beijing has deployed ballistic medium- and intermediate-range missiles that can cover up to 3,000km or 5,000km, including dual-capable ones for nuclear and conventional use and is developing and deploying more such systems, the spokesperson said.
China’s Defence Ministry accused the Philippines of breaking promises by introducing the missile system, which it called a “strategic offensive weapon”.
The Philippines said the Typhon missile system was only meant for defence and that the South-east Asian nation had never promised to withdraw it.
The Tomahawk cruise missiles in the launchers can hit targets in China or Russia from the Philippines, while the SM-6 missiles it also carries can strike air or sea targets more than 200km away. REUTERS

