BusinessMirror April 18, 2021

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ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDS

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Sunday, April 18, 2021 Vol. 16 No. 186

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THIS satellite image shows Chinese vessels in the Julian Felipe Reef off the West Philippine Sea, March 23, 2021. MAXAR TECHNOLOGIES VIA AP

‘IN THE SHADOW OF CHINA’S MIGHT’

Philippines urged to revise defense posture amid renewed foreign maritime incursions

W

‘In limbo’

By Rene Acosta

ITH China’s “physical” occupation of the Kalayaan Island Group (KIG) and West Philippine Sea (WPS) and its determined efforts to fortify its presence there, proposals are being put forward for the military to reevaluate its ongoing modernization program and shift its procurement focus to the acquisition of hardware that can best secure and defend the country’s stakes in those territories.

Beijing has undisputably swarmed the maritime waters that it disputes against Manila with its Coast Guard and maritime militias, and even fishing vessels. This, while ensuring the sustained presence of its ships from the People’s Liberation Army-Navy in those areas that are dotted with features, although these maritime waters are located within the Philippines’s 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zone (EEZ). While China is in physical control of the Scarborough Shoal near Zambales, it also exercises a de facto control of Sandy Cay, and is in possession of the Mischief Reef, which it has turned into a massive military base since first claiming in 1995 that it was simply building makeshift “fishermen shelters.” Its ships, especially those of its maritime militias, are

permanent fixtures in other parts of the KIG and the WPS. By the count of the National Task Force on the West Philippine Sea (NTFWPS)—as reported on Wednesday—at least 240 Chinese ships are still berthed in those two maritime waters, including at Julian Felipe Reef, which was used as a jumping board for 220 Chinese maritime militia vessels.

MEMBERS of the Philippine Coast Guard use rubber boats as they patrol beside Chinese vessels moored at Julian Felipe Reef on April 14, 2021. The Philippine government recently summoned the Chinese ambassador to press its demand for Chinese vessels to immediately leave a reef claimed by Manila in the West Philippine Sea and said their presence was stoking tensions, officials said. PHILIPPINE COAST GUARD VIA AP

Needed weaponry

DR. Renato de Castro, an international relations professor from the Dela Salle University and a trustee of the Stratbase Albert del Rosario Institute, said the maritime militia is part of China’s three-layered sea force, which includes its Navy and the Coast Guard. Given the undeclared “invasion” of the Chinese military of the KIG and WPS and the long-stand-

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 48.4790

DERR: “IF you’re serious about protecting your sovereignty and your people, you need to actively monitor, patrol and occupy features in your EEZ.”

ing problem of territorial security there, former Philippine Navy vice commander retired Rear Admiral Rommel Ong said the Armed Forces of the Philippines must readjust its defense posture, the primary focus of which is the acquisition of a “game changer” military package that has an immediate impact in the SCS. Ong, who is now a professor of praxis at the Ateneo de Manila University’s School of Government and executive director of the Security Reform Initiative, said the military must hasten the acquisition of Indian-made

Brahmos supersonic missile and other platforms. The military’s defense acquisition program under its remaining Horizon 2 and 3 projects follows a system where assets and equipment are set and identified before they are fixed for procurement, with the end goal of having a modern and fully equipped force. However, Ong doubted whether the Horizon 2 and 3 were still viable, given that the country is currently being ravaged by the Covid-19 pandemic, burying the government in trillions of pesos in debt.

DR. Chester Cabalza, president and founder of the International Development and Security Cooperation, said the government’s defense spending is currently at 1.4 percent of the country’s gross domestic product. With the acquisition program already uncertain, Ong, who served in the Navy for 30 years, said the military must turn its focus to the KIG and WPS and hasten the acquisition of weapons that are needed to defend them. Ong described the military’s procurement as in “limbo, as in the last five years.” According to him, it did not help that President Duterte took a “pro-China policy,” which he described as a “failure,” although he admits there is still a need to engage Beijing. Cabalza, on the other hand, said that other than acquiring weapons, what the military needs is a good concept of defense and strategy, including for the KIG and WPS. Liz Derr, president and cofounder of the US-based technology and research company Simularity, said that if the Philippines wanted to keep and protect its EEZ, then it must defend it and move to occupy the features within its waters, otherwise other states would take them.

How serious are we?

“IF you’re serious about protecting your sovereignty and your people, you need to actively monitor, patrol and occupy features in your EEZ,” she stressed. Continued on A2

n JAPAN 0.4458 n UK 66.8477 n HK 6.2417 n CHINA 7.4336 n SINGAPORE 36.3302 n AUSTRALIA 37.5615 n EU 58.0245 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.9274

Source: BSP (April 16, 2021)


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