The new commander of the US Pacific Fleet, Admiral Scott Swift, welcomes the controversial war games between the Philippines and Japan
BALIKATAN AS MULTILATERAL WAR GAMES. The new commander of the US Pacific Fleet welcomes war games between the Philippines and US. Rappler file photo
New US Pacific Fleet commander Admiral Scott Swift welcomed the historic navy-to-navy exercises between the
"He commended Philippine efforts to hold military
readiness exercises with U.S.
allies like Japan ,
which held search and rescue drills for the first time with the Philippine Navy
last month," the US Embassy said in a press release on Monday, July 27
"Admiral Swift disclosed that he was 'very interested'
in expanding annual US Navy-[Armed Forces of the Philippines] combat exercises
into multilateral engagements with other partner-nations," the press
release added.
Swift visited the Philippines from July 16 to 19 to
meet with new Armed Forces chief General Hernando Iriberri. He joined a surveillance flight of the US Navy P8 spy plane over the West
Philippine Sea (South China Sea), a move that was protested by China.
“It is important that the approach be a multilateral
approach, not a bilateral one.... These problems are common to many countries,
not just one,” Swift was quoted by the US embassy.
The US
and the Philippines are
treaty allies through the Mutual Defense Treaty and the Visiting Forces
Agreement, the latter allowing US
troops to come to the Philippines
for exercises. Aside from the annual Balikatan war games, the US and
Philippine navies also conduct the regular CARAT war games.
The drills between the Philippine Navy and the Japan
Maritime Self Defense Force is being questioned however because it was
conducted based on a Memorandum of Agreement and not a treaty. Groups have raised it before the Supreme Court after Rappler first raised the question in June.
Swift commands the US Pacific Fleet, which is headquartered
in Pearl Harbor in Hawaii .
It is the world's largest naval headquarters with about 200 ships and
submarines, over a thousand aircraft and 140,000 sailors and civilians.
http://www.rappler.com/nation/100637-us-philipines-japan-war-games
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