* Japan wants to donate Beechcraft TC-90 King Air planes - sources
* Aircraft could be fitted with surveillance radar - sources
* Tokyo has not made formal proposal to Manila - sources
* Any transfer of planes would likely anger China
A Japan Maritime Self-Defense Forces' TC-90 training aircraft is seen in this undated handout photo released by the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Forces, and obtained by Reuters on August 5, 2015. Photo by Reuters
Four sources with
knowledge of the matter told Reuters that Japan was looking to offer three
Beechcraft TC-90 King Air planes that could be fitted with basic surface and
air surveillance radar.
They said talks
within the Japanese government were preliminary and would need to overcome
legal hurdles. Japan had yet
to formally propose the planes as an alternative to more sophisticated Lockheed
Martin P3-C aircraft that Manila
wants to track Chinese submarine activity, they added.
Senior Philippine
military and defense officials in Manila said
they had not heard about the possible donation of the twin-turboprop TC-90
aircraft, which Japan
uses to train military pilots.
"The Philippines doesn't have enough aircraft to
conduct regular patrols over the South China Sea," one of the sources in Japan said,
declining to be identified because he was not authorzed to talk to the media.
Donating
aircraft, even small planes, would represent a military upgrade for the Philippines ,
which has only a handful of fixed-wing planes it can deploy on maritime
patrols.
Concerns over the
islands have dominated regional meetings in Kuala Lumpur
this week between Southeast Asia and countries including Japan , China
and the United States .
Equipping Manila with maritime-capable patrol planes would dovetail
with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's more muscular security agenda but likely anger
China , which has repeatedly
accused Japan of interfering
in the South China Sea dispute.
A spokesman for
Japan's Ministry of Defense said working level talks had been set up to explore
possible cooperation in defence equipment with the Philippines but that there
was no "concrete plan" to give Manila the TC-90s.
Philippine
Defense Minister Voltaire Gazmin told Reuters he was unaware of any Japanese
plan to supply the aircraft. Top Philippine generals said they were also
unaware of any proposal but welcomed the growing security cooperation with Japan .
POSSIBLE
PRECEDENT
To allow what
would be its first donation of equipment used by the Japanese military to
another country, lawmakers would have to amend financial regulations that
require second-hand government-owned equipment to be sold at fair market value,
sources said.
That could open
the way for Japan to give
military equipment to other friendly nations in Southeast
Asia .
The sources in Japan said
radar to monitor surface activity and aircraft could be easily installed on the
TC-90 planes if they were transferred. The U.S. military uses Beechcraft King
Air 90s in transport roles and to train pilots.
While Gazmin said
Manila still wanted P3s that Tokyo will retire over the next several
years, a senior Philippine military official said operating and maintaining
such advanced surveillance aircraft and ground-based support equipment would be
a challenge. The P3s, which have four turboprops, also use a lot of fuel, he
added.
GROWING
SECURITY COOPERATION
While
acknowledging its new islands will have undefined military purposes, China insists
it is not a threat to its neighbors and says the outposts will also have
civilian uses such as search and rescue and weather monitoring.
Recent satellite
images show China
has almost finished building a 3,000-metre-long (10,000-foot) airstrip on one
of the islands.
The Philippines and Japan
have conducted two naval exercises in and around the South
China Sea in recent months.
Philippine
President Benigno Aquino and Abe also agreed in June to begin talks on a
visiting forces agreement that would open the way for Japan to use bases in the Philippines to
refuel aircraft and resupply naval vessels.
The United States , which has security treaties with
both Manila and Tokyo , has backed the cooperation because it
wants its regional allies to shoulder more of the security burden as Chinese
military power and assertiveness grows.
http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/08/06/15/japan-may-give-planes-manila-south-china-sea-patrols-sources
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