Key Philippine Military and Insurgency-Related Events

By Retired Analyst

Thursday, March 2, 2023

DND chief dismisses opposition to US facilities on EDCA sites

From the Manila Times (Mar 3, 2023): DND chief dismisses opposition to US facilities on EDCA sites (By Franco Jose C. Baroña)

THE Department of National Defense (DND) dismissed opposition by local government officials over plans to establish additional United States military facilities on Philippine bases located in their respective provinces under the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA).

Defense Officer-in-Charge Carlito Galvez Jr. said on Friday that the Philippine government "is aiming to achieve an optimal number and locations of the EDCA sites to maximize their coverage of the Philippine archipelago."

"We understand the apprehensions expressed by our local chief executives about EDCA and our bilateral exercises. However, we must consider the volatile situation in which we operate and not view our country in isolation," said Galvez.


"The Philippines straddles a crucial location in the Pacific, and we have seaboards to the north, south, east and west. All of these must be monitored and protected," he added.

Last month, the DND announced the Philippine and US governments agreed to designate four new EDCA Agreed Locations. EDCA, along with the Visiting Forces Agreement, operationalizes the 1951 Philippine-US Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT).

The agreement will give US troops access to four more bases in strategic areas of the country, with the aim of accelerating the full implementation of the EDCA.

The DND has yet to name the locations of these new EDCA sites, but two sites in Cagayan, and one each in Palawan, Zambales, and Isabela had been mentioned.

While Cagayan Governor Manuel Mamba was vocal in his opposition to the plan, saying he is not keen on having an EDCA site in his province, his vice governor, Melvin Vargas Jr., was more calm in his opinion on the issue.

Vargas told The Manila Times in an interview earlier this week that any plans to establish two more US military facilities in the province of Cagayan would require extensive public consultations.

"Formality wise we are still waiting for the scheduled consultations that will happen in our province. Hopefully different sectors will be invited. I will be one of those who will attend to be able to learn more about the plan," he said.

'Long overdue'

Signed in 2014, EDCA's implementation was delayed for various reasons, Galvez pointed out.

"EDCA was met with legal challenges, but the Supreme Court eventually upheld its constitutionality in 2016. Coupled with other technical issues, which have since been resolved, and the restrictions brought by the pandemic, the implementation of the projects under EDCA was delayed for many years," explained Galvez.

"Thus, the identification of new sites for additional EDCA Agreed Locations is actually long overdue."

DND spokesman Arsenio Andolong, meanwhile, said the locations of the additional facilities would be made public once all the necessary consultations, coordination, staff work and other requirements are completed.

https://www.manilatimes.net/2023/03/03/news/dnd-chief-dismisses-opposition-to-us-facilities-on-edca-sites/1881135
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Marcos Embrace of US Troops Near Taiwan Revives Old Grievances

From BNN Bloomberg News (Mar 3, 2023): Marcos Embrace of US Troops Near Taiwan Revives Old Grievances (Philip J. Heijmans, Bloomberg News)



The USNS John Ericsson American supply ship is docked at a shipyard at the Subic Bay Freeport Zone in Subic, Zambales, the Philippines, on Friday Feb. 17, 2023 Photographer: Geric Cruz/Bloomberg , Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- It’s been more than three decades since the Philippines ordered US troops to withdraw from their sprawling military bases in the country, ending an era that hearkened back to America’s colonial days.

Now the man overseeing the Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority — once home to the US’s biggest naval base in Asia — wants them back.

A recently revived defense agreement between the US and the Philippines could “be a welcome development for us” if American forces return to Subic Bay, said Rolen Paulino, the authority’s chairman, in an interview. “When they come here they spend money, go to hotels, go to restaurants — plus tourists.”

Paulino isn’t alone. Beyond the local economic benefits, the Philippines’ strategic location means that a renewed US presence would be a huge asset to Washington in case of a conflict over Taiwan.

In contrast to earlier decades, when the US-Philippine alliance was seen as skewed toward Washington, now Manila has security concerns of its own.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s government is looking to counter a record number of Chinese incursions in the disputed South China Sea that have seen Filipino fishing ships harassed or driven away from traditional waters. Public outcry erupted last month when a Chinese coast guard vessel aimed a laser at a Philippine ship.

Marcos was blunt in telling the armed forces this week that their mission has changed, and put US-China tensions as the reason why.

“There was a time where we did not have to worry about these threats and the intensification of the competition between the superpowers,” Marcos said Feb. 27. “Now things have begun to change and we must adjust accordingly.”

So far, public sentiment appears to be on the side of stronger US ties.

In a survey published Feb. 9 by the ASEAN Studies Centre at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, nearly 79% of Filipinos said if Southeast Asia were forced to choose between the US and China, they would choose the former.

Marcos isn’t just looking for US support: he’s turning to regional allies as well. He said he’d be open to a reciprocal military access agreement with Japan if it would protect the country’s fishermen and its maritime territory, and last month the Philippines said it’s considering joint patrols with Australia.

But while US-China tensions are driving the rapprochement, America’s complicated past with the Philippines, and fears that embracing Washington will drag Manila into any future conflict with China, are giving some communities pause.

“They are not welcome,” said Manuel Mamba, governor of Cagayan province, which hosts one of the facilities US troops might soon have access to. “China has been good to us. I don’t see any threat coming from them and my province is one of the nearest to them.”

That kind of pushback may be why US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Philippines Defense Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. stopped short of disclosing where US troops would be working when they agreed last month to expand the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement. That’s a 2014 accord that was shelved under former President Rodrigo Duterte.

The EDCA deal allows the US to rotate troops for prolonged stays as well as build and operate facilities at designated sites, most of which are expected to be in the country’s north, closer to Taiwan, or along the South China Sea.

Austin hailed the agreement as a “really big deal,” and it was seen as more evidence that Washington’s long-promised pivot to Asia is finally underway.

But in a joint briefing with Austin, Galvez was careful to refer to the four unnamed locations US forces would go to under the agreement as “EDCA sites,” not bases, and stressed that the deal was still contingent on consultations with local authorities. President Marcos later said Subic Bay isn’t on the list of sites being considered, after a Philippine defense official said it was last year.

The EDCA expansion “is heavy on the hype, but wanting on the substance,” said Rommel Ong, a retired rear admiral in the Philippine Navy who is now a professor at Ateneo de Manila University’s School of Government.

Governor Mamba says he believes hosting American troops would be a security risk for his province, located about 300 kilometers (200 miles) from Taiwan at the northern tip of Luzon island. He also fears it would torpedo a $7 billion Chinese infrastructure package he said could transform the otherwise sleepy province.

In other communities, stories about mistreatment by visiting US troops in the past still resonate. The killing of a transgender Filipino in Subic Bay in 2014 by a US Marine on leave from a visiting warship sparked outrage and a renewed clamor for a review of the Philippines’ military commitments.

“Local opposition probably is a concern, certainly,” said Carl Schuster, a former operations director at U.S. Pacific Command’s Joint Intelligence Center. “The US Navy was not very popular there.”

And then there’s the fear of getting pulled too deep into a US-China conflict. That was behind the objections raised by President Marcos’s sister, Senator Imee Marcos. The senator, who chairs the foreign relations committee and is known for her political independence, grilled Defense Secretary Galvez at a hearing on Wednesday.

“We are not volunteering to fight wars that are not our own,” the senator said. The president’s office didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on the remarks.

Within Southeast Asia, not all leaders are comfortable with the US embrace. Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim says welcoming military forces is the wrong approach to deescalating tensions.

“It would be disconcerting if any force, East or West, starts showing military might or presence within Asean,” Anwar said in an interview with ABS-CBN News Channel in the Philippines broadcast on Friday.

It’s all evidence of how President Marcos has to navigate the US-China relationship carefully. Like other regional leaders, he has an interest in maintaining ties with Beijing, his country’s top trading partner. In January, Marcos visited President Xi Jinping, with the two sides agreeing to resume talks on joint oil and gas exploration in the South China Sea.

In the end, however, Marcos appears more open to the US than many experts expected. The president’s remarks ruling out Subic Bay from the list of places expected to welcome more US troops may be more symbolic than substantive. US Navy ships still call there and American troops flow in for the annual Balikatan military exercises.

Paulino — the Subic Bay authority’s director — said it’s time to move on. The area he oversees could benefit from more investment. The now-private shipyards struggle to find commissions renovating yachts, and limited tourism appeal has forced the local airport — built in the shape of an aircraft carrier — to darken its halls.

Sitting in his offices overlooking the bay, Paulino said he told US Ambassador MaryKay L. Carlson late last year that negative feelings about the American presence are in the past.

“I told her that there’s no such thing here; no resentment, nothing whatsoever,” he said.

[With assistance from Rebecca Choong Wilkins and Andreo Calonzo.]

https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/marcos-embrace-of-us-troops-near-taiwan-revives-old-grievances-1.1890592
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Msia to help Philippines have stable Bangsamoro administration in Mindanao

From the New Straits Times (Mar 2, 2023): Msia to help Philippines have stable Bangsamoro administration in Mindanao (By Azman Abdul Hamid)


Malaysia has assured the Philippines of continued help to pave the way to a stable Bangsamoro administration in Mindanao, said Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim. - Bernama pic

MANILA: Malaysia has assured the Philippines of continued help to pave the way to a stable Bangsamoro administration in Mindanao, said Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.

"The Phillippines President appreciates Malaysia's service all this time and asks us to help so that it can be streamlined and speed up the reconciliation process," he said.

Anwar subsequently met the chief minister in the Bangsamoro transitional government, Haji Murad Ebrahim and his team on Malaysia's assistance to them.

"The meeting is to discuss and give assurances about any cooperation so that reconciliation, especially among Muslims in the south of the Philippines, can be well established and sure of success.


"This has lasted for decades and is not easily solved so I thank the president of the Philippine government for taking this step. But, it is our responsibility as a neighbouring country, a Muslim country as well, to ensure that there is meaningful success and lasting peace in southern Philippines," he added.

The future of thousands of former fighters of the movement under the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) needs a solution.

Anwar said among the initiatives planned is to transfer the former fighters so they can be involved in normal employment, which in the long run will contribute to long lasting peace.

"This is a normal practice in any move towards peace in any conflict in the world," he added.

A recent report by a portal quoted Haji Murad as saying that his group has no problem fast-tracking the process of laying down arms.

However, he said this effort should coincide with the eradication of private armies of the local politicians.

"One problem we see that increases tension in the region is the private armed groups of the politicians," he said.

https://www.nst.com.my/news/nation/2023/03/885279/msia-help-philippines-have-stable-bangsamoro-administration-mindanao
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Blaming MILF for crimes 'unfair'

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Army: Two Quezon towns now ‘insurgency-free’

From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Mar 2, 2023): Army: Two Quezon towns now ‘insurgency-free’ (By: John Eric Mendoza)



INQUIRER FILE PHOTO

MANILA, Philippines — Quezon towns General Nakar and Infanta have been declared as free from the presence of the communist New People’s Army, the Philippine Army said on Thursday.

The local governments of General Nakar and Infanta on Monday held a ceremonial signing in General Nakar Municipal Hall and Infanta Municipal Covered Court, respectively, attended by key officials.

The programs included signing a “pledge of commitment” as well as the redeclaration of the Communist Party of the Philippines, its armed wing NPA, and political wing National Democratic Front as persona non grata in the said towns.

“These milestones are a testament to the effectiveness of the continuous and focused localized peace engagement efforts with our key stakeholders and security partners in the area,” said Second Infantry Division Commander Roberto Capulong in a statement.

“We will continue to relentlessly work to sustain our gains and extend our peace efforts to other areas still affected by insurgency,” Capulong added.

Earlier this year, also declared insurgency-free in Quezon Province are the municipalities of Alabat, Unisan, Gumaca, San Narciso, Perez and Quezon. — Kimberly D. Albaño, trainee

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1737477/two-quezon-towns-declared-to-be-free-from-npa
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VISCOM says it is gaining ground against CPP-NPA

From the Cebu Daily News (Mar 3, 2023): VISCOM says it is gaining ground against CPP-NPA (By: Pegeen Maisie M. Sararaña)



Here are some of the seized firearms and other documents from the alleged rebels during an armed encounter with the government troops last March 1, 2023 in Barangay Carabalan, Himamaylan City in Negros Occidental. | VISCOM photo

CEBU CITY, Philippines — The Visayas Command (VISCOM) said it continues to gain ground in its fight against the Communist Party of the Philippines – New People’s Army (CPP-NPA) after it reported neutralizing four alleged rebels during an armed encounter in Barangay Carabalan, Himamaylan City in Negros Occidental last March 1, 2023.

Lieutenant General Benedict Arevalo, VISCOM commander, said that the armed encounter was between the 94th Infantry Battalion and the alleged terrorists. This encounter resulted to the death of four alleged rebels and recovery of six firearms, which includes two M16 rifles; two M203 grenade launchers attached to the M16 rifles, and two AK47 assault rifles.


Aside from these firearms, Arevalo said that the government troops also allegedly recovered several ‘war materials,’ including nine backpacks containing personal belongings and subversive documents.

For the month of February, Arevalo said that a total of 28 alleged rebels were already neutralized during their operations against insurgency in Visayas. Of the 28 individuals, five were killed, one was apprehended, while 22 others surrendered.

At least 22 firearms were also confiscated within the same period.


Arevalo appeals to those a few remaining alleged rebels to surrender.

“Heed the call of our government for genuine peace and reconciliation. Lay down your arms and return to the folds of the law while you still can, for we will never stop and we will never back down in our efforts in pursuing those who threaten the safety and well-being of our people,” Arevalo said.

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/491607/viscom-says-it-is-gaining-ground-against-cpp-npa
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2 more Quezon towns declared insurgency-free

From the Philippine Star (Mar 3, 2023): 2 more Quezon towns declared insurgency-free (By Ed Amoroso)

CAMP VICENTE LIM, Laguna, Philippines — Nine towns in Quezon province are now free of communist rebels after two were recently added to the list.

Nakar and Infanta were declared insurgency-free on Tuesday after no incident of harassment and terrorist attacks were reported in the past several years, Col. Ledon Monte, Quezon police director, said.


The police, military, concerned local government executives and officials of the Department of the Interior and Local Government signed a memorandum of understanding declaring stable internal peace and security in the two towns.

Monte also cited the surrender of New People’s Army rebels who benefited from the Enhanced Comprehensive Local Integration Program or E-CLIP.

Macalelon, Gumaca, Unisan, Perez, Quezon, Alabat and San Narciso had earlier been declared free of communist rebels.

https://www.philstar.com/nation/2023/03/03/2248839/2-more-quezon-towns-declared-insurgency-free
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4 NPA rebels killed in Himamaylan clash

From Palawan News (Mar 3, 2023): 4 NPA rebels killed in Himamaylan clash (By DOMINIQUE GABRIEL G. BAÑAGA)


Photo courtesy of Mike Gonzalez (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:TheCoffee)

BACOLOD City – Four New People’s Army (NPA) rebels were killed in a gun battle with troops of the Philippine Army’s 94th Infantry Battalion (94IB) in Barangay Carabalan, Himamaylan City, Negros Occidental on Wednesday, March 1.

The rebel fatalities were yet to be identified.

Two 94IB soldiers were wounded but were reported to be in stable condition.

Colonel Orlando Edralin, commander of the 303rd Infantry Brigade (303IBde), called on the NPA rebels who were wounded to surrender.

He said they received information that many of the rebels involved in Barangay Carabalan clash were injured.

It is possible, Edralin said, that Army troops mopping up the encounter site could recover more dead rebels.

Government forces recovered from the encounter site two M16 assault rifles with M203 grenade launchers, two AK-47 assault rifles, four M203 grenade launcher ammunition, assorted ammunition, four bandoliers, a fragmentation grenade, assorted magazines for M16 and AK-47, nine backpacks, a compass, and two flashlights.

Also recovered were food and medical supplies, as well as subversive documents.

Meanwhile, 181 families fled their homes due to the clash. They are currently staying at the multipurpose gym in Barangay Carabalan.

The Himamaylan City Social Welfare and Development Office sent relief supplies to the evacuees.

As of this writing, the Philippine Army has yet to allow the residents to return to their homes.

https://www.panaynews.net/4-npa-rebels-killed-in-himamaylan-clash/
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Extortion letters recovered from encounter site

From the Visayan Daily Star (Mar 3, 2023): Extortion letters recovered from encounter site (By GILBERT P. BAYORAN)

Army soldiers have recovered numerous copies of rebels’ extortion letters at the encounter site in Brgy, Carabalan, Himamaylan City, Negros Occidental.

The letters contained demands to impose what the rebels refer as “revolutionary tax” or “permit to operate fee” on businesses, especially in rural areas where they have a strong presence, a statement issued by the 94th Infantry Battalion said.

Lt. Col. Van Donald Almonte, 94IB commander, said “this tax is an essential source of funding for the group’s activities, including their armed struggle against the government.”


Almonte added that the CPP-NPA justifies the tax as a means of levying fees from businesses that operate within their “territorial jurisdiction.”

The encounter on Wednesday claimed the lives of four suspected NPA rebels, whose identities have yet to be established by the Philippine Army, and the recovery of assorted high powered firearms and explosives, among other items.

Almonte called on the public to immediately report any rebel extortion activities.

The encounter also caused the temporary dislocation of 181 families residing in five remote sitios of Brgy. Carabalan, Himamaylan City, who are now staying at the evacuation center of the barangay.

Capt. Eduardo Rarugal, 94IB Civil Military Operations Officer, reported that Mayor Raymundo Tongson, who immediately sent food packs to the displaced families, also conducted series of psycho-social talks to help the evacuees lessen their worries and fears of the eventualities that occurred in their locality.

Gov. Eugenio Jose Lacson and Col. Orlando Edralin, 303rd Infantry Brigade commander, reiterated their calls for the NPA remnants to surrender, before it is too late for them.

https://visayandailystar.com/extortion-letters-recovered-from-encounter-site/
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Army looking for recruits

From the Mindanao Times (Mar 2, 2023): Army looking for recruits (By RHODA GRACE SARON)

THE ARMY Recruitment Office Mindanao encouraged all young professionals who want to serve the country to enter the Candidate Officer Cadet Course (COCC) of the Philippine Army.

Speaking during the AFP-PNP Press Corps Southern Mindanao media briefing on Wednesday, March 1, Master Sgt. Teofilo Cinches, of the Recruitment Office Mindanao Branch Non-commissioned officer l, said that the Philippine Army would have a recruit examination in the city this March 7 at the University of Southeastern Philippines.

“There is a quota of 800 individuals for Army Officers across the country where the first half of them will start training this coming June and the rest this December,” Cinches said.


He added that when anyone enters to become an officer candidate, he will have a monthly salary of P45,556; when he becomes a 2nd Lieutenant, he will receive a salary of P51,879.

Interested applicants can attend its pre-screening schedules from March 4 to 6 at the Army Reservist Office at SIR New Matina, University of Mindanao and USeP.

He added that interested applicants could visit the Army Recruitment Office Mindanao Facebook Page for other details.
 
https://mindanaotimes.com.ph/2023/03/02/army-looking-for-recruits/
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DFA: PH crafting guidelines on WPS joint patrols

From the Philippine News Agency (Mar 2, 2023): DFA: PH crafting guidelines on WPS joint patrols (By Joyce Ann L. Rocamora)



Foreign Affairs spokesperson Ma. Teresita Daza (File photo)

MANILA – The Philippine government is crafting the guidelines on joint patrols in the West Philippine Sea (WPS), the Department of Foreign Affairs confirmed Thursday.

“GPH (Government of the Philippines) is in the process of crafting guidelines for the conduct of combined maritime activities in the WPS, including joint patrols,” Foreign Affairs spokesperson Ma. Teresita Daza told reporters in a text message.

Daza said operational details and the possibility of including other countries would be discussed in the Mutual Defense Board and Security Engagement Board meetings between Manila and Washington DC.

The statement came following an Inquirer report quoting Australian Ambassador to the Philippines HK Yu as saying that “conversation on the joint patrols with the US, Philippines and Japan in international waters are ongoing”.


The Japanese Embassy in Manila days before said Tokyo would “explore the possibility of cooperating with partners to reinforce Maritime Domain Awareness and the maritime law enforcement in the Indo-Pacific” but there are no discussions yet on the activity.

The US, Australia and Japan were among the first countries to voice concern over the recent lasing incident in the Ayungin Shoal involving the Chinese Coast Guard and the Philippine Coast Guard.

Amid increasing Chinese activities at the West Philippine Sea, the three separately called for peace and stability, and the respect for international law in the vital waterway.

Last month, Foreign Affairs Secretary Enrique Manalo confirmed that there were “daily incidents” of harassment or land reclamation that had been depriving the Philippines of use of its exclusive economic zone in the West Philippine Sea.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1196472
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DND: EDCA meant to boost PH defense capabilities, not for war

From the Philippine News Agency (Mar 3, 2023): DND: EDCA meant to boost PH defense capabilities, not for war (By Priam Nepomuceno)



US Department of Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin III (left) and Department of National Defense Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. (right) (PNA file photo by Joey Razon)

MANILA – The Philippines' Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA) with the United States is aimed at improving the country's defensive capabilities and is not meant for war.

In a statement Thursday night, Department of National Defense (DND) Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. emphasized that the bilateral agreement does not seek to interfere with the domestic affairs of other nations.

"The geopolitical situation is becoming more precarious by the day. Our projects under EDCA and our other defense partnerships are not intended for aggression. We are not preparing for war, rather we are aiming to develop our defense capabilities against eventualities and threats to our security," he added.

Galvez also stressed that projects under EDCA are geared towards enhancing facility readiness of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) as part of its modernization efforts to speed up external defense development.


"As the Commander-in-Chief, President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. directed the AFP recently, we are shifting our focus towards territorial defense, especially in the West Philippine Sea (WPS),” the DND chief added.

Previous military engagements and exercises with Philippines allies used to focus on internal security operations. "Now, we are eyeing to strengthen our abilities to respond to external threats that may arise along our border-areas,” Galvez said.

He also added that the DND is aiming to achieve an optimal number and locations of the EDCA sites to maximize their coverage of the Philippine archipelago.

“We understand the apprehensions expressed by our local chief executives about EDCA and our bilateral exercises. However, we must consider the volatile situation in which we operate and not view our country in isolation,” Galvez added.

“The Philippines straddles a crucial location in the Pacific, and we have seaboards to the north, south, east and west. All of these must be monitored and protected," he said.

Last month, the DND announced that Manila and Washington D.C. agreed to designate four new EDCA "agreed locations".

EDCA, along with the Visiting Forces Agreement, operationalizes the 1951 PH-US Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT). It was signed in 2014 but its implementation was delayed due to various reasons.

“EDCA was met with legal challenges, but the Supreme Court eventually upheld its constitutionality in 2016. Coupled with other technical issues, which have since been resolved, and the restrictions brought by the pandemic, the implementation of the projects under EDCA was delayed for many years,” Galvez explained.

He also added that the identification of new sites for additional EDCA "Agreed Locations" is actually long overdue. Meanwhile, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) shared that projects under EDCA are being prioritized and funded by the US side.

"To date, the United States has allotted and committed a total of USD82.68 million to complete all of these projects," DFA Secretary Enrique A. Manalo said during the Senate Committee Hearing on Foreign Relations on March 1.

"These new EDCA locations will allow more rapid response for humanitarian and climate-related disasters in the Philippines, as well as respond to other shared challenges," he added.

Galvez also noted that undertaking projects under EDCA is one of the DND and AFP’s various efforts to prepare for contingencies in the domestic and regional spheres.

These include responding to natural disasters and calamities, evacuating Filipino citizens in the region whenever needed, undertaking search and rescue operations, and defending against invasion.

“The MDT is founded on the principle of peace and promotion of regional stability. These underpin our activities and projects under EDCA,” Galvez pointed out.

“As a nation, we renounce war as a foreign policy. However, we are committed to exhaust all available means and the resources available to us to defend our national interests,” he added.

The DND chief also emphasized that the Philippines continues to forge ties not only with the United States, but also with friends, allies and like-minded nations.

“While we are further deepening and seeking ways to modernize our long-standing alliance with the US, we are pursuing engagements with many other like-minded nations. We are hopeful for the continued support of the Filipino people in these endeavors," Galvez said.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1196528
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4 NPA rebels killed in Negros Occidental clash

From the Philippine News Agency (Mar 2, 2023): 4 NPA rebels killed in Negros Occidental clash (By Nanette Guadalquiver)



CASUALTIES. The bodies of the four New People's Army rebels who died in a clash with troops from the Philippine Army's 94th Infantry Battalion in Barangay Carabalan, Himamaylan City, Negros Occidental on Wednesday (March 1, 2023). The soldiers also recovered high-powered firearms during the clearing operation. (Photo courtesy of 3rd Infantry Division, Philippine Army)

BACOLOD CITY – The Philippine Army has declared another victory in its anti-insurgency operation in central Negros with the death of four Communist Party of the Philippines-New People's Army (CPP-NPA) rebels during an encounter in Barangay Carabalan in Himamaylan, Negros Occidental on Wednesday.

In a statement on Thursday, the 3rd Infantry Division headed by Brig. Gen. Marion Sison said the NPA "suffered a huge debacle" in the latest clash, which came five months after a series of encounters took place in the same village.

"We will not allow you to continue harming our people. Expect relentless and intensified military operations in the coming days and weeks," said Sison, stressing that government forces are determined to protect Negrenses from the atrocities of the NPA.

On Wednesday morning, troops of the 94th Infantry Battalion (94IB) engaged around 20 communist rebels in a 20-minute firefight, which injured a soldier and claimed the lives of four NPA fighters, who were not yet identified as of Thursday afternoon.

The troops responded to the reported presence of armed men who were asking for food and supplies from the villagers.

During the clearing operation, the troops recovered two M16 rifles attached to M203 grenade launchers, two AK47 assault rifles, a hand grenade, four rounds of M203 grenade launcher ammunition, four M16 magazines, seven AK47 magazines, and assorted ammunition.


Other items included backpacks, a compass, two flashlights, food items, personal belongings, subversive documents and a stack of extortion letters.

"We laud the collaboration of the 94IB with the local populace that resulted in a major setback for the CPP-NPA in Negros," Sison said.

He urged the remaining NPA rebels to surrender peacefully.

"Regain your future and avoid death like what happened to your comrades during an encounter in Barangay Carabalan," he added.

The clash displaced at least 181 families in five sitios, who were evacuated to the village covered court.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1196455
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OVERVIEW: Retired soldier/civilian analyst - Vietnam veteran- Southeast Asia specialist - Spent some time in Vietnam, Europe, the Middle East, Korea, and the Philippines - Now old and long-retired - Enjoying the good life - Blog helps to keep me mentally active
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