Key Philippine Military and Insurgency-Related Events

By Retired Analyst

Saturday, March 11, 2023

China Ships Still Operating Near Pag-asa, Says Philippine Coast Guard

 Posted to the US Naval Institute News (Mar 11, 2023): China Ships Still Operating Near Pag-asa, Says Philippine Coast Guard (By: Dzirhan Mahadzir)



A China Coast Guard cutter off the coast of Pag-asa Island on March 3, 2023. Philippine Coast Guard Photo

China reduced the number of ships off the disputed Spratly Islands archipelago Pag-asa, according to officials in the Philippines said this week.

A Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA) flight showed fewer Chinese Maritime Militia ships around the island internationally known as Thitu island compared to the previous week, according to a Friday release. There is also a People’s Liberation Army Navy ship operating nearby – a Type 056 Jiangdao-class corvette.

“The PCG noted a decrease in the number of suspected CMM vessels observed over Pag-asa – from forty-two (42) last week to fifteen (15) on 09 March 2023,” according to the release, which added that the Jiangdao class corvette and China Coast Guard (CGC) ship 5203 continue to loiter within Pag-asa Island’s 12-nautical mile territorial sea since last week.

The PCG flight also observed CCG ship 5304 approximately six nautical miles from the grounded Philippine Navy landing ship tank BRP Sierra Madre (LT-57), near Ayungin Shoal, also called Second Thomas Shoal internationally.

Former USS Harnett County (LST-821), which operated in the U.S Navy from World War II to the Vietnam War, before transferring to the Republic of South Vietnam Navy in 1970. It arrived in the Philippines in 1975 following the republic’s fall and subsequently was transferred to the Philippine Navy in 1976. Sierra Madre was deliberately grounded at the shoal in 1999 by the Philippines to stake its claim to the shoal and to serve as an outpost there that is manned by a garrison of a dozen Philippine Marines.

Chinese Maritime Militia vessels were down to 17 compared to 26 observed at Sabrine Shoal – also known as Escoda Schoal – two weeks ago, according to the release, which also stated that during the flight, the PCG flight received a total of seven radio challenges from the CCG vessels: four challenges while over Pag-asa Island’s territorial sea and three while over the vicinity of Ayungin Shoal. The release did not state which aircraft type conducted the MDA flight. The PCG operates two Britten-Norman BN-2 Islanders and a single Cessna 208 Caravan in its wing inventory. The flight also embarked a small number of Philippine and foreign media, Reuters reported.

China, along with Taiwan and Vietnam, does not recognize Philippine sovereignty over Manila’s holdings in the Spratlys as all three nations claim the archipelago in its entirety. China foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said in a Friday press conference that China has sovereignty over the Spratlys and its adjacent waters and thus it was reasonable and legal for it to carry out activities in waters under China’s jurisdiction, according to Reuters.

Australia, Japan and the United States conducted the Trilateral ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance) Exchange at Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, Honshu, from Monday to Wednesday, according to releases from the Japan Maritime Self Defense Force (JMSDF) and Japan Air Self Defense Force (JASDF).

The exercise involved a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) P-8A Poseidon Maritime Patrol Aircraft, (MPA) a JMSDF EP-3 Electronic Intelligence (ELINT) aircraft, a JMSDF OP-3C reconnaissance aircraft, a JASDF RC-2 ELINT aircraft and a United States Air Force RC-135 electronic and signal intelligence aircraft. The exercise enabled the exchange of information, improved tactical capabilities and interoperability among participants, according to the release.

The JMSDF aircraft were part of JMSDF Fleet Air Wing 31 stationed at MCAS Iwakuni while the RAAF P-8A has been operating from Kadena airbase, Okinawa, since early February under Operation Argos, the Australian Defence Forces (ADF) commitment to the international effort to enforce United Nations Security Council sanctions on North Korea. The RAAF P-8A has been conducting surveillance and monitoring missions on ships suspected to be operating in breach of these sanctions with its deployment to end in early March.

On Thursday, the JMSDF issued a release stating that a JMSDF EP-3 ELINT aircraft from Fleet Air Wing 31 conducted Despatched Electromagnetic Maneuver Warfare Training and a bilateral exercise with U.S Navy EP-3E ELINT aircraft and EA-18G Growler electronic warfare aircraft at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, Washington state, from Feb. 24 until Tuesday. The JMSDF routinely dispatches its ships, submarines and aircraft to conduct bilateral, specialized training in the United States with the most recent notable instance being in November last year when two JMSDF destroyers conducted Ballistic Missile Defence missile firings.

https://news.usni.org/2023/03/11/china-ships-still-operating-near-pag-asa-says-philippine-coast-guard
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Philippines: Elite Troops Deployed To Central Island Following Killings

Posted to the Eurasian Review (Mar 11, 2023): Philippines: Elite Troops Deployed To Central Island Following Killings (By Camille Elemia, BenarNews)



Members of the Philippines Light Reaction Company. Photo Credit: Philippine Army, Wikipedia Commons

Responding to an order from the president, the Philippine military has deployed a counterterrorism unit to combat criminality on the island of Negros following the killing of a provincial governor last week, officials said Friday.

Fifty troops from the Light Reaction Company, the Philippine Army’s premier counterterrorism unit, were deployed to hunt suspects in the shooting of Negros Oriental Gov. Roel Degamo. The same unit was deployed in 2017 to aid in the defeat of Islamic State-linked rebels who occupied the city of Marawi in the southern Philippines.

“President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. gave his instruction to me last night to suppress criminal activities and impunity in the entire island of Negros and give justice to the families and loved ones of those who were slain … and restore normalcy and confidence of the people in the area,” Defense Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. told reporters during a Friday briefing.

Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla said the department was looking into at least 10 reports of killings in Negros Oriental, adding there was an apparent “pattern of immunity.”

“I think that a lot of people are coming out with information about past cases, but we have to process them properly. We have to look at the evidence. We have to look at the statements. But we’ll look at them one by one,” Remulla told reporters during a separate interview on Friday.

At least three suspects in custody for Degamo’s killing were dishonorably discharged from the army, Remulla said, adding that law enforcers are seeking more than a dozen additional suspects. The attack killed a total of nine people and injured 17 others.
‘Gun-for-hire’

Degamo was meeting with local people at his official residence on March 4 when a group of about 10 armed men clad in battle gear arrived, demanding to speak with him and then opening fire on people inside the compound. Degamo was rushed to a hospital but died hours later.

Galvez said the elite unit was needed because of this and other “emerging cases.” He said many local government officials and residents had spoken up about other crimes in the province when Marcos attended Degamo’s wake on Wednesday.

“The president wants to completely eliminate the threat from the gun-for-hire [scheme] that we saw has existed in Negros Oriental for a long time,” Galvez said.

Following the killing, Negros Oriental Rep. Arnolfo Teves Jr., a political rival of Degamo, claimed his followers had no involvement in the attack. In a Facebook video posted on March 6, Teves said he expected that he and his brother would be blamed.

Degamo assumed the governorship after a recount unseated his rival, Pryde Henry Teves, who had been declared the victor following a contentious election in June 2022, according to AFP.

“In all crimes, the investigator or police first look for who is most likely, has a motive or has something to gain from the incident,” Teves said in the post.

“What would be the motive if I carried it out now? Neither I nor my brother would be the beneficiaries because it’s the vice governor who will take over,” Teves said.

Meanwhile, House Speaker Martin Romualdez called on Teves, who is vacationing in the United States, to return to the Philippines “as soon as possible,” adding that government authorization for his travel outside the country expired on Thursday.

Teves faces a murder complaint in relation to at least three killings in the province in 2019. On Friday, the Philippine National Police-Criminal Investigation and Detection Group raided Teves’ properties in a search for firearms.

[BenarNews’ mission is to provide readers with accurate news and information that reflects the complex and ever-changing world around them. With homepages in Bengali, Thai, Bahasa Malaysia, Bahasa Indonesia and English, BenarNews brings timely news to its diverse audience. Copyright BenarNews. Used with the permission of BenarNews]

https://www.eurasiareview.com/11032023-philippines-elite-troops-deployed-to-central-island-following-killings/
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AFP taps '2 brigades, 6 battalions' in serving warrants to Degamo slay suspects

From the Philippine Star (Mar 11, 2023): AFP taps '2 brigades, 6 battalions' in serving warrants to Degamo slay suspects (By James Relativo)



Photo shows the firearm of an officer guarding the wake of Degamo in Dumaguete City.
PTV4


MANILA, Philippines — Orders have already been sent out to the military to form a task force to aid the Philippine National Police in serving warrants against various suspects to the assassination of Negros Oriental Gov. Roel Degamo, according to the Department of National Defense.

The governor died from gunshots last Saturday while tending to beneficiaries of the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program in his residence in the town of Pamplona, an ambush carried out after a series of fatal violence against government officials early into 2023.


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Negros Oriental governor killed while tending to 4Ps beneficiaries


AFP vows intensified monitoring of soldiers engaged in crimes after Degamo killing


Rep. Teves, tagged in Degamo slay, urged to return from travel, address allegations


"The Armed Forces of the Philippines has been tasked to organize two brigades and six battalions to work with the PNP in carrying out the president's order and serve warrants for the crimes relating to the death of our beloved Gov. Degamo," said Defense Secretary Carlito Galvez during the wake of Degamo today.

"The instruction of the president to me is very clear. One, to get all the 10 suspects. Two, to sever all the tentacles of violence here in Negros. And as I have said, there is always time for reckoning. And this day is a day of reckoning."


A "Congressman Teves" was earlier implicated by two alleged suspects as the mastermind behind the killing. While not explicitly stated, former Gov. Pryde Henry Teves was known to be a political rival of Degamo. He has a brother who is currently holding a position in legislature: Negros Oriental 3rd District Rep. Arnolfo Teves Jr.

Arnolfo's houses were raided last Friday by the PNP-Criminal Investigation and Detection Group by virtue of a search warrant, wherein various illgal firearms and explosives were allegedly seized.

The Defense official says that they are now endeavoring the safety of Degamo's family alongside witnesses to the bloody crime.

"The president is very firm in his guidance to solve the case as soon as possible and bring these lawless elements to justice," continued Galvez.
Additional forces 'to ensure peace'

AFP chief of staff Gen. Andres Centino alayed the fears of the public who are warry of possible militarization with respect to the increase of troops in their region. He says that they're only there to keep people safe.

"The deployment of our forces is to assudae the people of Negros that the government is here, it's working and making sure that peace and order will prevail in this part of the country," he explained.

It could be noted that some of the suspects tagged in the case were former military officials who went AWOL (absent without official leave), including: Joven Javier, Joric Labrador and Benjie Rodriguez.

AFP spokesperson Col. Medel Aguilar earlier said that the military is already intensifying the monitoring of government troops who end up engaging in crimes.

"It's really unfortunate, but the [AFP] has already explained. Some of the suspects called are mga dating sundalo who were actually dishonorably discharged years ago," Centino added.

"We have a program to make sure that our current soldiers are trained... Our soldiers right now will have this real appreciation of the value of life."

The AFP official claims that no special treatment would be extended to their former brothers in arms and that "[t]he full course of the law will be applied to them just like any other criminal."
Teves asked to come home

House Speaker Martin Romualdez last Friday called on Rep. Teves to return to the Philippines since his travel clearance to America have already expired last Thursday.

According to Romualdez, Teves should use this opportunity to answer allegations regarding the death of the local official.

"It’s better for Cong. Arnie to come home so that he can face allegations against his family related to the death of Gov. Roel Degamo," he said.

It's not yet clear if repercussions would be lodged regarding the solon's extended stay overseas.

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2023/03/11/2250936/afp-taps-2-brigades-6-battalions-serving-warrants-degamo-slay-suspects

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The Philippines campaign to draw attention to Chinese activities

Posted to Modern Diplomacy (Mar 11, 2023): The Philippines campaign to draw attention to Chinese activities (By Anuj Dhyani)



As reported by a Philippine official on Wednesday, the Philippine coast guard has begun a strategy of publicising aggressive actions by China in the disputed South China Sea. This strategy has countered Chinese propaganda and sparked international condemnation, which has put Beijing in the spotlight.

A Chinese coast guard ship aimed a military-grade laser at a Philippine patrol boat off a disputed reef on February 6, temporarily blinding some crew members for a few seconds. Since then, Manila’s coast guard has increased patrols in the disputed waters and made extra efforts to document and publicise assertive Chinese behaviour in the strategic waterway. It caused concern in the Philippines, the United States, and other Western nations when the coast guard objected and published a video of the event. To address the long-simmering territorial disputes in the South China Sea, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. called in China’s ambassador to Manila and announced that the country’s military would shift its focus from fighting Muslim and communist insurgents and other internal threats to external defence.

Coast Guard Commodore Jay Tarriela said, “I would like to emphasise that the best way to address Chinese ‘grey zone’ activities in the West Philippine Sea is to expose it.” The Commodore was referring to China’s use of ostensibly civilian fishing and research vessels to perform military tasks in order to avoid a military response from rival claimant states. Tarriela referred to the area of the South China Sea along the Philippines’ western coast by its Native name. There was a meeting in Manila where he discussed China’s “grey zone” activities in the contested waters. Because of the Filipino coast guard’s efforts to speak out against Chinese aggression, “like-minded governments may voice censure and reprimand, which puts Beijing in the limelight,” he added. Chinese covert operations are being monitored, forcing the Chinese to either come clean or openly lie. Manila’s fury over the laser-pointing event, according to Tarriela, spurred China to issue statements and have its envoy to Manila address the media. Chinese authorities said the Filipino patrol vessel had illegally entered Chinese waters, and that the Chinese coast guard had responded “professionally and with moderation” by using a harmless laser to follow the path of the Philippine vessel. “We can once again influence public opinion to assess things objectively based on facts and not just propaganda,” Tarriela added, referring to the release of unedited coast guard tapes and images of such Chinese operations. China’s “dangerous operational conduct directly affects regional peace and stability” and “undermines the rules-based international order,” the U.S. State Department said in response to the incident. It reaffirmed its earlier threat to protect the Philippines, a treaty partner, if Philippine military personnel, planes, or ships were attacked in the South China Sea. Former U.S. Air Force colonel Raymond Powell, an expert on Chinese military tactics, has praised the Philippine coast guard for publicising China’s actions in the South China Sea but has warned that the Philippine government will face pressure from China to “stop making so much trouble, stop releasing things.”

Since China lays claim to so much of the South China Sea, it is in direct conflict with countries like the Philippines, Vietnam, and Malaysia. The difficulties have remained despite the visits to Beijing by former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte and his successor, Marcos Jr., who met with President Xi Jinping in January.

https://moderndiplomacy.eu/2023/03/11/the-philippines-campaign-to-draw-attention-to-chinese-activities/
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The ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict: Impact on Southeast Asia

From the Observer Research Foundation (Mar 11, 2023): The ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict: Impact on Southeast Asia (By PREMESHA SAHA)

The disruptions in the supply of key commodities have affected the geographically-distant economies of Southeast Asia



The Ukraine conflict questions the very notions of a rules-based international order, respect for territorial sovereignty of other countries, and the core principles which underline the concept of a Free and Open Indo-Pacific region. The ongoing conflict for a year now has had an impact even on regions like Southeast Asia, which are ‘geographically distant’.

The increase in energy and food prices which have impacted the daily lives of people has raised concerns among the masses in the region
Economic impact

This region has mostly faced economic repercussions primarily due to the sanctions that have been imposed by countries like the United States (US), Europe, Japan, Australia, and others. Though both Moscow and Ukraine do not have a strong economic presence in the region as is reflected in the trade figures, with Russia contributing around 0.64 percent of global trade with the region and Ukraine only 0.11 percent, some analysts have cautioned that “a protracted conflict that hurts the European Union will have spillover effects in Southeast Asia as well, hitting everything from trade to tourism.” Malaysia’s Maybank issued a statement highlighting, “A broader Europe downturn will have larger knock-on effects on ASEAN’s exports, foreign direct investment, and growth. The European Union accounts for a substantial 9 percent of ASEAN exports, and more than 11 percent for Vietnam and the Philippines. It added that foreign direct investment from the EU makes up 11 percent of ASEAN’s total.”

The most visible impact can be seen in inflation due to the fast increase in the costs of oil and gas right after the outbreak of the war. Besides this, Russia and Ukraine are the key exporters of agricultural products, food grains, and critical minerals required for semiconductors. Some analysts have pointed out, “considering Russia’s and Ukraine’s roles as major wheat exporters and Ukraine’s position as a major player in corn, Indonesia and the Philippines would be vulnerable to wheat supply shocks and Vietnam exposed to corn disruptions.” For instance, in recent years, Vietnam has imported nearly US$1.5 billion worth of fertiliser, iron and steel, coal, and agricultural products from Russia and Ukraine. Therefore, some banks in Southeast Asia, like DBS Singapore have warned about “direct risks from specific commodity dependencies.” Likewise, in Thailand, there has been a constant increase in producer and consumer price inflation for the rise in commodity prices. Vietnam has faced instances of oil shortage and incidents of petrol hoarding have also been reported which is further escalating the price.

Impact on Russia’s arms sales to Southeast Asia

Moscow had been one of the leading arms exporters in the region, particularly to Vietnam. But a shift and the desire to diversify their arms imports from India, the United States (US), Israel, among others, is clearly visible. This is not solely for the ongoing war but also for reasons like the United States’ Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA), which threatens penalties against countries that buy weapons from Moscow. But according to some scholars, there have been growing concerns about “the poor performance of Russian weaponry in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, over the quality and effectiveness of Russian weapons” even in countries like Vietnam. Many countries in Southeast Asia have already cancelled deals for purchasing of Russian arms. Indonesia, for instance, cancelled a planned purchase of SU-35 fighter jets worth US$1.14 billion and the Philippines withdrew from a US$250 million contract to acquire MI-171 military helicopters. Vietnam, meanwhile, has paused new arms purchases, partly due to a domestic anti-corruption crackdown, but also because Hanoi is increasingly concerned about Moscow’s ability to fulfil orders amid international sanctions. Still, scholars like, Richard A. Bitzinger, Visiting Senior Fellow with the Military Transformations Programme at the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies (IDSS), S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS) are of the opinion, “Southeast Asian nations may find it hard to resist the appeal of Russian arms deals, which often come without political strings and with innovative payment schemes.”

The ASEAN’s response to the conflict

In the wake of the conflict, barring Singapore, most of the Southeast Asian countries did have a very strong reaction to the crisis. Even the ASEAN issued a statement on 26 February 2022, which did not condemn Russia or even mention Russia, but just read that “all relevant parties to exercise maximum restraint”. However, with the conflict still dragging for a year now, some events do show that the ASEAN member countries are also moving away from a purely diplomatic stand and taking stronger positions. The first instance was seen during the 40th and 41st ASEAN Summit held in Phnom Penh from 10 to 13 November, 2022, with Ukraine’s accession to the Treaty of Amity and Cooperation in Southeast Asia (TAC). Scholars like Hoang Thi Ha Senior Fellow and Co-coordinator of the Regional Strategic and Political Studies Programme at the ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore and William Choong, Senior Fellow at the ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute are of the opinion that, “the signing ceremony at the November 2022 ASEAN summit carried strong symbolism since the TAC—to which Russia is also a party—enshrines the cardinal principles of respect for territorial integrity, national sovereignty and non-use of force.” Similarly, Indonesia, during its G20 presidency in 2022 at the G20 Bali Summit invited Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky to deliver his virtual address and put together a strong statement by quoting the UNGA resolution that “deplores in the strongest terms the aggression by the Russian Federation against Ukraine and demands its complete and unconditional withdrawal from the territory of Ukraine”. This was a big step considering both China and Russia are a part of the G20. These incidents are reflective of a shift in the thinking of the Southeast countries, but the official position of the ASEAN remains the same.
Growing concerns about regional security

The Russia-Ukraine war has brought to the fore the reality that an attack and invasion of a country’s sovereign territory is a very real possibility. There are growing concerns about the chances of a regional conflict—over competing claims in the South China Sea or involving a spillover from a Chinese invasion of Taiwan. The statement by Singapore’s Prime Minister, Lee Hsien Loong, “If we regress to a world where ‘might is right’, small states would find it impossible to survive” and also the Japanese Prime Minister, Fumio Kishida, “The usurping of the status quo in Ukraine could breed new dynamics to the usurping of the status quo in East Asia, be it over the South China Sea, Taiwan and the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands” is reflective of this.

There are growing concerns about the chances of a regional conflict—over competing claims in the South China Sea or involving a spillover from a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.

The Russia-Ukraine conflict is no longer being viewed as a ‘remote conflict’, which will not have much of an impact on geographically distant Southeast Asia. The increase in energy and food prices which have impacted the daily lives of people has raised concerns among the masses in the region. The desire to diversify the imports of arms from countries such as India, US, Israel, cancelling of planned deals for arms purchases and strong stands as well as measures in organisations like the ASEAN and G20 does show that there is a growing realisation that the soft stand taken in the initial stages of the conflict need to change.

https://www.orfonline.org/expert-speak/the-ongoing-russia-ukraine-conflict-impact-on-southeast-asia/
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    China’s neighbors seek expanded partnerships with US to deter, defend

    Posted to Defense News (Mar 10, 2023): China’s neighbors seek expanded partnerships with US to deter, defend (By Joe Gould)

    WASHINGTON ― The Chinese Coast Guard ship made its presence known.

    First, the ship sped near the Philippine patrol vessel Malapascua close to the Second Thomas Shoal, a submerged reef in the hotly contested South China Sea. Then, it allegedly came within 150 yards, blocking the Philippine ship’s path in what government officials later described as “dangerous maneuvers,” before the Chinese crew pointed what Manila called a green “military grade” laser at some of the Philippine crew, temporarily blinding them.


    China denied it was operating unsafely, but Philippine officials were unassuaged. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. summoned Chinese Ambassador Huang Xilian to express “serious concern.”

    In the days before the alleged Feb. 6 incident, the United States and the Philippines had announced an expansion of their 2014 Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement. Instead of periodic access for U.S. forces to five Philippine installations, they will have access to nine. The U.S. Navy’s top admiral has since offered Manila a chance for joint patrols: Philippine vessels cruising side by side with their American allies in the face of Chinese coercion.



    The Philippines has accused China of using a green, military-grade laser at sea that allegedly blinding some Philippine Coast Guard crew members. (Philippine Coast Guard)

    The agreement marked a striking reversal from Manila’s flirtation with ending most military cooperation with the U.S., as it sought to balance relations with Washington and Beijing. It capped a wave of personal diplomacy, in which Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin visited the Philippines in 2021, President Joe Biden called Marcos to congratulate him on his election and Vice President Kamala Harris visited Manila in November.

    And now the newly strengthened defense relationship was on full display. Austin called his counterpart days after the reported incident to reiterate that “an armed attack on Philippine armed forces, aircraft, and public vessels, including those of its Coast Guard, anywhere in the South China Sea, would invoke U.S. mutual defense commitments,” according to an official readout.


    The Pentagon’s efforts to improve U.S. force posture in the Pacific have yielded a flurry of major agreements in recent months, with allies motivated by China’s aggressive behavior to embrace the U.S. With new arrangements, the Pentagon aims to spread what it calls “combat credible” forces closer to Taiwan as a way to deter China from invading the island and ― if deterrence fails ― win any resulting fight.

    The U.S. military’s problem is that heavy concentrations of its forces in Northeast Asia ― 50,000 in Japan and 28,000 in South Korea ― offer fat targets for China’s long-range missiles, which can reach areas as far away as Guam. Shifting to smaller, more distributed groupings not only complicates Chinese targeting, but increases the presence of U.S. troops in the arc of islands east of Taiwan. China considers Taiwan a rogue province, and has threatened to take it back by force if necessary.

    In early December, Ely Ratner, the assistant secretary of defense for Indo-Pacific security affairs, publicly pledged that 2023 would be a “transformative” year for U.S. force posture in the Pacific, and in the eight weeks that followed, the Pentagon made good with moves Ratner has said “will make our forward posture more distributed, resilient and lethal.”

    Beyond increasing access to sites in the Philippines, the U.S. military is transforming a Marine regiment in Japan into a quick-reaction force. At the same time, Australia rotations for U.S. Air Force bomber task forces and fighters are due to increase this year, in addition to newer Army and Navy rotations there. Australia is also expected to agree to host U.S. submarines when it announces March 13 the type of nuclear-propelled submarine it will obtain.

    With tension over Taiwan escalating in recent years, amid Chinese military flights near the territory and controversial visits by U.S. politicians, the Biden administration has pushed for deeper ties in the region. Three months after Ratner forecast the new arrangements, he said on March 2 that “it’s already been really a breakthrough year for U.S. alliances and partnerships in the Indo-Pacific.”



    Chinese fighter jets conduct drills around Taiwan on Aug. 7, 2022. (Gong Yulong/Xinhua via AP)

    “The story of the U.S. position in the region, the degree to which we are deepening our partnerships with our allies and partners, the degree to which they’re investing in their own capabilities, their ability to contribute to regional security and the degree which they’re working with with each other is really cause for optimism,” Ratner said in at event sponsored by the Hudson Institute, a conservative think tank. “It is creating a more stable and enduring security environment, even as these challenges from [China] become more intense.”

    Avoiding a conflict with China over Taiwan before the end of the decade is “doable,” Ratner added. “It’s going to be really hard, but I think we’re getting after it with urgency, but also with confidence that we can do it.”

    A change of pace in Manila

    The Philippines is a case that might give a defense watcher whiplash.

    In 2020, then-Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte announced plans to cancel Manila’s 1999 agreement to allow U.S. forces to visit, but he reversed course when Austin visited in June 2021 following a series of incidents that included a standoff with China over the contested Whitsun Reef. Fast forward to Austin’s visit with Marcos in February, where the two nations agreed to expand U.S. military presence there with access to four more bases.

    The Philippines has long been a target of China’s maritime coercion in the resource-rich, busy South China Sea. There, China, the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Taiwan are among the countries involved in a tense, decades-long territorial impasse.

    It’s unclear how a greater American presence will impact that dynamic. But the U.S. and the Philippines are planning high-level talks this spring to clarify the locations of the newly accessible sites — potentially in the northern Philippines, near Taiwan and the South China Sea. (The 2014 Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement, or EDCA, authorizes U.S. military use of Philippine sites, but rules out permanent basing.)

    The Philippine government said it earmarked $66.5 million to construct facilities for training, storage and more. Further infrastructure improvements, including airfield repairs and pre-positioned fuel supplies, are on the table.

    “U.S. access to Philippine bases will offer a new level of training, exercises and interoperability between forces to modernize and develop the Philippines military ― to enable us to respond to events more quickly,” Ratner told Defense News. “Meetings in the spring will afford an opportunity to clarify which airfields may need repairs or be suitable for pre-positioned equipment so that we can respond to contingencies in the South China Sea or conduct joint disaster relief missions.”

    Stacie Pettyjohn, director of the defense program at the Center for a New American Security think tank, said that because the existing sites have languished, it’s unlikely that, without more investments, the runways or aprons are strong enough to support fully loaded U.S. fighters or bombers. The two countries also may be considering modest locations from where U.S. Marine or Army forces could operate surveillance drones or launch less expensive, mobile missiles.

    There are several questions involved in the site selection process, according to Pettyjohn: “Is it a mountainous area? What can it range from that place, and can they actually reach the targets the U.S. wants to be able to hold at risk or that they want to be surveilling if they have unmanned or manned aircraft conducting surveillance in that area?”

    U.S. Army Secretary Christine Wormuth said she’s hopeful the Philippines, alongside Australia, Guam and Japan, will host logistics hubs for pre-positioned fuel and other supplies the Army wants to bring to the region. The service’s role in a Pacific fight would be to furnish the joint force with long-range fires, as well as secure staging sites and communications.

    “The folks in the Philippines have expanded the EDCA sites because of their concerns about what they see [China] doing,” Wormuth said at a Feb. 28 event in Washington. “I would like to see us continue to have wins like those four new sites. Our job in the Army certainly is to just be as ready as we can to take advantage of those agreements when they get signed.”

    U.S. Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Michael Gilday said in a Feb. 22 visit to Manila the U.S. is “committed” to joint maritime patrols with the country in the South China Sea, and that details will likely emerge from broader bilateral talks.

    In the meantime, the U.S., the Philippines and Australia plan to show off their strengthened ties with a bigger version of the joint Balikatan exercise, set for April. Last year’s exercise with the U.S. and the Philippines was billed as the largest since 2015, with a combined 8,900 troops.

    “You’re going to see an increase with respect to the numbers. I think you’re going to see an increase with respect to the joint mix of capabilities that we bring together this time in Balikatan,” Gilday told reporters, adding that the drill “would provide a very powerful optic of assurance.”
    Watching Taiwan from Japan

    When the Chinese military’s large-scale drills near Taiwan last August managed to send some missiles into the waters of Japan’s exclusive economic zone, Japan saw it as a warning. And it reacted.

    In January, Washington and Tokyo announced a new U.S. Marine quick-reaction force on Okinawa and unveiled plans to deepen military cooperation on Japan’s other southwest islands near Taiwan. The Okinawa-based 12th Marine Regiment, an artillery unit, will become the 12th Marine Littoral Regiment ― with advanced intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, anti-ship and transportation capabilities.

    Japan has also announced it will acquire new counterstrike capabilities and raise defense spending to 2% of its gross domestic product, which would total about 43 trillion yen (U.S. $315 billion) through 2027. This marks a dramatic change for a nation that forged a pacifist approach to its defense after World War II and historically kept defense spending below 1% of its GDP.

    Japan wants to buy American-made Tomahawk cruise missiles and Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missiles that can reach potential targets in China ― and extend the range of its Type 12 land-based anti-ship missile. Tokyo also announced plans to buy all 400 of the Raytheon Technologies-made Tomahawks it is seeking from the U.S. at once this year, rather than over several years as initially planned.



    The U.S. Navy submarine Annapolis and aircraft carrier Ronald Reagan participate in an antisubmarine exercise with South Korea and Japan in waters between the two countries on Sept. 30, 2022. (South Korean Defense Ministry via Getty Images)

    The U.S. and Japan also agreed to the shared use of U.S. facilities on Okinawa. Marine officials say the littoral regiment will bolster the U.S. presence beyond Okinawa, into the first island chain, which stretches from Japan’s East China Sea islands through the Philippines.

    Japan may use Okinawa as it adds bases, radars and air defense units on its chain of southwestern islands, which extend from Japan’s largest island to Yonaguni, which is 70 miles east of Taiwan. The deal also opened up these islands for joint training ― offering U.S. forces a greater familiarity with the terrain on which they’d operate in a confrontation over Taiwan.

    “These islands are proximate to where the [Taiwan] conflict would be playing out, and in concept at least they would allow these small [American] units to place Chinese naval assets at risk,” said Christopher Johnstone, a former White House director for East Asia who is now with the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank. “The idea of this distributed presence with self-reliant comms, ISR capabilities and weapons has a pretty strong logic if it plays out according to concept.”

    Marine littoral regiments are designed with stealth, speed and military prowess in mind. From beaches and straits throughout the region, they’d have naval strike missiles with 100-mile ranges capable of conducting anti-ship strikes or gaining sea control with just the threat of being able to target enemy ships.

    “Having the [Marine littoral regiment] outfitted with anti-ship cruise missiles would allow them to really go after a potential Chinese invasion fleet, if China were to launch an amphibious invasion of Taiwan,” said Becca Wasser, who leads the Center for a New American Security’s gaming lab. “In line with the Marine Corps concept of stand-in forces, the Marines are supposed to be able to conduct sea-denial [missions] and be able to bottle up Chinese forces to ensure they don’t go outside the first island chain.”

    Marine littoral regiments are also designed to use MQ-9A Reaper drones for extended-range intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance ― sensing what’s happening in the region and passing those findings to joint force commanders in the theater or directly to Marines with the anti-ship missiles to take immediate action.

    According to a Marine Corps spokesman, Marine Corps Air Station at Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, will be home to two General Atomics-made Reapers later this year, and six by fiscal 2025 ― replacing the smaller Boeing Insitu RQ-21 Blackjack.

    A new squadron on base and activated in January, Marine Aerial Refueler Transport Squadron 153 will this year absorb the first of six KC-130J tankers. The aerial refueling aircraft are meant to allow more Hawaii-based Marines to move throughout the vast region in the event of a crisis.

    Speaking at the West naval conference in February, the assistant commandant of the Marine Corps, Gen. Eric Smith, teased that the Reapers and refueling aircraft were just two on a “laundry list” of U.S. military moves in the Pacific that “gets a lot longer and a lot sexier” at the classified level.



    A Canadian service member rappels down the side of a ship during an exercise with the naval forces of Canada, Japan, Australia and the United States. (LSIS Bradley Darvill/Royal Australian Navy)
    Australian modernization

    Australia is expected to announce this month how it will acquire a fleet of submarines powered with U.S. nuclear technology as part of the trilateral AUKUS pact. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese recently called the program “the single biggest leap in our defense capability in our history.”

    Options to replace the Australian-built Collins-class diesel-electric submarines that went into service more than 20 years ago include a next-generation U.S. Virginia-class sub, a British Astute-class boat or a new hybrid design.

    But whatever the decision, Australia is also expected to host new rotations of U.S. nuclear-powered submarines as it begins a long ramp-up to 2040, when the plans call for the boats to arrive. That would give Australia’s naval personnel a chance to acclimate themselves to operating and maintaining the complex submarines.

    “The rotation issue, I would be shocked if that’s not openly discussed in the next couple of weeks,” Connecticut Rep. Joe Courtney, the top Democrat on the House Seapower and Projection Forces Subcommittee, said during a March 3 interview.

    Eric Sayers, a former staffer for U.S. Indo-Pacific Command during the Trump administration, said he also expects U.S. and U.K. naval nuclear power schools to welcome Australians, who will “have to get on our nuclear submarines, deploy and learn.”

    “It’s already going to be a long pathway to deliver this capability; it’s better to start that training now,” Sayers said.

    Also likely, according to Pettyjohn, is that the Pentagon acquires rotational basing for its ships and submarines in locations like Perth, the Western Australian city that houses Australia’s Collins fleet. By her thinking, the U.S. could seek to build Australia-based stockpiles of missiles for its ships and submarines with vertical launching systems, especially if the Pacific ally operates the same kinds of munitions.

    Amid criticism that Australia’s lack of nuclear expertise will leave it heavily reliant on nuclear-armed partners, Austin has vowed Australia will not face a capability gap as it waits for nuclear-powered subs. Without disclosing details, the defense secretary also pledged to increase U.S. rotations of bomber task forces and fighters in Australia in addition to bolstering Army and Navy rotations there.

    The moves in 2023 dovetail with rotations in 2021 of F-22, B-2 and B-1 aircraft, and with fuel, runway and ordnance storage infrastructure projects underway at the Darwin and Tindal airfields in Australia’s Northwest Territory. The U.S. spent millions of dollars in recent years to build ramps and storage for munitions and fuel so that, in a crisis, American refueling aircraft could use Darwin and bombers could use Tindal.

    Last year, the U.S. announced plans to accommodate up to six nuclear-capable B-52 bombers by upgrading facilities at Tindal by 2027. The project, expected to cost as much as $100 million, would build a new concrete apron and squadron operations facilities as a means to better host bombers, tankers and fighters.

    “We’re building physical bases in places like Japan and Guam, but we’re also building infrastructure that we could quickly fall in on, that has what we need to scale up quickly ― in the Philippines and northern Australia,” Sayers said. “Some of these things are permanent for a heavier presence, while others are lighter so that we can go there if we need to.”
    Military construction

    Defense experts and at least one key lawmaker believe the recent moves are positive steps, but that the U.S. must make more investments in military construction. Budget watchers will be looking at the Pentagon’s military construction budget, known as MILCON, and the separate Pacific Deterrence Initiative for new proposals.

    “If we’re going to be serious about pre-positioning Marine Corps, Navy and air assets, it goes hand and glove that you’ve got to build support for it, which obviously is airfields,” Courtney said.

    A recent Center for Strategic and International Studies war game for a Chinese amphibious invasion of Taiwan highlighted the vulnerability of allied aircraft. It found that most would be destroyed on the ground as China launches missile attacks on U.S. bases in Japan and Guam.



    U.S. Army Secretary Christine Wormuth tours Hawaii’s Red Hill fuel storage facility. (Spc. Matthew Mackintosh/U.S. Army)

    Cognizant of the threat, the Air Force wants to establish a system of resilient basing that relies less on established forward bases that are well known to enemies and more on the “agile combat employment” concept of flexible satellite bases dispersed in a “hub-and-spoke” system.

    Wasser is among the experts calling for the military to invest more in passive defenses by building hardened aircraft shelters, particularly on Tinian in the Mariana Islands and on Guam, which has none.

    “Looking at some basic resiliency efforts, there are things that you need to do to create passive and active defenses on U.S. air bases,” Wasser said. “We announced these EDCA sites, but the state of the sites is unclear at the moment. All this suggests you’re going to want to see a request in MILCON or line items in [the Pacific Deterrence Initiative] for base resilience or infrastructure enhancement.”

    Another expense is coming as the U.S. military shuts down a major fuel storage facility — Red Hill in Hawaii — after it leaked petroleum into Pearl Harbor’s tap water last year. Because Red Hill supplied fuel for Navy jets and surface combatants, the public health disaster may also hamstring U.S. operations in the Pacific, Sayers said.

    “We basically didn’t address the issue of critical aviation and surface combatant fuel storage at this location for years. We just didn’t resource it properly,” Sayers said.

    The Red Hill underground fuel storage facility consists of 20 steel-lined underground storage tanks encased in concrete, which together could store up to 250 million gallons of fuel.

    “This fuel was not just protected, relatively safe, but huge portions of it are necessary to be able to sustain a maritime fight, not just for days, but weeks and months,” Sayers said. “We basically shut all that down without a clear plan or a budget for how we would disperse it.”

    While stateside military construction funding is popular on Capitol Hill because it provides local economic boosts, military construction overseas can be a tough sell. It remains to be seen whether the tab for these moves would be picked up by or shared with host countries ― or be small enough, given the modest footprint for the forces involved, to fall under the budgets for training and military exercises.

    Courtney predicted that a request for more military construction funding to support the plans would be “well received” by centrist Democrats and Republicans.

    “Despite the fact that maybe some people think members of Congress view MILCON as earmarks for their district, I think the drumbeat of briefings on new dispersed presence is really sinking in, and people get it,” he said.

    [Megan Eckstein, Geoff Ziezulewicz and Jen Judson contributed to this report.]

    [Joe Gould is the senior Pentagon reporter for Defense News, covering the intersection of national security policy, politics and the defense industry. He served previously as Congress reporter.]

    https://www.defensenews.com/pentagon/2023/03/10/chinas-neighbors-seek-expanded-partnerships-with-us-to-deter-defend/
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    PH Coast Guard formally requests US to help in cleaning up Mindoro oil spill: Abu

    From ABS-CBN (Mar 11, 2023): PH Coast Guard formally requests US to help in cleaning up Mindoro oil spill: Abu (By Job Manahan, ABS-CBN News)


    Members of Bantag Dagat clean up the shore affected by an oil spill in Barangay Tagumpay, Pola, Oriental Mindoro on March 2,2023. Russel Tan, Pola Oriental Mindoro Official Page

    MANILA – The Philippine Coast Guard has formally asked the help of the United States in cleaning up the oil spill off the waters in Oriental Mindoro, its chief said on Saturday.

    Coast Guard commandant Admiral Artemio Abu said a letter formalizing the request had a "generic" content.

    "Kung ano ang tulong na ibibigay nila, response equipment... and everything. Kung ano ang sa aabot ng kanilang kakayahan na maibibigay sa atin. They know it kung ano ang ating kailangan sa panahon na ito," Abu said during a media forum in Quezon City.

    READ: US, Japan, Korea willing to help in Oriental Mindoro oil spill - DENR

    "They have more experience and knowledge in this issue. It's just a matter of making known to them that we are asking assistance from them," he said.

    The Coast Guard chief said "many countries" had presented to assist the country in containing the oil spill, as they race to clean this up in less than four months. 

    READ: Gov't hopes to finish Mindoro oil spill cleanup in under 4 months

    "Sa Lunes, may ibang bansa na gustong makita ang pamunuan ng PCG to be able to extend assistance to figure out how they would be of help sa Philippine Coast Guard and the Philippine government," he said.

    They are in need of more remote-operated vehicles now that they located the oil tanker, said Abu. The PCG has these vehicles but it could not penetrate 400 meters deep where the vessel is.

    It will also help "by way of having these advanced equipment, technology, by way of getting the oil."

    The Presidential Communications Office earlier said the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) will work with the US, which is open to deploying its military for responding to the oil spill.

    READ: Gov't hopes to finish Mindoro oil spill cleanup in under 4 months

    US forces are set to participate in the Philippine-led Balikatan military exercises this year.

    The DENR added that South Korea is also open to helping the country in containing the oil spill.

    Japan has already taken part in the Philippine efforts.

    A ship sank with its cargo of 800,000 liters of industrial fuel oil on Feb. 28 as it sailed into rough seas off Naujan, Oriental Mindoro.

    The Coast Guard this week already confirmed that the oil spill has reached Caluya, Antique.

    https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/03/11/23/pcg-formally-requests-us-to-help-clean-up-mindoro-oil-spill-abu
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    Two Air Force pilots prove Filipinas can fly high

     From CNN Philippines (Mar 10, 2023): Two Air Force pilots prove Filipinas can fly high



    Metro Manila (CNN Philippines, March 10) — Two female pilots of the Philippine Air Force have proven that women can - literally - aim for the sky.

    For First Lt. Xandra Aquinde, her job makes her feel accomplished.

    "Yung females kilala sila bilang nerbiyosa...pero pagdating namin sa itaas, kumbaga, malaman po namin na isa kami sa inaasahan ng mga nasa ibaba, sobrang nakakataba ng puso na nalalaman po namin na natulungan namin sila," she told CNN Philippines' News Night.

    [Translation: Women are often stereotyped as nervous...but once we are up in the air, it touches our hearts when we know that people down there trust us and we're able to help them.]

    Aquinde followed the footsteps of her father - a retired master sergeant. It runs in the family, as her grandfather and uncle are also retired PAF members.

    For Major Xyza Anna Amar Antenor-Cruz, being a pilot shows women are equally capable in a male-dominated field.

    "Being one of those pilots, nakaka-proud na hindi natin ina-underestimate yung skills and potentials ng isang babae as a pilot," she said.

    [Translation: It makes me proud to know that they are not underestimating our skills and potentials to become a pilot.]

    Antenor-Cruz decided to enter the Philippine Military Academy after she finished her psychology degree. Among her sisters, she was the only who decided to follow their father's footsteps in the Air Force.

    Aquinde is an attack pilot and has been deployed in counterterrorism missions. Antenor-Cruz, meanwhile, has joined rescue and disaster relief operations. They are just some of the around 20 female pilots in their respective units.

    "Para sa akin isa po siyang accomplishment na makapagbigay saya ka sa mga kapwa mo Pilipino at matulungan mo sila," Aquinde said.

    [Translation: For me, it is an accomplishment to be able to give joy to fellow Filipinos and help them.]

    "Ayun yung nagpu-push or nagmo-motivate sa amin na gawin pa namin nang mas maayos yung trabaho namin, kapag nakikita namin na na-appreciate ng mga tao yung tulong na binibigay namin sa kanila," Antenor-Cruz added.

    [Translation: That's what pushes or motivates us to do our jobs well, whenever we see people appreciating the help we are providing them.]

    https://www.cnnphilippines.com/news/2023/3/10/Two-Air-Force-pilots-prove-Filipinas-can-fly-high.html
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    'Endangering peace': China warns PH over EDCA expansion plans with US

    From CNN Philippines (Mar 10, 2023): 'Endangering peace': China warns PH over EDCA expansion plans with US (By Tristan Nodalo, CNN Philippines)



    Metro Manila (CNN Philippines, March 10) — The Chinese Embassy in Manila on Friday countered the remarks made by a United States official and warned the Philippines against opening up additional sites under the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA).

    US Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Victoria Nuland earlier said putting up the new sites would create economic opportunities for the Philippines.

    She also talked about the promises made by Beijing and asked if most of these promises benefited Filipinos. This did not sit well with China.


    "Economy and trade cannot flourish without a peaceful and stable regional environment," the Chinese embassy said in a statement.

    "However, some Americans claim that the four additional military sites in the Philippines to which US forces would have access under the EDCA would bring economic 'opportunities, jobs' to their host communities, and discredit China-Philippines economic cooperation at the same time," it added.

    China said such remarks showed "total ignorance" of the Philippines' pursuit of peace and cooperation with the East Asian giant.

    The embassy added that the additional EDCA sites would only cause instability in the region.

    "Creating economic opportunities and jobs through military cooperation is tantamount to quenching thirst with poison and gouging flesh to heal wounds," the embassy said. "Such cooperation will seriously endanger regional peace and stability and drag the Philippines into the abyss of geopolitical strife and damage its economic development at the end of the day."


    US responds

    The US embassy reiterated that it remains committed to its defense ties with the Philippines.

    "The United States and the Philippines stand together as friends, partners, and allies," it said in a statement. "Now and always, the US commitment to the defense of the Philippines is ironclad, and we are committed to strengthening our economic and investment relationship."
    PH-China ties over the years

    Meanwhile, the Chinese embassy noted the cooperation between Manila and Beijing, which has been ongoing in many fronts, including infrastructure, economy, and tourism.

    "Around 40 government-to-government cooperation projects have been completed or are in progress, including Binondo-Intramuros Bridge, Davao-Samal Bridge and Chico River Pump Irrigation Project," the embassy said.

    China is also the Philippines' largest trading partner, import source, and third foreign direct investment source.

    The embassy also cited the benefits of the recent visit of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to Beijing and his meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    "Since the state visit many Chinese business delegations are coming to the Philippines, reaching extensive agreements on expanding trade and investment cooperation between the two countries, demonstrating the huge potential and broad prospects of China-Philippines practical cooperation," the embassy noted.

    https://www.cnnphilippines.com/news/2023/3/10/China-warns-Philippines-EDCA-United-States.html
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    AFP sends elite unit, creates task force in Negros after Degamo killing

    From Rappler (Mar 10, 2023): AFP sends elite unit, creates task force in Negros after Degamo killing (By SOFIA TOMACRUZ)



    An elite light reaction company, together with six battalions, will form part of the joint task force that steps up joint military and police operations

    MANILA, Philippines – The Armed Forces of the Philippines is sending an elite unit of 50 soldiers to augment forces deployed in Negros island following the killing of Negros Oriental Governor Roel Degamo.

    Defense Officer-in-Charge Senior Undersecretary Carlito Galvez Jr. and AFP Chief of Staff General Andres Centino made the announcement on Friday, March 10, saying the response stemmed from an order by President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to “suppress all forms of lawless violence and restore peace and order in Negros island as soon as possible.”

    “President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. gave his instruction to me last night to suppress the criminal activities and impunity in the entire island of Negros and to give justice to the families and loved ones of those who were slain in the assassination of Governor Roel Degamo and restore normalcy and confidence of our people,” Galvez said.


    The 50 additional troops formed part of a light reaction company, a unit of soldiers with special training in counterterrorism operations. Together with two brigades already based in the area, the groups will be part of a joint task force formed to step up joint military and police operations, Centino said.

    Other Stories: LIST: Local officials killed under Marcos gov’t
    Besides incumbent officials, several former local officials have also been killed since July 2022


    Centino said the joint task force would be headed by Brigadier General Marion Sison, commander of the 3rd Infantry Division. He will be assisted by two other brigade commanders, Brigadier General Leonardo Peña and Colonel Orlando Edralin.

    The Light Reaction Company (LRC), meanwhile, had been deployed from Cotobato.

    Asked why there was a need to deploy more forces to Negros, Galvez cited additional “cases” that had emerged and were being investigated by the government after Degamo’s killing. The Department of Justice earlier said it was looking at 10 more reports of killings in Negros Oriental.

    He also said that the AFP was reorienting troops and aiding the police, after it saw the need for stronger security presence even outside of Negros Oriental.

    “So kailangan natin talaga na ma-cordon ‘yung areas ng buong Negros island so they cannot escape from the island,” Galvez said. (So we need to cordon the area and the entire Negros island so they cannot escape from the island.)

    Centino added that the joint task force would also initiate the movement of forces and, if needed, aid in establishing checkpoints.

    “That is why it’s important that there is a task force, so there will be united command, united efforts. Also considering that, aside from those that are there already in Negros, we have additional forces to support our effort,” he said.

    Earlier this week, Marcos visited Degamo’s wake, where he once again vowed to deliver justice and accountability in the local official’s killing. Degamo’s death, the President said, was “particularly terrifying.”

    Degamo was earlier killed by heavily armed men – among them former soldiers dishonorably discharged from the Philippine Army – who barged into an aid distribution activity outside his residential compound in Pamplona town, Negros Oriental.

    Responding to the incident, the Philippine Army said it was strengthening its counter-intelligence efforts to keep track of the activities of former troops, especially those with special training.
    No state of emergency

    Asked if the government planned to declare a state of emergency or martial law in Negros, Galvez said that the “degree of the event” could not yet be considered for either.

    Actions taken were also done under the “calling out powers” of the President, Galvez said.

    “We see the ongoing criminalities in Negros below what we would call a state of lawlessness. When we had discussions on our response, it needs to be calibrated. This is not what we would describe as overkill,” Galvez said in a mix of English and Filipino.

    In an ambush interview with reporters, Centino also addressed questions on the threat level in Negros and whether an elite unit was needed to respond to these. The AFP chief said that the security situation could not yet be considered as a “state of emergency” or lawlessness, and that the deployment of an LRC was “for contingencies.”

    “Were just deploying these elite units to support the ongoing operation, and in case contingencies will happen or exigencies, we will be able to respond,” he said.

    Centino added that there would be no restrictions on the movement of residents in Negros, nor have directives been given to impose a curfew. Residents, however, should expect some checkpoints.

    Degamo was the second incumbent government official killed under the Marcos administration. Five other former local officials have been killed since Marcos took office in end-June 2022. 

    (READ: LIST: Local officials killed under Marcos gov’t)

    https://www.rappler.com/nation/visayas/afp-sends-elite-unit-creates-task-force-in-negros-after-degamo-killing/
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    Over the South China Sea, dispute simmers via radios and rhetoric

    From Rappler (Mar 10, 2023): Over the South China Sea, dispute simmers via radios and rhetoric (By REUTERS)



    The Philippines under Marcos has stepped up its rhetoric to challenge China and is seeking closer ties with former colonial power and defense ally the United States, including plans to hold joint sea patrols

    ABOARD PHILIPPINES COAST GUARD PLANE, South China Sea – As a Philippine coast guard aircraft flew over the disputed Spratly islands in the South China Sea on Thursday, March 9, a message came in over the radio telling it to immediately leave “Chinese territory.”

    Such warnings, from a Chinese coast guard ship, have become an almost daily ritual around one of the world’s most contested archipelagos, where China is one of five countries claiming the strategic islands – or at least some of them – as their own.

    “Calling China coast guard vessel. You are transiting inside Philippine territorial sea,” the Philippine pilot radios back.

    “Request identify yourself and state your intention to prevent misunderstanding,” he said.


    RESPONSE. A prepared response by the Philippine Coast Guard is written on a piece of paper on the event that they receive a challenge from their Chinese counterpart, as they flew over the South China Sea, on March 9, 2023. Photo by Eloisa Lopez/Reuters

    Other Stories: Philippines says Chinese navy ship spotted near Pag-asa Island
    The Philippine Coast Guard says 42 vessels believed to be crewed by Chinese maritime militia personnel were seen in the vicinity of the island, while a Chinese navy vessel and coast guard ship were observed 'slowly loitering' in the surrounding waters

    China claims sovereignty over almost the entire South China Sea and has for years permanently deployed hundreds of coast guard and fishing vessels in disputed areas like the Spratlys, where it has dredged sand to build islands on reefs, and equipped them with missiles and runways.

    Malaysia, Vietnam, Brunei and Taiwan also have claims in the Spratlys. The Philippines occupies nine features there, and has accused China of aggression and “swarming” by fishing vessels that it says are militia, including near the tiny Thitu island occupied by Manila since the 1970s.

    A Reuters journalist joined the Philippine flight on Thursday and observed some of those Chinese boats dotted in the waters around Thitu, an island of 400 people. The Philippines last week accused the vessels, including a navy ship, of “slowly loitering.”


    PAG-ASA. An aerial view shows the Philippine-occupied Thitu Island, locally known as Pag-asa, in the contested Spratly Islands, South China Sea, on March 9, 2023. Photo by Eloisa Lopez/Reuters

    China said on Friday, March 10, it has sovereignty over the Spratly Islands, known in China as the Nansha Islands, and its adjacent waters.

    “Therefore, it is reasonable and legal for Chinese ships to carry out normal activities in waters under China’s jurisdiction,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning told a regular briefing. 

    (READ: Philippines says Chinese navy ship spotted near Pag-asa Island)

    The fly-by came amid repeated complaints by the government of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr against China’s actions, including its use of a laser that Manila said temporarily blinded crew members of a coast guard vessel last month.

    The Philippines under Marcos has stepped up its rhetoric to challenge China and is seeking closer ties with former colonial power and defense ally the United States, including plans to hold joint sea patrols.

    The plane flew over another hot spot for China-Philippines tensions – the Second Thomas Shoal – where the military grade laser was last month used to target a coast guard crew supporting a military resupply mission.

    The Philippines has long maintained a small contingent of military aboard a rusty former US navy ship that it ran aground on a reef there to preserve Manila’s territorial claim.

    China’s coast guard challenged the plane again as it flew over the shoal, located inside the Philippines 200-mile exclusive economic zone.

    “This is the Philippine Coast Guard,” the pilot responded.

    “We are conducting a routine maritime patrol within our national airspace, and monitoring the safety of our fishermen,” it said.

    https://www.rappler.com/nation/dispute-simmers-radio-rhetoric-patrols-south-china-sea/
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    PLA navy warship, CCG vessels, militia boats still present in PH domains in WPS

    From Palawan News (Mar 10, 2023): PLA navy warship, CCG vessels, militia boats still present in PH domains in WPS (By Gerald Ticke)




    The Philippine Coast Guard once again recorded sightings of a number of Chinese Coast Guard vessels and other military militia in Philippine-controlled territories in West Philippine Sea.

    PCG said that after conducting a maritime domain awareness flight over Pag-asa Island, Ayungin and Sabina shoals in WPS last Wednesday, they still saw “a significant number of foreign flagged vessels, including Chinese Maritime Militia (CMM) and presence of People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy and Chinese Coast Guard (CCG) vessels were previously observed and reported.”

    The coast guard however said the CMM vessels have had a significant decrease in Pag-asa Island from 42 last week to only 15 on Wednesday while in Sabina Shoal, the nimber of Chinese vessels went down from 26 two weeks ago to 17 this week.

    PCG also particularly noted the presence of PLA Navy’s Jiangdao Class warship and CCG vessel 5203 that continue to loiter within 12 nautical miles off Pag-asa’s territorial sea.

    In Ayungin Shoal, CCG vessel 5304 was observed maintaining its location roughly six nautical miles from BRP Sierra Madre, Philippine Navy’s station in the area.

    During the flight, the PCG received a total of seven radio challenges from the CCG vessels: four while over Pag-asa Island’s territorial sea; and three while over the vicinity of Ayungin Shoal.


    The PCG is now preparing a complete report on the MDA flight that will be endorsed to the National Task Force on the West Philippine Sea for review and analysis. It is alao currently coordinating with the Western Command (WESCOM) of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and the Area Task Force-West (ATF-WEST).

    “We join AFP-WESCOM in reiterating that current efforts of our civilian and uniformed services promote adherence to an international rules-based order and strengthen established bilateral and multilateral mechanisms to avoid conflict and maintain peace and stability in the West Philippine Sea and the South China Sea,” PCG said.

    “Notwithstanding incidents of harassment, coercion, and provocations challenging our legitimate entitlements as articulated by UNCLOS and upheld in the 2016 Arbitral Award, the PCG leadership assures the Filipino public that we will remain steadfast in advancing the national interest,” it added.

    Earlier this week, the AFP through WESCOM also said it is realigning its focus on external defense operations in WPS amidst escalating tension in the region brought by the presence of Chinese vessels.

    https://palawan-news.com/pla-navy-warship-ccg-vessels-militia-boats-still-present-in-ph-domains-in-wps/

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    Elite AFP troops deployed in Negros Island

    From the Visayan Daily Star (Mar 11, 2023): Elite AFP troops deployed in Negros Island (By GILBERT P. BAYORAN)


    Troopers of the highly trained Light Reaction Company, a counter terrorist unit of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, stationed at Fort Magsaysay in Nueva Ecija.* AFP photo

    A 50-man Light Reaction Company (LRC), the elite and highly-trained troops of the AFP Special Operations Command, have been deployed in Negros to monitor the manhunt for the remaining suspects in the assassination of former Negros Oriental Gog. Roel Degamo.

    This was confirmed yesterday by Defense Secretary Carlito Galvez and AFP chief of staff Gen. Andres Centino during a press briefing at Camp Aguinaldo.

    Galvez said the 50-man strong specially trained LRC were involved in the Battle of Marawi.

    Former Army Sgt. Joven Javier, one of the four arrested suspects involved in the assassination of Gov. Degamo, used to be a member of the Light Reaction Company of Special Operations Command. The other three were also former Army soldiers.

    In the same press briefing, Gen. Centino also announced the creation of a Joint Task Force, composed of two Army brigades and six Army battalions, to implement the orders issued by President Ferdinand Marcos, to step up the joint military and police operations against the suspects and prevent escalation of lawless violence in Negros Oriental.

    Centino designated Brig. Gen. Marion Sison, 3rd Infantry Division commander, as JTF head, to be assisted by Brig. Leonardo Peña, and Col. Odie Edralin, commanders of the 302nd and 303rd Infantry Brigades, respectively.

    President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has ordered the Department of National Defense (DND) to “suppress criminal activities and impunity” in the entire Negros Island, to give justice to the families of Gov. Degamo and eight others, and help restore normalcy in Negros Oriental.

    The arrest of four suspects in Bayawan City, Negros Oriental, also yielded high powered firearms, explosives and anti-tank rocket propelled grenades.

    On the other hand, the Police Regional Office 7 relieved and replaced all policemen assigned to Bayawan City, Santa Catalina and Valencia Police Stations, with police officers from Cebu.

    https://visayandailystar.com/elite-afp-troops-deployed-in-negros-island/
    Retired Analyst at 3:33 AM No comments:
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    Marcos thanks Malaysia for peace efforts

    From the Mindanao Examiner (Mar 10, 2023): Marcos thanks Malaysia for peace efforts

    PRESIDENT FERDINAND Marcos Jr. has thanked Malaysia for its role in peace efforts in Mindanao and called on Kuala Lumpur to continue supporting Manila in sustaining the peace in the troubled region.

    Marcos, who recently met with Malaysian Prime Minister Dato’ Seri Anwar Ibrahim in Manila, said he invited Malaysia to continue supporting the Philippine government’s efforts to bring development and enhancement to the livelihood of Mindanaoans.

    He commended the progress made towards achieving sustainable and inclusive peace in Mindanao, saying, it is the culmination of years of effort and sincerity among all parties, which will soon realize the dividends of peace.

    “We have recognized the great contribution that Malaysia has made to the peace process in the southern Philippines. And we hope that this support that they have shown over the past few years will continue and will continue to contribute to the success of the peace process and the establishment of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region,” Marcos said.


    He said the two countries, as immediate neighbors, recognize the importance of maintaining peace and security in the region. “As such, we agreed to continue our cooperation on political and security matters, rekindling the Joint Commission Meetings and joint initiatives to combat transnational crime and terrorism,” Marcos said.

    The two leaders also agreed to boost security, trade and investment exchanges during their meeting in Malacañang.

    “Prime Minister Dato’ Seri Anwar Ibrahim and I had a cordial and productive discussion on Philippines-Malaysia bilateral cooperation, reaffirming our two countries’ desire to revitalize relations as we traverse past the pandemic then through the years towards a new normal,” Marcos said.

    With the ongoing impacts of the pandemic and geopolitical upheavals challenging
    the Philippines’ and Malaysia’s economies and the prospects of a global recovery, the two leaders agreed to “reinvigorate trade and investment exchanges, with a special focus on the halal industry, agriculture and food security, and the digital economy.”

    Marcos said the Philippines and Malaysia, as founding members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the Brunei-Indonesia-Malaysia-Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area, have ASEAN Centrality embedded in their regional outlook.

    “We have thus resolved to support development and peace-building initiatives within this group, including the importance of achieving a resolution to the situation in Myanmar,” he said.

    Marcos congratulated then-newly sworn-in Anwar in a telephone call last November and expressed hopes to work with the new Malaysian leader, particularly as the Southeast Asian region tackles various challenges.


    (Bernama)

    Anwar, in a Facebook page, said his visit to Manila brought back memories of when he was a student. “Manila is very special and not a foreign city for me personally,” he said.

    Malaysia, along with Libya, played a crucial role in the peace talks between the Filipino government and the Moro National Liberation Front. And Malaysia was among the countries which deployed peace keepers in Mindanao to ensure the 1996 peace accord is holding in the South.

    https://mindanaoexaminernewspaper.blogspot.com/2023/03/marcos-thanks-malaysia-for-peace-efforts.html
    Retired Analyst at 3:27 AM No comments:
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    Sulu proposes new, modern airport

    From the Mindanao Examiner (Mar 10, 2023): Sulu proposes new, modern airport

    SULU – A new and modern airport may soon rise in Sulu which could further boost trade and commerce, including tourism and put the southern Filipino province as a gateway to BIMP–EAGA or the Brunei Indonesia Malaysia Philippines-East ASEAN Growth Area.





    Provincial government photo shows Gov. Sakur Tan as he looks at photos of the proposed airport site in Talipao-Maimbung municipalities.

    The regional government through the Bangsamoro Planning and Development Authority (BPDA) has already approved the conduct of a feasibility study for the proposed airport that straddles Talipao and Maimbung municipalities, according to Gov. Sakur Tan.

    Tan said the BPDA has already approved the funding for the conduct of a feasibility study for the new airport. “It is a pragmatic move, due to its location and near proximity to other municipalities being at the center of the Sulu mainland,” he said.

    Members of the BPDA were recently in Sulu and conducted a preliminary aerial survey of the proposed airport site. The officials were led by Director Engr. Kadil Sulaik Jr., and Engineers Esmael Usop and Bernie Taula; and also Yasher Arafat Usman, the project assistant; and planning officer Edenson Magiting.


    They were also joined by Engineers Bertrand Chio, head of the Provincial Planning and Development Office, and his assistant Ben Akalal; Abdurasad Baih, the provincial engineer; and Engr. Aldrin A Juljani, the assistant provincial assessor.

    Sulaik said the BPDA would also provide assistance in the power generation requirements of Sulu. “Provide us with the projected yearly power requirements for our reference so we can provide the necessary assistance,” Sulaik told Tan.

    Tan thanked the regional government and the BPDA for their infrastructure support. Currently, the capital town of Jolo hosts the lone airport in the province which is also being used by the military.

    https://mindanaoexaminernewspaper.blogspot.com/2023/03/sulu-proposes-new-modern-airport.html
    Retired Analyst at 3:25 AM No comments:
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    EU continues support for peace and development in South

    From the Mindanao Examiner (Mar 10, 2023): EU continues support for peace and development in South

    PAGADIAN CITY – The European Union (EU) continues to support the government’s peace and development efforts in the southern Philippines, especially the welfare of children.

    It also supported the nongovernmental organization Save the Children Philippines in the launching recently of SENANG of the “Supporting an Enabling Atmosphere for children and youth Network for peacebuilding Goals.”

    The project will be implemented within the next three years in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, including urban and rural areas from Muslim dominant conflict-affected communities in the country.

    SENANG’s primary objective is to ensure that 80,000 children and youth in Mindanao will live in a peaceful environment. To do this, the project will contribute in preventing human-induced conflicts, respond to crises, foster children and youth’s meaningful participation on social cohesion, provide opportunities for intergenerational, intercultural, and interreligious dialogues, create safe and neutral spaces, and promotion of peace and tolerance through arts and culture.


    “The EU is a reliable, trusted and neutral partner supporting peace and development in Mindanao,” said Frederic Grillet, First Secretary, Political, Press and Information section of the EU Delegation to the Philippines.

    “This meaningful project aligns and supports the existing peace efforts and initiatives of the government and other relevant agencies whose aims are to prevent conflict, respond to crisis and build peace, reflecting how the key roles of children and young people play in the achievement of a peaceful society,” he added.

    Lawyer Alberto Muyot, CEO of Save the Children Philippines, thanked the EU for its continued support and commitment in peace building.

    “We continue our commitment to seek durable solutions and bridge the humanitarian-peace-justice and development nexus. Peace education and inclusive spaces of children and youth participation are our key approaches that will drive our goal to provide a fair and equal world for and with children,” Muyot said.

    “We enjoin everyone to journey with us in positively transforming the lives of children and youth in Mindanao, including their families and communities, and help build a sustainable future for the next generation.”

    https://mindanaoexaminernewspaper.blogspot.com/2023/03/eu-continues-support-for-peace-and.html
    Retired Analyst at 3:23 AM No comments:
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    Marcos vows to modernize air force

     From the Mindanao Examiner (Mar 10, 2023): Marcos vows to modernize air force

    PRESIDENT FERDINAND Marcos Jr. praised Filipino air force pilots as he underscored the importance of increasing the country’s defense capabilities to effectively guard its maritime territory, especially in the South China Sea.

    “Ang gagaling talaga ng piloto natin. That’s why we have to continue to encourage the modernization of our Armed Forces para ‘yung capabilities natin ay mas tumibay pa. And we saw some of the capabilities that were demonstrated to me during the flight and we can see how important this increase in our capabilities is going to be, especially in the defense of our maritime territory,” Marcos said.




    President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. sits in the cockpit of FA-50PH at Villamor Air Base in Pasay City.

    Marcos also flew onboard the Philippine Air Force’s FA-50PH fighter jet to witness its capability in a flight demonstration at the Clark Air Base in Pampanga province recently.

    He described his fighter jet experience as fantastic and very interesting. He said flying aboard a fighter jet was something he has been wanting to do.

    Marcos expressed confidence that the acquisition of modern aircraft by the Philippine Air Force will ultimately improve the country’s defense systems.

    https://mindanaoexaminernewspaper.blogspot.com/2023/03/marcos-vows-to-modernize-air-force.html
    Retired Analyst at 3:21 AM No comments:
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    CPP/NDF-Laguna: Kababaihan at mamamayan, isulong ang digmang bayan!

    Propaganda statement posted to the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) Philippine Revolution Web Central (PRWC) Website (Mar 11, 2023): Kababaihan at mamamayan, isulong ang digmang bayan! (Women and citizens, advance the people's war!)
     


    Malaya Asedillo
    Spokesperson
    NDF-Laguna
    NDF-Southern Tagalog
    National Democratic Front of the Philippines

    March 11, 2023

    Nagbibigay pugay ang National Democratic Front — Laguna sa lahat ng kababaihang anakpawis at rebolusyonaryo na tinatahak ang landas ng panlipunang pagbabago tungo sa isang lipunang pantay at mapagpalaya.

    Sa nagdaang Pandaigdigang Araw ng Kababaihang Anakpawis, pinakita ng mga militante at progresibong kababaihan ang kanilang tapang at paninindigan para ipaglaban ang kanilang mga demokratikong karapatan. Gayundin, patuloy na pinapakita ng mga rebolusyonaryong kababaihan ang kanilang kakayahang mamuno sa pambansa-demokratikong rebolusyon at sa matagalang digmang bayan.

    Tunay nga na pasan ng kababaihan ang kalahati ng kalangitan. Doble ang pagsasamantala na nararansan ng kababaihan — pangunahin dahil sa kanilang uri, pangalawa dahil sa kanilang kasarian. Sa lipunang Pilipino, kung saan nananatili ang labi ng pyudal na kultura at naghahalo sa burges at dekadenteng kaisipan, nawawalan ng disenteng lugar ang kababaihan. Tinuturing sila bilang mas mababa o mas mahina sa kalalakihan; mahinhin, dapat protektahan, o kaya nama’y nabubuhay lamang para pagsilbihan ang kalalakihan.

    Biktima rin ang kababaihan ng lumalalang pandaigdigang krisis. Kababaihang manggagawa ang karaniwang unang tinatanggal ng mga kapitalista sa pagawaan, habang patuloy na tinatanggalan ng lupa ang kababaihang magsasaka. Walang sapat na serbisyong panlipunan ang maraming kababaihang maralita kung kaya’t napipilitan sila lumahok sa antisosyal na gawain tulad ng krimen o prostitusyon.

    Bagama’t may pagkilala ang reaksyunaryong estado sa paglitis sa krimen laban sa kababaihan at bata, hindi ito nabibigyan ng tunay na hustisya. Nananatili ang kultura ng impunidad laban sa kaso ng panggagahasa, abuso, at iba pang pandarahas sa kababaihan — na karaniwa’y ginagawa ng mga nasa poder tulad ng pulis, sundalo, atbp.

    Ang demokratikong rebolusyong bayan ay isang rebolusyon para sa pagpapalaya ng kababaihan; ang sosyalistang perspektiba ay perspektiba ng pagpapalaya sa kasarian. Layunin nito basagin ang mismong ugat ng patriyarka: ang pyudalismo sa kanayunan at ang imperyalismong nagpapanatili ng ganitong kaayusan. Makakamit lamang ng kababaihan ang ganap na paglaya kung lalahok sila sa rebolusyon.

    Makikita ang militanteng kababaihan sa gulugod at sa unahan ng bawat pakikibaka. Sila ay mga lider-komunidad, lider-masa, at tagapagtaguyod ng demokratikong karapatan ng mamamayan. Sila ay may istorikong papel sa pagsulong ng demokratikong rebolusyong bayan at pagsulong ng armadong pakikibaka. Hanggang ngayon, makikita ang rebolusyonaryong kababaihan bilang mga Pulang kumander ng hukbo at mga susing kadre na nagbubuo ng Pulang kapangyarihan sa kanayunan.

    Magiging tunay na pangmasang pagsisikap lamang ang rebolusyonaryong pakikibaka kung lalahukan ito ng lahat ng mamamayan. Susing papel ng kababaihan at ng buong sambayanang Pilipino ngayon na isulong ang digmang bayan sa lahat ng antas. Hinog ang kundisyon hindi lamang para sa pagpapalaya ng kababaihan kundi sa pagpapalaya ng masang anakpawis laban sa lahat ng pwersa ng reaksyon.

    Ngayong buwan ng kababaihang anakpawis, hamon sa lahat ng kababaihan na pangunahan ang pakikibaka para sa pambansang demokrasya. Tumungo sa kanayunan at lumubog sa masa, at isulong ang digmang bayan hanggang sa tagumpay!

    Kababaihan, ang lugar mo ay sa rebolusyon! Sumapi sa Bagong Hukbong Bayan!

    https://philippinerevolution.nu/statements/kababaihan-at-mamamayan-isulong-ang-digmang-bayan/
    Retired Analyst at 3:17 AM No comments:
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    CPP/NDF-MAKIBAKA-Laguna: Kababaihang anakpawis, biguin ang terorismo ng rehimeng US-Marcos-Duterte! Hawanin ang mga landas at ipagtagumpay ang digmang bayan!

    Propaganda statement posted to the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) Philippine Revolution Web Central (PRWC) Website (Mar 11, 2023): Kababaihang anakpawis, biguin ang terorismo ng rehimeng US-Marcos-Duterte! Hawanin ang mga landas at ipagtagumpay ang digmang bayan! (Women of the masses, let the terrorism of the US-Marcos-Duterte regime fail! Clear the paths and win the people's war!)
     


    Divina Malaya
    Spokesperson
    Makabayang Kilusan ng Bagong Kababaihan-Laguna
    NDF-Laguna
    NDF-Southern Tagalog | National Democratic Front of the Philippines

    March 11, 2023

    Rebolusyonaryong pagbati at pakikiisa ang alay ng Makabayang Kilusan ng Bagong Kababaihan Laguna (MAKIBAKA Laguna) sa hanay ng kababaihang nakikibaka sa Pilipinas at iba’t ibang panig ng mundo ngayong Pandaigdigang Buwan ng Kababaihang Anakpawis.

    Higit sa isang pagdiriwang, ang Pandaigdigang Buwan ng Kababaihang Anakpawis ay kumikinang na simbolo ng parte na ginagampanan ng kababaihan sa paghubog ng isang lipunang may pagkakapantay-pantay at nakabatay sa katotohanan at hustisyang panlipunan. Tanda ito ng nagpapatuloy na paglaban ng kababaihan kasama ang sambayanan.

    Ngayon na mas umiigting ang pagtutunggali ng mga imperyalistang bayan tulad ng Amerika at Tsina upang kontrolin ang bansa, mas magiging bulnerable ang kababaihan sa mga pang-aabuso at pagsasamantala ng mga dayuhang pwersa. Kasabay ng mas agresibong taktika ng Amerika sa pamamagitan ng Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement o EDCA, awtomatik na magiging target muli ng sekswal na abuso at karahasan ang kababaihan at LGBTQ na kadalasang biktima ng mga tropang ‘Kano na nakabase sa Pilipinas tulad nina ‘Nicole’ at Jennifer Laude.

    Hindi rin dapat kaligtaan ng kababaihan ang aktibong paglaban sa serye ng mga kontra-mamamayang polisya na niraratsada at ipinapatupad ng rehimeng US-Marcos-Duterte sa tabing ng huwad na pagpapabuti sa kalagayan ng bansa. Hinihimok ng MAKIBAKA ang lahat ng kababaihan at may kinikilalang kasarian na sumama, makiisa, at ipagtagumpay ang mga kampanya at puputok na pakikibakang masa kasabay ng pagtindi ng krisis. Saan mang espasyo — sakahan, pagawaan, paaralan, terminal ng mga pampublikong sasakyan, komunidad, at iba pa, ay dapat dumagsa at maramdaman ang paglahok ng kababaihan sa mga labang ito. Ang mga kampanya at pagkilos ng mamamayan tulad ng nangyaring malawak na tigil pasada ng mga tsuper ay dapat suportahan at lahukan ng kababaihan upang mas patatagin ang tunay na nagkakaisang demokratikong pwersa laban sa tambalang Marcos-Duterte. Mahalagang makisangkot ang kababaihan sa pagtuligsa at pagpigil sa mga nagnanaknak na isyung ito at gabayan ang ating mga kababayan tungo sa mas matayog na pakikibaka.

    Bukas ang mga kagubatan at kabundukan sa kanayunan sa lahat ng kababaihan na magpapasyang ialay ang kanilang buong panahon sa pagsisilbi sa bayan. Hitik na hitik na ang mga rason at hinog na ang kondisyon upang tahakin ng milyun-milyong kababaihan ang landas ng armadong pakikibaka at isanib ang sarili sa rebolusyon para sa isang matiwasay na lipunan at kinabukasan. At sa gabay ng dakilang Partido, kasama ang sandatang teoryang Marxismo-Leninismo-Maoismo, tiyak ang ating pagsulong at pagtatagumpay.

    Mabuhay ang kababaihang anakpawis ng Pilipinas at buong daigdig!
    Kababaihan, sumapi sa Bagong Hukbong Bayan!

    https://philippinerevolution.nu/statements/kababaihang-anakpawis-biguin-ang-terorismo-ng-rehimeng-us-marcos-duterte-hawanin-ang-mga-landas-at-ipagtagumpay-ang-digmang-bayan/
    Retired Analyst at 3:14 AM No comments:
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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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