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Filipino Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Maria Lourdes Lazaro and Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Sun Weidong shake hands during a bilateral meeting in Manila. Photo: EPA-EFE

South China Sea: Chinese diplomats oppose US military presence in Philippines

  • China’s intense objections were voiced at the start of two-day talks aimed at assessing overall relations between the two sides amid thorny issues
  • Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Sun Weidong and Philippine Foreign Undersecretary Theresa Lazaro will focus on the disputed waterway in the South China Sea

Chinese diplomats expressed their strong opposition to an expanded US military presence in the Philippines in closed-door talks with their Filipino counterparts in Manila on Thursday, a Filipino official said, underscoring the intense US-China rivalry in the region.

The Philippine official, who attended the meeting, said about China’s intense objections on condition of anonymity for lack of authority to discuss what transpired at the start of the two-day talks.

Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Sun Weidong and Philippine Foreign Undersecretary Theresa Lazaro led the talks aimed at assessing overall relations between the two sides amid thorny issues, including Beijing’s alarm over a Philippine decision to allow the US military to expand its presence to a northern region facing the Taiwan Strait and escalating spats in the South China Sea.

The discussions will focus on the long-seething territorial spats in the disputed waterway on Friday, according to the Department of Foreign Affairs in Manila.

The back-to-back meetings are the first under President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr, who took office in June last year. He met Chinese President Xi Jinping in a state visit to Beijing in January where both agreed to expand ties, pursue talks on potential joint oil and gas explorations and manage territorial disputes amicably.

Early last month, the Marcos administration announced it would allow rotating batches of American forces to indefinitely station in four more Philippine military camps. Those are in addition to five local bases earlier designated under a 2014 defence pact between the long-time treaty allies.

Philippines’ Marcos defends US military presence, which China opposes

Marcos said on Wednesday that the four new military sites would include areas in the northern Philippines. That location has infuriated Chinese officials because it would provide US forces a staging ground close to southern China and Taiwan.

The Americans would also have access to military areas on the Western Philippine island province of Palawan, Marcos said, adding that the US military presence under the 2014 Enhanced Defence Cooperation Agreement was aimed at boosting coastal defence.

Palawan faces the South China Sea, a key passage for global trade that Beijing claims virtually in its entirety but a United Nations-backed arbitration tribunal ruled in 2016 that historical claim had no legal basis under the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Seas.

China had dismissed the ruling, which Washington and other Western governments recognise, and continues to defy it.

When asked to react to the Philippine decision, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin told a news briefing in Beijing on Wednesday that defence cooperation between countries “needs to be conducive to regional peace and stability and not targeted at or harmful to the interests of any third party”.

Wang warned countries in the region “to remain vigilant and avoid being coerced or used by the US” without naming the Philippines.

A recent statement issued by the Chinese Embassy in Manila was more blunt and warned that the Manila government’s security cooperation with Washington “will drag the Philippines into the abyss of geopolitical strife and damage its economic development at the end of the day”.

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US to gain expanded access to Philippine military bases in bid to counter China

US to gain expanded access to Philippine military bases in bid to counter China

The territorial conflicts have persisted as a major irritant in relations early in the six-year term of Marcos, whose administration has filed at least 77 of more than 200 diplomatic protests by the Philippines against China’s increasingly assertive actions in the disputed waters since last year alone.

That included a February 6 incident when a Chinese coastguard ship aimed a military-grade laser that briefly blinded some crew members of a Philippine patrol vessel off a disputed shoal. Marcos summoned the Chinese ambassador to Manila to express concern over the incident, but Beijing said the Philippine vessel intruded into Chinese territorial waters and its coastguard used a harmless laser gadget to monitor the vessel’s movement.

The Biden administration has been strengthening an arc of military alliances in the Indo-Pacific to better counter China, including in any future confrontation over Taiwan. The US moves dovetail with Philippine efforts to shore up its territorial defence amid its disputes with China in the South China Sea.

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