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US, PH discuss more missile system deployments
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US, PH discuss more missile system deployments

Associated Press

MANILA, Philippines—The United States is discussing the possible deployment of more missile launchers to the Philippines to strengthen deterrence against aggression in the disputed South China Sea and other Asian security hots pots, but no final decision has been reached by both sides, Manila’s ambassador to Washington said Thursday.

The US military delivered a midrange missile system called the Typhon, a land-based weapon that can fire the Standard Missile-6 and the Tomahawk Land Attack Missile, to the northern Philippines as part of joint combat exercises in April last year. That was followed by the transport by the US military of an antiship missile launcher in April this year to the northernmost Philippine province of Batanes, just a sea border away from Taiwan.

Beijing strongly protested the installation of the US missile systems, saying they were aimed at containing China’s rise and warning that these would threaten regional stability. China has asked the Philippines to withdraw the missile launchers from its territory, but officials led by President Marcos had rejected the demand.

Ambassador of the Philippines to the United States, Jose Manuel Romualdez (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)

NMESIS missile launchers

Ambassador to the United States Jose Manuel Romualdez said without elaborating that the possible deployment by the United States of more Navy Marine Expeditionary Ship Interdiction System, or NMESIS missile launchers, “was being discussed for consideration by both sides.” The antiship missile systems could be installed along Philippine coastal regions facing the South China Sea and outlying regions to beef up deterrence against aggression, he said.

“This is part of the strong US and Philippines defense partnership,” Romualdez told The Associated Press (AP).

He spoke on the sidelines of a trade and investment conference in Manila, where he and Philippine Foreign Secretary Theresa Lazaro encouraged major US companies to invest in a wide array of industries—from energy and telecommunications to infrastructure and navy shipbuilding—in the Philippines, the oldest treaty ally of the United States in Asia.

Peace ‘through strength’

“When US companies invest here, it’s not just about returns on capital—it’s about returns on alliance,” Romualdez told US business executives at the conference.

“A stronger Philippine economy means a more capable and reliable defense partner for the United States.”

“At a time when America is diversifying supply chains and rethinking global strategy, we are a natural choice—and a strategic necessity,” Romualdez said. “I ask you to carry this message to the Trump administration: ‘Every US dollar invested in the Philippines strengthens America’s position in the Indo-Pacific.’”

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth flew to Manila in March in his first visit to Asia and said the Trump administration would work with allies to ramp up deterrence against threats across the world, including China’s increasingly aggressive actions in the South China Sea.

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The United States was not gearing up for war, Hegseth said then, but underscored that peace would be won “through strength.”

China claims virtually the entire South China Sea. The Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan also have overlapping claims to the resource-rich and busy waters, but confrontations have spiked between Chinese and Philippine coast guard and naval forces in recent years.

On Wednesday, the United States briefly deployed two warships in what it called a “freedom of navigation” operation off the disputed Panatag (Scarborough) Shoal in the South China Sea where two Chinese navy and coast guard ships collided earlier in the week while trying to drive away a smaller Philippine coast guard vessel. The high-seas accident sparked alarm among Asian and Western countries.

“Freedom of navigation is essential for the trillions of dollars worth of commerce that passes through these waters,” the US ambassador to the Philippines, MaryKay Carlson, told reporters on the sidelines of the Manila investment conference. “It’s about commerce. It’s about lives and livelihoods.” (See related story on Page A8)

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