US to provide $500M military aid to PH
“We are now allocating an additional $500 million in foreign military financing to the Philippines to boost security collaboration with our oldest treaty ally in this region,” Blinken said at a press briefing, adding that Washington’s relationship with the US “is the strongest that it has ever been.”
The assistance, according to him, is “a once-in-a-generation investment to help modernize” the Armed Forces of the Philippines and the Philippine Coast Guard, the US foreign secretary said.
According to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin III, “this level of funding is unprecedented” and “sends a clear message of support for the Philippines” from the US.
“We are working with the US Congress to allocate $500 million in foreign military financing into the Philippines,” Austin said.
Edca funding
‘Deterrent posture’
Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr. said the US funding, including those for Edca, would “serve to secure the Philippines’ credible deterrent posture” against “unlawful foreign aggression.”
“Every peso or dollar spent on hardening Philippine capabilities to defend itself and to deter unlawful aggression will be a plus against any threat actor whether it be China or anyone,” Teodoro said in the same press briefing together with his American counterpart, Austin, and Blinken.
He said the “investments” would not only be for defense but also for civil defense purposes such as humanitarian assistance and disaster response.
The Edca sites would also serve as venues for joint cooperation and interoperability between the United States and the Philippines and multilateral exercises with like-minded nations, Teodoro said.
“So these are not monodimensional but multidimensional investments that will help the development of the country and help to deter unwanted and unlawful aggression by building a credible deterrent posture,” he said.
Blinken said Manila and Washington both share concerns regarding Beijing’s “escalatory actions in the South China Sea, the East China Sea, and elsewhere.”
“We stand by our ironclad defense commitment to the Philippines under [our] mutual defense treaty. That extends to armed attacks on Filipino Armed Forces, public vessels or aircraft, including the Coast Guard, anywhere in the Pacific, including the South China Sea,” he said.