Bipartisan US bill seeks US$2.5bil for Philippines’ defence

Bipartisan US bill seeks US$2.5bil for Philippines’ defence

The bill authorises US$500 million a year in assistance to the Philippines up to 2029.

The Philippines and China have had a series of maritime run-ins in the South China Sea. (Philippine Coast Guard/AP pic)
WASHINGTON:
On the eve of a trilateral summit between the US, Japan and the Philippines, two prominent US senators on Wednesday introduced a bipartisan bill to provide Manila with US$2.5 billion to boost its defences against Chinese pressure.

The bill, put forward by Republican Bill Hagerty, a former ambassador to Japan, and Democrat Tim Kaine, authorises US$500 million a year in Foreign Military Financing (FMF) grant assistance to the Philippines over the five fiscal years to 2029.

The Philippines, a long term ally of the US, has become increasingly important strategically in US and Japanese efforts to push back against China and has been in need of funding to modernise its long-neglected armed forces.

The bill requires the US state secretary, in coordination with the Pentagon, to submit an annual spending plan to Congress on how the US government would spend the grant and an annual report on steps taken to enhance the US-Philippines defence relationship.

The latter would include a description of the capabilities needed to modernise Philippine defence capabilities.

Areas could include coastal defence, long-range fires, integrated air defences, maritime security, manned and unmanned aerial systems, mechanised ground mobility vehicles, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance and defensive cybersecurity, Hagerty’s office said.

In a statement shared with Reuters, Hagerty said it was “critical” to deepen cooperation with the Philippines at a time of “Communist China’s growing aggression in the West Philippines Sea and South China Sea.”

Kaine echoed this, saying it was “pivotal that the people of the Philippines have the resources and support they need in the face of those threats.”

The Philippines and China have had a series of maritime run-ins, including an incident in March when China used water cannons to disrupt a Philippine supply mission to soldiers stationed on a grounded warship in the disputed Second Thomas Shoal.

Hagerty said the funds would “profoundly strengthen and modernise the defence and deterrence capabilities” of the US-Philippines alliance.

On Thursday, US president Joe Biden will hold a bilateral meeting with Philippines president Ferdinand Marcos, and the two will join Japanese prime minister Kishida for a trilateral summit expected to focus on countering Chinese pressure on the Philippines in the disputed South China Sea.

In 2022, the US said it was making US$100 million in FMF available to the Philippines, underscoring greatly improved defence ties between the treaty allies under Marcos, whose predecessor, Rodrigo Duterte, had sought warmer ties with China.

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