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US military to help Philippines monitor coastal waters
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) June 12, 2012


The US military said Tuesday it planned to help the Philippines monitor its coastal waters as Manila faces an escalating dispute with China over territorial claims.

The Pentagon revised earlier comments and said there was no firm plan to deliver a land-based radar to the Philippines, but that a radar could be part of future assistance.

"We are in the initial planning stages of assisting the Philippines with a National Coast Watch Center," Major Catherine Wilkinson told AFP.

The center is designed "to create an overall picture of what is going on in the Philippines' territorial waters," she said.

"Right now we are discussing a range of options and no details have been finalized. Radars may be an eventual part of the package but it hasn't been determined yet."

The cost and the time line for the project were still being worked out, she said.

The Philippines has requested radar, patrol aircraft and naval vessels as it seeks to bolster its position in a row with China over the Scarborough Shoal, which lies near the main Philippine island of Luzon.

China claims the area along with virtually all of the South China Sea up to the shores of other Southeast Asian nations, including Malaysia, Vietnam and the Philippines.

The Pentagon's comments came after President Benigno Aquino paid a visit last week to the White House, where he was offered a robust show of support.

Plans to help Manila reflect Washington's strategic shift towards Asia amid a growing rivalry with Beijing, with the South China Sea at the center of the contest, analysts said.

"Land-based radar is one of the practical ways the United States can simultaneously boost Philippine defense capabilities and signal Washington's long-term commitment to Asia," said Patrick Cronin, senior adviser for Asia at the Center for a New American Security, a Washington think tank.

China may choose to defuse tensions with the Philippines just before a gathering of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations next month, Cronin said.

"But it is also possible that China is determined to humiliate the Philippines and, indirectly, the United States," he told AFP.

Manila's request for US military help marks a reversal after the Philippines evicted the American military from its vast naval base at Subic Bay in 1992.

It was unlikely the United States would look at providing military aircraft at a time when China may be preparing a conciliatory gesture, Cronin said.

"If China persists with embarrassing the Philippines, then I have no doubt aircraft sales will follow," he said.

Tensions between Beijing and Manila escalated in April when Chinese and Philippine vessels approached the Scarborough Shoal, which lies near the main Philippine island of Luzon. Manila says the rock formation falls within its exclusive economic zone.

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Philippine churches turn on Manila over US troops
Manila (AFP) June 12, 2012 - Church officials in the Philippines on Tuesday accused Manila of trying to increase US troop numbers in the country, as it marked the 114th anniversary of its declaration of independence from Spain.

The left-leaning Ecumenical Bishops Forum, composed of dozens of Roman Catholic and Protestant churches, suggested that closer ties between Manila and Washington would only bring more US soldiers to the Philippines.

"The visit of President (Benigno) Aquino to the US this past week was also about the US military deployment in the Philippines, although the president officially denies it," it said in a statement.

It alleged that US forces had recently been allowed to "re-occupy" their former bases at Clark and Subic Bay -- which have already been converted to commercial purposes.

After the Spanish departure from the Philippines the US took possession of the archipelago in turn.

Nowadays surveys consistently show wide pro-US sentiment among ordinary Filipinos, but there are highly-visible, vocally anti-American nationalists and leftists in religious, academic and elite circles.

During his recent trip Aquino sought greater US help to boost the country's defences amid a two-month long standoff between Philippine and Chinese troops over the Scarborough Shoal, a disputed outcrop in the South China Sea.

Both Manila and Beijing still have ships based at the shoal to press their claims to the area. The standoff has also highlighted how poorly-equipped the Philippines is to handle such external challenges.

Beijing is becoming increasingly assertive in pressing its territorial claims in the area, but the bishops' forum dismissed Manila's concerns.

"The Scarborough conflict is only being made an excuse in order for the US to deploy their forces in the Asia-Pacific to protect its economic interest in the region and to counteract its economic rival China's expansionism," it said.

Among the signatories to the statement was Bishop Deogracias Iniguez, the public affairs chief of the country's influential Catholic bishops, who count about 80 percent of Filipinos as followers.

But Roy Lagarde, a media officer of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines, said Iniguez signed the document in a personal capacity and it did not mean the bishops endorsed his views.

During Aquino's visit to the United States, Obama pledged US support for efforts to upgrade the notoriously antiquated Philippine military and build a "minimum credible defence posture".

Several hundred US special forces have been rotating through the southern Philippines for a decade to train Filipino soldiers to hunt local Islamist militants with ties to the al-Qaeda network.

The US and Philippine militaries also engage in regular joint exercises and US naval ships transit through the country.



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To successfully reduce the United States' dependence on fuels from outside North America, the government must pursue policies that foster the diversion of Canadian oil sands crude to U.S. Gulf Coast refineries, according to a new study by Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy. The study calculates that this move would reduce the U.S. trade deficit through increased trade with Canad ... read more


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