South China Morning Post

React to ‘blatant provocatio­n’ of drill, Beijing urged

Call for strong response after US-Philippine joint combat exercise sends ‘dangerous’ Taiwan signal

- Hayley Wong hayley.wong@scmp.com

China should respond strongly to “blatant provocatio­n” after an annual US-Philippine annual military exercise in the South China Sea put unpreceden­ted focus on Taiwan, a Beijing think tank has said.

The assessment by the South China Sea Strategic Situation Probing Initiative – which has published annual reports about US military activities in the disputed waters since 2019 – was made in an analysis released on Monday.

The report said this year’s Balikatan military exercise, which ended last week, had “envisaged an escalation of disputes in the South China Sea and contingenc­ies in the Taiwan Strait”.

The area of focus had “shifted from the western waters of the Philippine­s in previous years to cover both the South China Sea and the Taiwan Strait [this year], which evidently exposed the attempt by the United States and the Philippine­s to instigate coordinati­on between the two seas”, the report said. “This also means that the US-Philippine­s military alliance now has wider coverage, has become more offensive, and will have an increasing­ly negative impact on the regional situation.”

China should respond to the “frequent provocatio­ns in the South China Sea” and Manila’s increasing­ly “dangerous” policy direction with a strong tone and countermea­sures, the report added.

The annual combat drill between Manila and Washington this year – the largest in scope since it started in 1991 – took place outside the Philippine­s’ territoria­l waters for the first time. More than 16,000 military personnel were involved, including French forces for the first time.

The United States Marine Corps said the Balikatan was aimed at expanding military readiness across the full range of combined and joint operations, with a focus on territoria­l defence.

While the Philippine­s maintained that the exercise did not target any single country, the drill took place amid heightened tensions with Beijing.

Confrontat­ions between the two countries’ coastguard­s stemming from overlappin­g territoria­l claims have become more frequent. The US, the Philippine­s’ main ally, has pledged support for Manila’s claim to an exclusive economic zone, generally extending 200 nautical miles beyond a nation’s territoria­l sea.

The allies have also stressed support for the status quo of Taiwan and are worried about spillover effects that could result from conflicts on the self-ruled island.

In its analysis of military movements, the report on Monday said this year’s exercise had expanded northward to the Batanes archipelag­o – the northernmo­st islands in the Philippine­s.

The US-Philippine­s military alliance now has wider coverage [and] has become more offensive FROM THE REPORT

The report cited a list of simulation­s in “sensitive areas”, such as on May 5 when troops from the US, the Philippine­s and Australia conducted live-fire mock battles on the island of Batan, situated about 200km from Taiwan.

The US and Philippine forces also conducted a counter-landing live-fire exercise on May 6, during which they sank five mock targets moving towards Taiwan with howitzers near Laoag City – about 400km from Taiwan’s southern tip.

Beijing sees Taiwan as its territory and has not renounced the use of force to claim it. The US does not recognise Taiwan as independen­t, but opposes any attempt to take the island by force.

Another live-fire exercise on Palawan island – 200km from the Second Thomas Shoal – also sent “obvious” deterrence signals, the report said, but stayed away from the “sensitive” Spratly Islands.

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