This Week in Asia

US-Philippines drills: island retaking, ship sinking simulate Taiwan, South China Sea conflicts

Philippine and US forces are simulating scenarios that observers say are relevant to potential conflicts over Taiwan and the South China Sea, with missions involving the retaking of an island and the sinking of a Chinese-made vessel in the final week of this year's Balikatan joint military exercises.

On Monday, a small contingent of US and Philippine marines disembarked from Black Hawk helicopters in Itbayat, a remote town located on the Philippines' northernmost island of the same name, which is about 160km (100 miles) south of Taiwan.

Their mission was to practise retaking the remote island, which lies along the strategic Bashi Channel, from a foreign invader.

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More than 11,000 troops from the United States and 5,000 from the Philippines, as well as 150 Australian and 100 French armed forces, are taking part in this year's edition of the Balikatan drills, which began on April 22 and run until Friday.

For the first time, some of this year's exercises are taking place beyond the 12 nautical-mile boundary of the Philippines' territorial waters. Fourteen other nations sent "observers".

The presence of two Chinese navy ships in the South China Sea during the group sail exercise prompted Balikatan 2024 spokesman Army Colonel Michael Logico to say on April 30: "I thought there are just 14 countries that will be sending observers. Apparently, there is a 15th country that sent observers."

Washington-based defence journalist Aaron Matthew Lariosa, who writes for the US Naval Institute and Naval News and has covered multiple Balikatan drills, said a similar island-retaking exercise during last year's event took place on an island facing the South China Sea rather than the northern Philippines.

He said this year's exercise was different because it appeared to be in preparation for a real-world scenario: hostilities breaking out over Taiwan.

Such a conflict could have serious ramifications for the Philippines, even if it was not directly involved in the hostilities, he said.

"Given the Philippines' proximity, a cross-strait crisis can have very tangible spillover effects in [terms of] either refugees fleeing the conflict or military forces occupying the strategic islands for their own use," he told This Week in Asia on Tuesday.

"It should be remembered that the Batanes [islands, which include Itbayat] were the first [areas] occupied by the Japanese in their invasion during the Pacific War."

Ricardo Jose, a professor of history at the University of the Philippines specialising in World War II, noted that in 21st century warfare, the Batanes islands could provide an ideal location to conceal small, mobile missile systems such as the US Army's Typhon missile launcher, which made an appearance at this year's Balikatan and has a range of 370km.

"The islands are very remote, isolated, they're difficult to get to with rugged terrain and rapidly changeable weather," he said.

"Under camouflage and because they are smaller and more mobile, it's also easier to conceal [missile launchers like the Typhon]" from even spy satellites."

The Typhon missile system was not fired during the Balikatan drills, but a similar system was included to test the feasibility and effectiveness of deploying it on land using an airlift.

Besides the island-retaking drill, Monday also saw a separate exercise focused on repelling an invasion force, which took place along the sand dunes of Laoag in Ilocos Norte on the northwestern tip of Luzon.

This large-scale war game included 150 Australian soldiers from the first battalion of the Royal Australian Regiment.

The climax of the 19-day exercises will take place on Wednesday with a multilateral "maritime strike" or sinking of the BRP Lake Caliraya, a 4,700-tonne Philippine navy vessel built in China.

The Philippine navy will, for the first time, fire an SSM-700K C-Star (Haeseong) anti-ship cruise missile at the Caliraya, which was towed on Tuesday to its target location beyond the 12 nautical-mile boundary of the Philippines' exclusive economic zone.

The goal of the exercise is to achieve a controlled sinking of the Caliraya. The military said the choice of the Chinese-made target was "not intentional" and not meant to send a message to any particular country.

In response to questions about whether they might be provoking China, both Philippine and US military officials have insisted that this year's exercises, which also included firing rockets towards the disputed waters of the South China Sea, are not aimed at any particular country.

Logico said in a briefing on April 17 that the military chose locations "that gave us the most training value, the most challenges" - including weather and capability issues - and "how to integrate the capabilities of our treaty allies".

This year's Balikatan drills come amid heightened tensions between Beijing and Manila after numerous maritime confrontations involving their vessels in the South China Sea.

The Philippines has also been increasing its security ties with the US, which has a mutual defence treaty with Manila that US officials, including President Joe Biden, have promised is ironclad.

"What makes this [year's] exercise notable is its occurrence during the Armed Forces of the Philippines' shift to the Comprehensive Archipelagic Defence Concept, which looks to orient the country's military against external threats," Lariosa said.

"However, due to the weakness of its forces, the Philippines still has to remind potential aggressors that its only treaty ally is prepared to help in certain contingencies."

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2024. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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