US, Philippine troops storm ashore in bulked-up drills

AFP  |  San Antonio (Philippines) 

US and Philippine troops stormed ashore from the disputed Sea today for military exercises that had promised to scrap, but quietly allowed to carry on.

But the number of troops taking part in the drills has increased by a third from last year to 8,000, a return to figures seen in years past when the exercises served as a thinly-veiled deterrent to a rising

The reason for Duterte's change of heart on the two-week drills codenamed "Balikatan", or "Shoulder-to-Shoulder", may be down to what experts see as careful efforts by the Filipino military to restrain their unpredictable

"The fact it's being done under this administration means they (Duterte's government) now have a better understanding of the security equation," told AFP.

Though the bulked-up manoeuvres -- including a live-fire component that was dropped last year -- took place on a naval base just 180 kms east of the Filipino-claimed Shoal that China has controlled since 2012, the drill's leaders barely mentioned

"We are an island nation. That's why we need to improve our capabilities on amphibious operations," Philippine told reporters.

"We're not concerned about We're concerned about what we're doing here." China claims most of the Sea, a strategic waterway believed to harbour significant and natural gas deposits, but their assertion was ruled illegal in 2016 after Duterte's predecessor Benigno Aquino filed suit before an international maritime tribunal.

has since reversed course and set the ruling aside, along with long-simmering friction over competing claims to the waters, in order to court Chinese trade and investment.

He has also cut two major annual naval exercises with the US and last year reduced the Balikatan contingent to 5,400 American and Filipino troops.

The decision came at a low point for US-Philippine relations, when Duterte hurled insults at the American to and served notice that the 2017 edition would "be the last military exercise" with the

Much of Duterte's ire appeared to have been triggered by American criticism of his deadly anti-drug crackdown, which has claimed thousands of lives and been condemned by rights groups as a possible crime against humanity.

The renewed ramping up of the US-Philippine war games coincides with improving ties with under Donald Trump, who has said drug dealers should face the death penalty.

Analysts said Philippine Delfin Lorenzana, a retired general and ex-defence attache to Washington, and other advisers had helped moderate Duterte's position.

"He (Lorenzana) could handle, in a very effective way, most of the president's biases without ruffling feathers," said Roilo Golez, a former of ex-Philippine leader

US Marine Daniel Gaskell, who took part in the landing exercise Wednesday, sidestepped on Duterte's anti-US claims. "We are welcomed here, walking in the airport, throughout your country, (but also) by the Filipino armed forces who we've interacted with," he said.

"So we're really happy to be here.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, May 09 2018. 17:55 IST