Andrey Popov — why tensions are growing between Beijing and Manila
As part of the second phase of the Salaknib 2024 joint exercises, the United States opened the Joint Pacific Multinational Combat Training Center in the Philippines from June 1 to 10. News about the strengthening of military cooperation and the next joint maneuvers of the two countries appear one after another. So, from April 22 to May 10, large-scale exercises Balikatan 2024 were held on the territory of the island state. In addition, in the second half of June, the Philippine and US Air Forces will conduct Cope Thunder exercises. At the same time, the maneuvers of the two countries are taking place against the background of noticeably deteriorating relations between Beijing and Manila.
Ship collisions
Recently, Chinese and Filipino ships have been increasingly colliding, literally and figuratively, in the South China Sea. The reason for this is the long—standing territorial dispute over the Spratly Islands (Nansha), the rights to which are claimed by both Beijing and Manila. Over the past three months, Chinese Coast Guard ships have used water cannons twice — in March and April — against Filipino ones off the Second Thomas Shoal (Ayungin Reef, Renai). Here, in March, there was a direct collision between the ships of the two countries. The Philippine side received external damage, four crew members were injured. Beijing and Manila then exchanged accusations, pointing out that the opposite side was responsible for the incident.
The Philippines apparently deliberately stranded the old Sierra Madre warship off this reef in 1999 in order to assert its control over the waters. A small military contingent is stationed on the ship. The Philippines regularly sends supply vessels to it, which causes a harsh reaction from the Coast Guard of the People's Republic of China. For many years, the parties have continued to accuse each other of violating sovereignty and escalating the situation.
It is noteworthy that Sierra Madre was originally an American ship. It was launched in 1944 in Indiana. He was involved in World War II, in the Vietnam War, and in 1976 was transferred to the Philippines. This ship symbolizes American interventionism and the spirit of confrontation. And today, its presence in the South China Sea, even under the flag of the Philippines, seems to be another signal for China: The United States is tightly moored to the shores of the region and is not going to set sail.
Collisions at the Second Thomas Shoal have happened before. However, they are now taking place against the background of an extremely unstable situation in the Asia-Pacific region caused by the strategic competition between China and the United States.
The anti-Chinese nature of U.S.-Philippines relations
With the inauguration of Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. in 2022, Washington and Manila have stepped up military cooperation. The new leader of the Philippines relies more on the United States in foreign policy compared to his predecessor Rodrigo Duterte. But at the same time, Marcos does not intentionally seek to aggravate relations with China, realizing that economic ties with China are extremely important.
In February 2023, U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin visited the Philippines. During the visit, the parties agreed to provide the US military with access to four more military bases. Prior to that, access was granted to five Philippine bases.
In late April — early May 2024, the United States and the Philippines actively used these bases during the major military exercises Balikatan 2024. About 11,000 American and about 5,000 Filipino troops, as well as several hundred Australian and French military personnel, took part in the maneuvers. For the first time, the Philippine Coast Guard took an active part in the exercise, using six ships. The exercises were observed by representatives of 14 countries, including US partners in the Five Eyes intelligence alliance (Great Britain, New Zealand, Canada), security in the Indo-Pacific region (India, Japan) and South Korea, which is also a US military partner in Asia.
The exercises were partially held outside the territorial waters of the Philippines, in the waters claimed by the PRC. During the maneuvers, which were clearly anti-Chinese in nature, the military, with the help of artillery and aviation, sank the ship of the imaginary enemy.
It is worth noting that the Philippine and American militaries have honed cooperation in the northern parts of the Philippines, in particular in the island province of Batanes, which is located 160 km from Taiwan. There, on the northernmost Philippine island of Itbayat, US and Philippine military personnel practiced landing from American helicopters. After the exercises, it became known that the Philippines had opened a coast guard post on Itbayat. If the strengthening of the US military presence in the Philippines is a strong cause for concern in Beijing, then maneuvers near Taiwan are already a clear alarm signal. Moreover, the newly elected leader of the Taiwanese administration, Lai Qingde, is an open supporter of the island's independence.
China hopes for peaceful reunification with Taiwan, but does not rule out the use of force if necessary. In the event of a conflict on the island, the United States will be involved in it. Manila, which is bound to Washington by a mutual defense treaty, will probably not stand aside. Beijing understands this and perceives the increased military presence in the Philippines as a factor in increasing tensions in the region.
The region is under fire
Perhaps the most provocative step on the part of the United States and the Philippines was the deployment of the American Typhon medium-range missile system in early April in the northern Philippine province of Luzon. The complex is adapted for the vertical launch of SM-6 anti-aircraft guided missiles (370 km radius of destruction) and Tomahawk cruise missiles (1,600 km). These missiles can reach targets not only in the South China Sea, but also on the east coast of China. The missile system was not used during the exercises, but remains in the Philippines.
The actions of the United States could not but provoke a strong reaction from Beijing. On May 31, Chinese Defense Minister Dong Jun, at talks with Pentagon Chief Lloyd Austin on the sidelines of the Singapore security forum Shangri-La Dialogue, said that the deployment of medium-range missiles in the Philippines poses a significant threat to the security architecture in the region. A day earlier, on May 30, the official representative of the Chinese Defense Ministry, Wu Qian, expressed himself even more harshly. He said the deployment of missiles in the Philippines "put the entire region under American artillery fire" and "brought huge military risks to the region."
On June 2, Dong Jun, presenting the Chinese vision of global security at the Shangri-La Forum, again commented on the deployment of American missiles in the Philippines. He noted that China shows great restraint "in the face of such violations and provocations," but this restraint "has a limit."
It is likely that the limit is quite close. Today, the conflict between China and the Philippines is gradually moving beyond the territorial dispute between the two countries. Tensions between Beijing and Manila are growing, and Washington is playing a significant role in this. The Philippines is becoming a link in the chain — along with the island of Taiwan, Japan and South Korea — through which the United States will try to contain China.
An ideal storm is developing in the South China Sea - a situation in which the summation of individual adverse factors significantly increases the negative effect of each of them and eventually leads to catastrophic consequences. Expanding military cooperation Washington and Manila, a series of US-Philippine major military exercises, including near Taiwan, the inauguration of the pro—American head of the Taiwanese administration, the deployment of American medium-range missiles in the Philippines, the harsh rhetoric of the Chinese military - all these are separately parts of the same puzzle, and, unfortunately, the overall picture in the region looks completely not rosy.