Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
US Renews Warning It Will Defend Philippines After Incidents With Chinese Vessels in South China Sea
By admin
Published 1 year ago on
October 23, 2023

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

MANILA, Philippines — The United States renewed a warning Monday that it would defend the Philippines in case of an armed attack under a 1951 treaty, after Chinese ships blocked and collided with two Filipino vessels off a contested shoal in the South China Sea.

Philippine diplomats summoned a Chinese Embassy official in Manila on Monday for a strongly worded protest following Sunday’s collisions off Second Thomas Shoal. No injuries were reported but the encounters damaged a Philippine coast guard ship and a wooden-hulled supply boat operated by navy personnel, officials said.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. called an emergency meeting with the defense secretary and other top military and security officials to discuss the latest hostilities in the disputed waters. The Philippines and other neighbors of China have resisted Beijing’s sweeping territorial claims over virtually the entire South China Sea, and some, like Manila, have sought U.S. military support as incidents multiply.

After the meeting, Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro blasted China in a news conference for resorting to “brute force” that he said endangered Filipino crew members and for twisting the facts to conceal its aggression.

“The Philippine government views the latest aggression by China as a blatant violation of international law,” Teodoro said. “China has no legal right or authority to conduct law enforcement operations in our territorial waters and in our exclusive economic zone.”

Marcos ordered an investigation of the high-sea collisions, Teodoro said, but he refused to disclose what steps the Philippine government would take.

“We are taking these incidents seriously at the highest levels of government,” he said, adding that the government called for a news conference to provide accurate facts. “The Chinese government is deliberately obfuscating the truth,” the defense chief said.

The Philippines also plans to raise its alarm over the Chinese ships’ dangerous maneuvers in talks between China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations on a proposed nonaggression pact — a “code of conduct” — to prevent a major armed conflict in the South China Sea. Beijing is hosting the three-day negotiations starting Monday, two Philippine officials told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because of a lack of authority to publicly discuss details of the talks.

Teodoro said it was “very ironic” that China was hosting the talks that aim to prevent major conflicts at sea when they just committed “a blatant disregard of international law.”

The territorial conflicts involving China, the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei have long been regarded as a flashpoint in a delicate fault line in the U.S.-China rivalry.

About five Chinese coast guard ships, eight accompanying vessels and two navy ships formed a blockade on Sunday to prevent two Philippine coast guard ships and two boats from delivering food and other supplies to Filipino forces stationed at Second Thomas Shoal aboard a marooned navy ship, Philippine coast guard Commodore Jay Tarriela said.

Chinese Ship Collides With Philippine Vessels

During the standoff, one of the Philippine coast guard ships and a supply boat were separately hit by a Chinese coast guard ship and a vessel. Only one of the two Filipino boats managed to deliver supplies to Philippine forces, Tarriela said.

The senior Chinese diplomat who was summoned by Philippine foreign officials repeated China’s assertion that the Philippine vessels intruded into Chinese territory.

“China once again urges the Philippines to take seriously China’s grave concerns, honor its promise, stop making provocations at sea, stop making dangerous moves, stop groundlessly attacking and slandering China, and to tow away the illegally ‘grounded’ warship as soon as possible,” Zhou Zhiyong was quoted as saying by the Chinese Embassy in Manila.

He was referring to the Sierra Madre, which serves as Manila’s territorial outpost at the shoal after being deliberately ran aground in 1999.

The Chinese coast guard on Sunday blamed the Philippine vessels for causing the collisions and said the Filipinos were carrying construction materials to strengthen their outpost at the shoal.

The U.S. and other allies expressed alarm over the Chinese action. Washington renewed a warning that it’s obligated to defend the Philippines under a 1951 Mutual Defense Treaty if Filipino forces, ships and aircraft come under an armed attack, including “those of its coast guard — anywhere in the South China Sea.”

“The United States stands with our Philippine allies in the face of the People’s Republic of China coast guard and maritime militia’s dangerous and unlawful actions obstructing an October 22 Philippine resupply mission to Second Thomas Shoal,” the U.S. State Department said in a statement issued by its embassy in Manila.

It blamed the dangerous maneuvers by China’s ships for the collisions and added that they “violated international law by intentionally interfering with the Philippine vessels’ exercise of high seas freedom of navigation.”

The State Department also cited a 2016 arbitration ruling that invalidated China’s expansive claims to the South China Sea on historical grounds, including in Second Thomas Shoal.

Washington lays no claims to the disputed sea but has deployed forces to patrol the waters to promote freedom of navigation and overflight — moves that have angered Beijing, which has warned the U.S. to stop meddling in what it says is a purely Asian dispute.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Rihanna Appears at Trial of A$AP Rocky and Outshines Key Testimony on Alleged Shooting

DON'T MISS

FireAid, a Benefit for LA Wildfire Relief, Is Almost Here. Here’s How to Watch and Donate

DON'T MISS

Here Are Some of the Deadliest Plane Crashes in US History

DON'T MISS

With Sweeping Executive Orders, Trump Tests Local Control of Schools

DON'T MISS

NASA’s 2 Stuck Astronauts Take Their First Spacewalk Together

DON'T MISS

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Bousen Chanthalangsy

DON'T MISS

Baked-in-Profits Send PG&E and SCE Bills Soaring. Are They Excessive?

DON'T MISS

Merced Officer Saves Choking Toddler. Brings Her a Stuffed Animal as She Recovers.

DON'T MISS

US Economy Grows 2.3% in October-December on Eve of Trump Return to White House

DON'T MISS

Trump’s FBI Pick, Kash Patel, to Face Skeptical Dems at Senate Confirmation Hearing

UP NEXT

Hamas Will Free 3 Israelis and 5 Thais in Next Hostage Release Thursday

UP NEXT

Israel’s Prime Minister Says Trump Has Invited Him to the White House on Feb. 4

UP NEXT

Trump Administration Halts HIV Drug Distribution in Poor Countries

UP NEXT

Trump’s Gaza Displacement Plan Faces Rejection, Regional Concerns

UP NEXT

California Projected to Lose Congressional Seats While Texas, Florida Gain

UP NEXT

Behind the Colombia Blowup: Mapping Trump’s Rapid-Escalation Tactics

UP NEXT

CDC Ordered to Stop Working With WHO Immediately

UP NEXT

Israeli Forces Again Open Fire as Lebanese Try to Return Home, Lebanese Officials Say

UP NEXT

Crowds of Joyous Palestinians Stream Into Northern Gaza — Though Uncertainty Awaits Them

UP NEXT

State Department Freezes New Funding for Nearly All US Aid Programs Worldwide

With Sweeping Executive Orders, Trump Tests Local Control of Schools

36 minutes ago

NASA’s 2 Stuck Astronauts Take Their First Spacewalk Together

38 minutes ago

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Bousen Chanthalangsy

49 minutes ago

Baked-in-Profits Send PG&E and SCE Bills Soaring. Are They Excessive?

50 minutes ago

Merced Officer Saves Choking Toddler. Brings Her a Stuffed Animal as She Recovers.

1 hour ago

US Economy Grows 2.3% in October-December on Eve of Trump Return to White House

2 hours ago

Trump’s FBI Pick, Kash Patel, to Face Skeptical Dems at Senate Confirmation Hearing

2 hours ago

Fresno Police Will Conduct DUI Patrols on Saturday

2 hours ago

Palestinian Prisoners Leave Ofer Prison in West Bank. Eight Israeli Hostages Freed

2 hours ago

Stock Market Today: Meta Platforms Leads Most of Wall Street Higher

2 hours ago

Rihanna Appears at Trial of A$AP Rocky and Outshines Key Testimony on Alleged Shooting

LOS ANGELES — The most important testimony at the trial of rapper A$AP Rocky got second billing as the defendant’s partner and the mot...

17 minutes ago

17 minutes ago

Rihanna Appears at Trial of A$AP Rocky and Outshines Key Testimony on Alleged Shooting

26 minutes ago

FireAid, a Benefit for LA Wildfire Relief, Is Almost Here. Here’s How to Watch and Donate

32 minutes ago

Here Are Some of the Deadliest Plane Crashes in US History

An all gender student restroom at Belvedere Middle School in East Los Angeles, Sept. 23, 2024. With sweeping executive orders, President Donald Trump tests local control of schools. (Philip Cheung/The New York Times)
36 minutes ago

With Sweeping Executive Orders, Trump Tests Local Control of Schools

38 minutes ago

NASA’s 2 Stuck Astronauts Take Their First Spacewalk Together

Authorities are seeking Bousen Chanthalangsy, wanted for grand theft; call Crime Stoppers at 498-STOP with anonymous tips. (Valley Crime Stoppers)
49 minutes ago

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Bousen Chanthalangsy

50 minutes ago

Baked-in-Profits Send PG&E and SCE Bills Soaring. Are They Excessive?

Officer Cruz Ramirez saved a choking 14-month-old, restoring the child's breathing before returning the next day to check in. (Merced PD)
1 hour ago

Merced Officer Saves Choking Toddler. Brings Her a Stuffed Animal as She Recovers.

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend