MANILA: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr Saturday in a bid to bolster the countries’ “strong” alliance, as China conducts military drills around nearby Taiwan.
Blinken is the most senior US official to visit the Southeast Asian
nation — a treaty-bound ally of the United States — since Marcos took
office on June 30.
“The alliance is strong and I believe can grow even stronger,” Blinken
told Marcos as they met at the presidential palace in the capital
Manila.
Marcos hailed the “special relationship” between the two countries.
The United States has a security pact with the Philippines and has
backed its former colony in increasingly heated disputes in the South
China Sea with Beijing.
Blinken’s meeting with Marcos came after China launched a series of huge
military exercises around Taiwan that have been condemned by the United
States and other Western allies.
During drills on Thursday and Friday, China fired ballistic missiles and
deployed fighter jets and warships around Taiwan, about 400 kilometers
north of the Philippines. The war games are to continue Saturday.
The People’s Liberation Army also declared multiple no-go danger zones
around Taiwan, straddling major shipping lanes and coming within 20
kilometers (12 miles) of the island’s shores at some points.
The moves came in response to a visit to Taiwan by US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, which prompted fury in China.
Marcos said Pelosi’s visit only demonstrated the existing “intensity” of the conflict, rather than adding to tensions.
Blinken arrived in Manila late Friday after attending an Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit in Cambodia.
There, he condemned China’s military drills as “a significant escalation.”
Like other members of ASEAN, the Philippines does not formally recognize
Taiwan and has shown no appetite for backing Taipei against China.
The Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs said Thursday it was “concerned with the rising tensions” to its north and urged “restraint by all parties.”
“Diplomacy and dialogue must prevail,” it said in a statement.
The United States has a complex relationship with the Philippines — and the Marcos family.
After ruling the former US colony for two decades with the support of
Washington, which saw him as a Cold War ally, Ferdinand Marcos Senior
went into exile in Hawaii in the face of mass protests and with the
nudging of the United States in 1986.
As regional tensions rise, Washington is keen to preserve its security alliance with Manila, which includes a mutual defense treaty and permission for the US military to store defense equipment and supplies on several Philippine bases.
It also allows US troops to access certain military bases in the country.
Marcos has indicated he will strike a balance between China and the
United States, which are vying to have the closest ties with his
administration.
US relations rebounded with Manila toward the end of the tenure of Marcos’ predecessor Rodrigo Duterte, who waged a brutal war on drugs that rights groups say left tens of thousands of dead.

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