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U.S.-Philippines Agree to Modernize, Strengthen Alliance

(Source: US Department of Defense; issued May 03, 2023)
US Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III welcomed Philippine President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. at the Pentagon with a full-honors ceremony on the Pentagon Parade Field — the first such ceremony for more than three years -- to underscore the renewed military relations between the two countries. (DoD photo)

The United States and the Philippines will continue the fundamental work needed to modernize and strengthen the alliance between the two nations, said Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III and Philippine President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. today at the Pentagon.

The secretary hosted a full-honors ceremony for the close ally on the Pentagon Parade Field — the first such ceremony for more than three years.

The secretary reiterated the United States' ironclad commitment to the Philippines under the Mutual Defense Treaty. The treaty, Austin said, "applies to armed attacks on our armed forces, coast guard vessels, public vessels, or aircraft in the Pacific, including anywhere in the South China Sea. So, make no mistake, Mr. President, we will always have your back in the South China Sea or elsewhere in the region."

Marcos came to the Pentagon the day after meetings with President Joe Biden at the White House. The visit is the latest in a series of meetings between the two nations. Austin visited Manila in February and met with Marcos at the Malacanang Palace. Last month, the two nations held "two-plus-two" talks with defense and foreign affairs leaders in Washington.

Marcos said this visit furthers the efforts to strengthen relationships between the two nations. A DOD official said the visit is happening at a historic moment in the alliance. The two militaries are deepening coordination and interoperability at all levels, the official said.

Austin mentioned the recently completed Balikatan exercise hosted in the Philippines. It was the largest Balikatan exercise in history with 17,000 troops from the Philippines, the United States and Australia, he said. The exercise covered land, sea, air and — for the first time — cyber scenarios.

Following on that effort is Cope Thunder — an exercise testing air power interoperability. This is the first Philippine-hosted version of the exercise since 1990, officials said.

The two defense leaders discussed U.S. support to Philippine defense modernization efforts and expanding operational cooperation in the maritime domain, including the South China Sea, a senior defense official said. "We'll also talk a lot about ongoing plans to continue to operationalize the [enhanced defense cooperation] agreement sites … in Northern Luzon and Palawan," the official said.

The four new sites are Balabac Island; Camp Melchor Dela Cruz; Lal-lo Airport, Cagayan; and Naval Base Camilo Osias. These bases join five others that were previously announced: the Antonio Bautista Air Base in Palawan, Basa Air Base in Pampanga, Fort Magsaysay, Benito Ebuen Air Base in Cebu and Lumbia Air Base on the island of Mindanao.

Marcos and Austin also discussed new bilateral defense guidelines. This item reflects the unprecedented effort behind modernizing the alliance to bring it into a new era of cooperation, the senior defense official said. The emphasis is to look at how threats arise in the various domains and what form those threats will take. This will enable Philippine and U.S. officials to chart a bilateral way forward "to help build our interoperability, information sharing, planning, etc., around how we address these conventional and nonconventional threats," the official said.

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U.S.-Philippines Bilateral Defense Guidelines

On May 3, 2023, U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III and Philippine Secretary of the Department of National Defense Carlito Galvez established the Bilateral Defense Guidelines to modernize alliance cooperation in service of the United States and the Philippines’ shared vision for a free and open Indo-Pacific region. The guidelines reaffirm that an armed attack in the Pacific, including anywhere in the South China Sea, on either of their public vessels, aircraft, or armed forces – which includes their Coast Guards – would invoke mutual defense commitments under Articles IV and V of the 1951 U.S.-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty. Recognizing that threats may arise in several domains – including land, sea, air, space, and cyberspace – and take the form of asymmetric, hybrid, and irregular warfare and gray-zone tactics, the guidelines chart a way forward to build interoperability in both conventional and non-conventional domains.

The guidelines are informed by the following goals with the aim of strengthening the United States and the Philippines’ combined deterrence in an evolving security environment, including to:
-- Reaffirm the U.S.-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty’s enduring relevance in addressing both current and emerging threats;
-- Foster a common understanding of roles, missions, and capabilities within the framework of the alliance to face regional and global security challenges;
-- Drive unity of effort across all areas of bilateral security and defense cooperation to sustain focus on principal regional security concerns; and
-- Guide priority areas of defense cooperation to address both conventional and non-conventional security challenges of shared concern.

The guidelines identify multiple lines of effort to advance these objectives, including the following:

MODERNIZE DEFENSE CAPABILITIES
-- Coordinate closely on the Philippines’ defense modernization, including through the completion of a Security Sector Assistance Roadmap, to identify priority defense platforms and force packages that will bolster combined deterrence and capacity to resist coercion.
-- Prioritize the procurement of interoperable defense platforms sourced from U.S. programs and Philippine national defense procurement and funding initiatives.
-- Expand investments in non-materiel defense capacity building including through education and training exchanges, exercises, and other operational activities.  

DEEPEN INTEROPERABILITY
-- Orient bilateral exercises and activities around improving our combined ability to counter armed attacks on either country as well as threats in space and cyberspace, while expanding the scope, scale, and complexity of exercises.
-- Expand cooperation on maritime security and maritime domain awareness, including through the continued conduct of combined maritime activities, including but not limited to joint patrols.
-- Deepen cooperation under the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA) to strengthen interoperability, including through infrastructure improvements; enhanced joint use of facilities; advancement of additional maritime security, maritime domain awareness, and humanitarian assistance and disaster relief capabilities; and rotational U.S. access to Agreed Locations.

ENHANCE BILATERAL PLANNING AND INFORMATION-SHARING
-- Conduct coordinated analysis, tabletop exercises, and training and exercises to reinvigorate bilateral planning and coordination efforts; assess bilateral requirements; and advance common objectives and approaches to shared challenges.
-- Develop adaptable decision-making processes and communication procedures to support flexible, timely, whole-of-government bilateral coordination and action to respond to conventional and unconventional warfare.
-- Broaden information sharing on early indicators of threats to the peace and security of both countries to ensure preparedness to address principal challenges confronting the alliance.
-- Strive toward real-time information sharing in collaboration with other departments and agencies to support deeper interoperability and operational coordination.
-- Enhance information security through consultations on policies, practices, and procedures for the protection of classified defense and military information.

COMBAT TRANSNATIONAL AND NON-CONVENTIONAL THREATS
-- Improve cyber defense and cyber security cooperation to secure critical infrastructure and protect against attacks emanating from state and non-state actors.
-- Pursue capacity-building activities to respond to chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear-related attacks and to counter the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.

CONTRIBUTE TO GLOBAL AND REGIONAL PEACE AND SECURITY
-- Sustain participation in multilateral fora, anchored in shared support for ASEAN centrality.
-- Prioritize trilateral and other forms of multilateral cooperation based on common issues of shared concern, including pursuing opportunities for third-party participation and observation in bilateral U.S.-Philippine defense activities.

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