Current:Home > reviewsFrance and Philippines eye a security pact to allow joint military combat exercises -消息
France and Philippines eye a security pact to allow joint military combat exercises
View
Date:2025-04-19 06:48:13
MANILA, Philippines (AP) — France and the Philippines are condiering a defense pact that would allow them to send military forces to each other’s territory for joint exercises, the Philippine defense chief said Saturday after holding talks with his French counterpart.
Gilberto Teodoro Jr. said in a joint press conference with French Minister for the Armed Forces Sebastien Lecornu that they were seeking authorization from their heads of state to begin negotiations.
“We intend to take concrete steps into leveling up and making more comprehensive our defense cooperation, principally by working to get authorization from our respective heads of state and relevant agencies to begin negotiations for a status of visiting forces agreement,” Teodoro said.
“The first goal is to create interoperability or a strategic closeness between both armed forces, see how both navies work together, how air forces work together,” Lecornu said through an interpreter.
The Philippines has such an agreement — which provides a legal framework for visits of foreign troops — only with the United States, its longtime treaty ally, and with Australia. Negotiations between the Philippines and Japan are also underway for a reciprocal access agreement that would allow Japanese and Philippine troop deployments to one another for military exercises and other security activities.
The Philippine and French defense chiefs agreed to deepen defense cooperation, including by boosting intelligence and information exchanges to address security threats, Teodoro said.
They agreed to sustain Philippine and French ship visits and underscored the importance of upholding international law, including the 1982 U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea, he said.
That language has often been used by the U.S. and the Philippines, along with their allies, in their criticism of China for its increasingly aggressive actions in the disputed South China Sea.
France has deployed its navy ships to the South China Sea to promote freedom of navigation and push back against Chinese expansionism. China claims virtually the entire waterway and has constructed island bases protected by a missile system in the past decade, alarming smaller claimant states, including the Philippines, Vietnam and Malaysia.
Washington has repeatedly warned that it is obligated to defend the Philippines, its oldest treaty ally in Asia, if Filipino forces, ships and aircraft come under armed attack, including in the South China Sea.
The Philippines recently staged joint air and naval patrols separately with the U.S. and Australia in the South China Sea, provoking an angry reaction from China, which warned that the joint patrols should not harm its sovereignty and territorial interests.
Philippine National Security Adviser Eduardo Ano said Friday that the joint patrols with U.S. and Australia would continue and could be expanded to include other friendly nations like Japan.
Ano spoke to invited journalists on Thitu Island, a Philippine-occupied island in the South China Sea, where he led the inauguration of a new coast guard monitoring station that would be equipped with a radar, satellite communications, coastal cameras and ship-tracking equipment to help counter what he described as China’s “pure bullying.”
veryGood! (99599)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Prue Leith Serves Up Sizzling Details About Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds' Baking Show Visit
- Are the Oakland Athletics moving to Las Vegas? What to know before MLB owners vote
- Donald Trump Jr. to be defense's first witness in New York fraud trial
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Tracy Chapman becomes the first Black person to win Song of the Year at the CMAs
- Blinken says ‘far too many’ Palestinians have died as Israel wages relentless war on Hamas
- CBS News poll finds Republican voters want to hear about lowering inflation, not abortion or Trump
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Erdogan backtracks after siding with court that defied top court’s ruling on lawmaker’s release
Ranking
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Jury finds man not guilty of assaulting woman at U.S. research station in Antarctica
- This week on Sunday Morning (November 12)
- The 2024 Grammy Award nominations are about to arrive. Here’s what to know
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Demonstrators brawl outside LA’s Museum of Tolerance after screening of Hamas attack video
- Democratic West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin is retiring, giving GOP a key pickup opportunity in 2024
- Formatting citations? Here's how to create a hanging indent, normal indent on Google Docs
Recommendation
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Iconic 1990s Philadelphia Eagles jacket like one worn by Princess Diana going on sale
The IRS just announced new tax brackets. Here's how to see yours.
Daily room cleanings underscores Las Vegas hotel workers contract fight for job safety and security
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
French far-right leader Marine Le Pen raises a storm over her plan to march against antisemitism
Robert De Niro's former assistant awarded $1.2 million in gender discrimination lawsuit
Pakistan is planting lots of mangrove forests. So why are some upset?