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Balikatan ends

Alexis Romero - The Philippine Star

MANILA, Philippines - This year’s Balikatan military exercise between the Philippines and United States ended yesterday with officials claiming that the drills reflected the commitment of the two countries to protect their sovereignty and territorial integrity.

Armed Forces chief Gen. Emmanuel Bautista said the bilateral exercise had shown that the only way to overcome current security challenges is for everyone to stand shoulder-to-shoulder.

“The exercises emphasized that as friends and allies, the Philippines and the United States will act in our collective capacity to safeguard international peace and security, and to ensure that territorial integrity and sovereignty are respected,” Bautista said during the Balikatan 2014 closing rites in Camp Aguinaldo.

“Through the exercises that we conducted, the Philippines and the United States jointly developed a platform for regional engagement, enhanced our military capabilities, learned from each other and advanced interoperability and capacity in joint planning execution,” he added.

Bautista made the remarks amid the simmering tensions in the West Philippine Sea that was further fueled by China’s ongoing relocation in Mabini (Johnson) Reef off Palawan.

Defense officials said they have been observing Chinese movement in the reef since February but could not say what structures are being built.

Previous reports, however, said that China is building an airstrip in the area, which is well within the Philippines’ continental shelf.

The Philippines filed a protest against the reclamation but China ignored it and insisted that it has sovereignty over the area.

Officials have maintained that the Balikatan exercises, which started last May 5, have nothing to do with the territorial row.

Bautista only said the exercise proved the “enduring alliance” between the Philippines and the US, which he described as “a pillar for peace in Southeast Asia and the greater Asia Pacific.”

“May we seek for more ways to strengthen this alliance and ensure that it remains relevant, responsive and modernized,” he added.

US Deputy Chief of Mission Bryan Goldbeck said the drills would also enable the troops to respond to disasters like Typhoon Yolanda, which left more than 6,000 persons dead last November.

“Hopefully you won’t have to respond to another disaster on the scale of Typhoon Yolanda but if, God forbid, it comes to that, now you know that regardless of the uniform they wear, the man or woman standing shoulder to shoulder with you is a friend and an ally,” Goldbeck said.

Over 3,000 Filipino and 2,500 American soldiers joined Balikatan 2014, which focused on maritime security and humanitarian response.

Staff exercises that centered on crisis action planning were held at Camp Aguinaldo in Quezon City and at the Armed Forces Western Command headquarters in Puerto Princesa, Palawan.

Field training was held in San Antonio in Zambales, Ternate in Cavite and Crow Valley in Tarlac.

Humanitarian activities like the building and renovation of classrooms and health centers and the giving of medical and veterinary services were also conducted in the Bicol region. 

 

 

 

 

 

ARMED FORCES

ARMED FORCES WESTERN COMMAND

ASIA PACIFIC

BALIKATAN

BAUTISTA

CAMP AGUINALDO

CAVITE AND CROW VALLEY

DEPUTY CHIEF OF MISSION BRYAN GOLDBECK

PHILIPPINES AND THE UNITED STATES

TYPHOON YOLANDA

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