Showing posts with label AFP Modernization Act. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AFP Modernization Act. Show all posts

Monday, June 25, 2012

Philippine Air Force to get 25 more helicopters in December

MANILA, Philippines -– The Philippine Air Force (PAF) will get 25 more helicopters late this year to augment its depleting air assets.

This was announced during the Air Power Symposium 2012 held at the SMX Convention Center, Mall of Asia in Pasay City on Friday as part of its preparation for the forthcoming 65th PAF anniversary celebration on July 6.

The symposium was hosted by Lt. Gen. Lauro Catalino G. de la Cruz, PAF commanding general.

This year’s theme was “Mobilizing Air Power for the Nation’s Multi-Dimensional Challenges.”

De la Cruz said four of the helicopters will be the last of the eight brand-new combat utility Sokol choppers the Department of National Defense ordered from PZL Swidnik of Poland.
The arrival of the final four Sokol helicopters will boost the firepower of the PAF which is in dire need of air assets, particularly fighter jets.

PZL Swidnik is the largest helicopter manufacturer in Poland.

The Sokol helicopter can carry 14 persons, including the pilot and co-pilot and has a maximum speed of 260 kilometers per hour and a range of 745 kilometers non-stop.

Each Sokol is armed with a variety of weapons such as air-to-ground rockets, air-to-air missiles, M-60 machine guns and 20mm cannons and climbs to an altitude of 19,680 feet.

The contract price of the Sokol choppers was P3 billion.

On the other hand, 21 refurbished UH-1H “Huey” helicopters will also be delivered in December this year.

“Hueys” are not only the workhorse of the military’s counter-insurgency operations in ferrying troops to combat areas but are also used during disasters, carrying food, water and medicines for victims stranded in remote areas.

Some of the 21 “Huey” helicopters were refurbished in the United States and the others were done by PAF engineers and aircraft mechanics.

The acquisition of new combat helicopters is part of the Modernization Program of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP).

During the day-long affair, De la Cruz said the symposium, which is an annual event of the Air Force since 1982, except for some broken years, “is designed primarily to discuss and promote the value of air power to a wider constituency.”

But for 2012, the forum was unique as it included the holding of “a 5-in-1 activity -- an academic forum, an air power symposium, a defense exhibit, a historical photo display, and the first Youth LEAP or Youth Leader Exchange for Air Power gathering.”

“We are holding this event no longer to cater mainly to an internal audience or our friends in aviation, but to a greater multi-sectoral representation of national security stakeholders and partners.”

De la Cruz stressed the importance of air power in the country’s defense.

“Today we all live in a highly complex and unpredictable security environment, and that the threats we face demand from us no easy solutions.”

Taking advantage of today’s new technology, De la Cruz allowed questions asked via the Internet, Twitter, Facebook, or mobile phones.

The questions were flashed on the wide screen during the question-and-answer portion of the symposium that turned out to be more lively.

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/InterAksyon.Com | June 25, 2012 | Article Link

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

PNoy admin gives AFP modernization highest fund allotment, says official

The Armed Forces of the Philippines has received the highest fund allocation for its modernization and Capability Upgrade Program under the Aquino administration, a military official said Tuesday.

"During the first two years of President Benigno Aquino III, the military has received P16.8 billion from various sources, including remittances from the Bases Conversion and Development Authority, General Appropriations, and Malampaya funds," AFP spokesperson Col. Arnulfo Marcelo Burgos told GMA News Online in a phone interview.

"We are grateful of the President's unprecedented support," he said, noting that the modernization program received P34 billion in the 15 years and three presidents before the Aquino administration.

The AFP has implemented 43 modernization and capability upgrade projects amounting to P4.7 billion, of which 19 were delivered.

The Philippine Army received 1,621 Night Fighting System and 6 APC M113, while the Philippine Air Force (PAF) got 18 Basic Trainer Aircraft, four combat utility helicopters, and an aerial camera.

On the other hand, the Philippine Navy obtained two multi-purpose attack craft, four landing craft utility, and 76mm ammunition.

"We are in the process of building our capability. However, we don't have a clear time frame," Burgos said.

"It's very expensive and we can't demand more than what we're capable of. We can't get the budget for health or education. We make do with what we have," he added.

"We have always used the whole-nation approach," he added, noting the importance in enlisting the support of all sectors in the government's security program.

Apparent failure

Similarly, Senator Panfilo Lacson, in his sponsorship speech on Senate Bill 3164 amending the Armed Forces of the Philippines Modernization Act, emphasized the importance of upgrading the country's defense capabilities.

SB 3164 was approved by the Senate early this month.

"This matter [Panatag Shoal] only serves to elucidate the importance of having a reliable military force. While we do not discount the importance of having allies, it is undeniable that our country must have a reliable military force that can readily protect and defend our territory, our natural resources, and most importantly, our people," he said.

Lacson, who chairs the Senate committee on national defense and security, noted the apparent failure of the Modernization Program.

"What was then envisioned as a modernization program turned out to be only a capability upgrade for the AFP. But even at this level, the program still fell short of its target. The basic requirements of move, shoot and communicate of the AFP are substandard and outdated, if not totally lacking," he said.

Lacson attributed the dismal performance of the program to the constant changes in priority lists, the tedious procurement process, the lack of technical expertise, and the corresponding legal restrictions.

He said the revised modernization program addresses the drawbacks of the old law.

"The revised modernization program takes into account the pitfalls of the previous model and incorporates provisions that will ensure a more efficient and cost-effective implementation of the program," Lacson noted.

SB 3164 will be conducted in accordance with the Defense System Of Management or DSOM, "a strategy-driven, capability-based, multi-year planning and execution process," the senator said.

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Anna Mae Yu Lamentillo | GMA News Online | June 20, 2012 | Article Link

Tuesday, June 05, 2012

Senate passes bill amending AFP Modernization Program

MANILA, Philippines - The Senate approved on third and final reading on Monday a bill which seeks to amend the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) Modernization Act after senators noted the program fell short of its targets.

Senator Panfilo Lacson, chairman of the Senate committee on national defense and security and principal author of the bill, said the AFP modernization program under Republic Act No. 7898, which ended last year, had “failed in many aspects.”

“The first AFP Modernization Program started on Dec. 19, 1996 with the approval of Joint Resolution No. 28 by the 10th Congress. What was envisioned as a modernization program turned out to be only a capability upgrade for the AFP. But even at this level, the program still fell short of its targets,” Lacson said in his sponsorship speech.

The revised AFP Modernization Program, Lacson explained, seeks to rectify the flaws and pitfalls of the previous model and incorporate provisions that will ensure a more efficient and cost-effective implementation of the program.

Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile, a former defense secretary, said he fully supported the passage of the bill.

”There is a compelling need to look into these modernization efforts and government leaders need to provide the policy guidance, crucial resources and exercise the proper oversight to help the military become more responsive to our security needs,” Enrile said.
Senate Bill No. 3164 was approved with 21 affirmative votes, zero negative vote and zero abstention.

Under the proposed measure, Lacson said, a new system will be introduced to cut down the procurement process from 29 stages to two assessment levels in addition to the actual procurement and contracting stages.

Lacson said the “redundant and tedious procurement system” was one of the causes of delay in the modernization efforts.

The measure will also set the policy of the program to avoid shifts in priorities.

“It appears that in a span of 15 years, the project list as contained in Joint Resolution 28 has been changed 11 times. In fact, there were instances when the list was changed twice in a single year,” Lacson noted.

The constant shifts in priorities, he said, had caused serious setbacks in the modernization of the AFP.

“SBN 3164 also introduces changes in the provision regarding the AFP Modernization Act trust fund. One fundamental change is that the fund can now be used to cover all necessary expenses to implement the procurement of equipment such as expenses for the pre-selection and post-qualification stages. According to the military, the lack of funds to pay for these expenses hinders the entire procurement process,” Lacson said.

To expedite the process, he said, the approval of Congress will no longer be required in the lease or joint development of military reservations. The consent of the President will be enough for such act.

However, he said Congress has to approve the sale of military reservations. The proceeds of the project entered into by either the Department of National Defense or the AFP will form part of the trust fund.

“The creation of a congressional oversight committee is also proposed under SBN 3164. The main purpose of having this oversight committee is to give Congress the needed muscle to safeguard the public funds allocated in the program and to ensure that this new modernization program will be implemented as envisioned under the proposed measure,” Lacson said.

“The modernization of our AFP must be made a priority of this administration,” he added.

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Saturday, June 02, 2012

AFP needs P75B for modernization

MANILA, Philippines—The Armed Forces of the Philippines needs P75 billion in the next five years to upgrade its capabilities and provide the country with a “minimum credible defense posture.”

Defense Undersecretary for Finance Fernando Manalo said AFP brass had asked Congress to allocate P75 billion from 2013 to 2017, or P15 billion a year, to revive the military modernization program that lapsed two years ago.

The 15-year modernization program that began in 1995 under the Ramos administration ended in failure in 2010 despite the profitable sale of vast military lands.

According to military officials, only 10 percent or P33 billion of the promised P331-billion allocation for 15 years had been given to the AFP.

Manalo said Congress’ approval to continue the modernization program by funding a five-year acquisitions plan until 2017 for modern naval and air defense assets was “very critical.”

The country is currently defenseless against external threats, according to him.
Manalo said AFP planners had identified 39 projects worth P75 billion to be implemented over five years.

“Amending the law on modernization is very critical… We can’t afford not to pass it,” Manalo said in a news forum with the defense press corps on Friday.

Among those to be acquired are lead-in fighter trainer jets, close-air support aircraft, long-range patrol aircraft, radar systems and engineering equipment.

“We want the capability to be able to monitor our maritime and aerospace. We want to have domain awareness. To achieve that, we need radar, long-range patrol aircraft, coast-watch stations, ships, fighter aircraft,” Manalo said.

The military modernization budget as envisaged will be over and above the regular budget of the AFP, which mostly goes to personnel salaries.

Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin presented the P75-billion proposal to President Aquino on May 25.

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Friday, May 11, 2012

Philippine defense chief: We're poor, but we won't beg

MANILA, Philippines - The Department of National (DND) on Wednesday said that the government is continuously trying to modernize its military using its own resources amid criticisms that the $30 million support offered by the US is insufficient.

Defense chief Voltaire Gazmin said the Philippines should not rely too much on the US or other external sources to enhance its military capabilities.

“We’re not beggars. We are poor, but we certainly will not beg,” Gazmin said at the Defense Press Corps forum in Camp Aguinaldo, Quezon City.

“We should not be relying so much in so far as our acquisition and upgrade of our military equipment is concerned. If they (US) will give us something, okay, then we stand on our own. We try to stand on our own,” he added.

Gazmin was reacting to criticisms that the $30 million foreign military financing offered by the US to the Philippines is insufficient.

The US has doubled to $30 million from $15 million the military assistance allocation for the Philippines this year.

Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile, however, said the amount was “insulting.” He said the amount was too small considering that the US has been benefiting from its ties with the Philippines.

“If it is just $30 million, if I were the government of President Aquino, I would say thank you but I don’t need $30 million. We can provide that $30 million for ourselves," Enrile said last Sunday.

Enrile said it appears that the Philippines is begging alms from the US.

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Alexis Romero and J. Domingo | The Philippine Star | May 10, 2012 | Article Link

Wednesday, May 09, 2012

Second Hamilton class cutter to arrive by November

MANILA, Philippines—A second Hamilton class cutter will be turned over by the US Coast Guard to the Philippine Navy late this month, Navy chief Vice Admiral Alexander Pama said Tuesday.

The 45-year-old retired seacraft will be turned over by May 22 or 23, Pama told reporters in a phone interview.

He said the ship could arrive in the Philippines by November after refurbishments, repairs and training of crew in the United States.

Transfer cost will be about the same as its sister ship, the BRP Gregorio del Pilar, which cost the Philippine government about P450 million, Pama said.

He said that just like BRP del Pilar, some equipment will be taken out from the newest ship to join the Philippine fleet.

Among those removed from the BRP del Pilar before its transfer to the Philippine Navy were the sensors, communications and electronic equipment and close-in weapon systems.

On the 70th commemoration of Fall of Corregidor Sunday, President Benigno Aquino III announced that the new Hamilton ship will be named BRP Ramon Alcaraz.

Alcaraz was a World War II hero who commanded motor torpedo boats, known as Q-boats.

The Q-112 Abra, manned by Alcaraz and his crew, brought down three of the nine Japanese “Zero” fighters attacking his boat, before being captured. In captivity, Alcaraz became head of the Prisoner of War camp in Malolos, making sure that his fellow POWs were kept hopeful and alive, said Aquino.

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DND eyes second-hand jets, gunboats from other countries

MANILA, Philippines - The Department of National Defense (DND) is eyeing second-hand fighter jets and missile-firing gunboats from at least four friendly states apart from the United States in line with the country’s ongoing effort to build a credible territorial defense.

According to Peter Paul Galvez, DND spokesman, there are now ongoing acquisition efforts for these air and sea fighting equipment from France, Italy, the United Kingdom and South Korea.

“We now have this defense cooperative arrangements with these countries and through this scheme we will able to acquire fighter jets and gunboats at a lower price from them,” Galvez said yesterday.

Among the factors being considered by the department in its defense procurement program are the capability, longevity and cost of maintenance of these air and naval assets.

Now locked in a standoff with China over Panatag Shoal in Zambales, the country was earlier reported to be eyeing the procurement of a squadron of second-hand F-16 fighter planes and gunboats from the US Coast Guard.

“It’s not necessarily F-16s. We are also looking at jet fighters with the same capability as that of the F-16s but are cost-efficient and low in maintenance,” he said.

He added the acquisition program would also cover the Navy, which is awaiting transfer of the Hamilton-class cutter USS Dallas later this year.

The defense acquisition program is among 132 projects the department is eyeing to complete before the end of July.

“With the full backing of the President and with the assistance coming from friendly states, we will be able to achieve... a credible territorial defense,” Galvez said.

The US-based Center for a New American Security (CNAS) has said that the Philippines needs up to four squadrons (48) of upgraded Lockheed Martin F-16 fighter jets, well-armed frigates and corvette-size, fast to surface combatant vessels and minesweepers and four to six mini submarines, possibly obtained from Russia, to build a credible defense force in the face of China’s increasing belligerence in the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea).

In an article “Defending the Philippines: Military modernization and the challenges ahead” written by Richard Fisher, CNAS pointed out that this level of capability would far exceed current Philippine planning and finances and it would be in Washington’s interest to make it easier for Manila to acquire US fighters, frigates and other weapons system and encourage other countries such as Japan and South Korea to help modernize the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP).

The Philippine Air Force is presently relying on a single trainer jet converted into a fighter aircraft as well as several units of Vietnam-vintage OV-10 Bronco bombers, UH-IH and M520 attack helicopters as well as four newly delivered Sokol helicopters from Poland to guard the country’s skies.

The Navy, aside from several Peacock-class warships and a couple of World War II-vintage ships, simply relies on its newly acquired Hamilton-class cutter from the US, BRP Gregorio del Pilar, to secure maritime domain.

The country, through the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) and absent a credible territorial defense, could only watch China lording it over Panatag Shoal, a rich Filipino fishing ground 124 nautical miles from Zambales province.

Fight our own battles

Meanwhile, a congressman said yesterday that the Philippines should deal with China on its own in resolving the dispute over Panatag Shoal and the Spratly Islands.

“We cannot rely on the United States or the Association of Southeast Asian Nations for help. How then can we expect these nations to help us out when they have to protect their relations with and business interests in China? It’s quite pathetic for us to even seek their help,” Isabela Rep. Rodolfo Albano said.

“We should stop our practice of begging for help and hiding behind stronger economies when things get rough for our country. We cannot and should not always run to others for help. It’s time we fight our battle on our own,” he said.

Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario and Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin recently discussed with their US counterparts the country’s standoff with China over Panatag Shoal.

American officials, however, said they could not take sides in the dispute. But they promised help in the strengthening of the Philippine military.

Albano supported the position of President Aquino that the territorial conflict with China must be resolved peacefully and through diplomatic means.

“We must exhaust all peaceful and diplomatic means not because China is stronger than the Philippines in all aspects. Small country as we are, we have the obligation and the right to fight for the territory which has been ours long before China made its claim,” he said.
He said the plan to bring the issue before international forums like the United Nations is the right tack.

“We can win this battle over (Panatag) Shoal even without help from other countries because the territory is ours. We should make China accept that fact through peaceful and diplomatic means,” he added. 

Anti-China ‘hysteria’ hit

For the National Democratic Front, the US military activities in the Philippines are as much a form of foreign intervention as the Chinese incursion in Panatag Shoal.

“Alongside our condemnation of China’s incursion into (Panatag) Shoal, we must defy continued US troop presence and forward military deployment because these not only impinge on our sovereign right but, worse, drag the nation to the brink of an unjust war as well,” Jorge Madlos, spokesman for the NDF-Mindanao, said.

“We recognize, however, that it has been imbued upon the collective consciousness of the Chinese people that the West Philippine Sea is part of China, as much as Filipinos strongly believe that it is part of the Philippines. Thus, what is at stake here is the very integrity of both peoples,” he said.

“The answer to this inter-territorial dispute, therefore, is not war, but rather a diplomatic political solution between two countries in a third-party international tribunal,” Madlos said.

“It is for this reason that we condemn the military solution foisted by the US-Aquino regime, the pro-imperialist Akbayan special agents, and other rabid war mongers within the reactionary state. These war mongers shamelessly spread an anti-China hysteria that is engineered to drum up a military solution by upgrading the military capability of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, and worse, insist on US military intervention,” he added.
He said prominent Chinese businessmen like Henry Sy and Lucio Tan have connived with the US to exploit the environment and the Filipino workers.

“The (Panatag) Shoal standoff is but symptomatic of their corporate greed, just a scratch to their decades-long plunder and exploitation. Adding to the tension in the standoff in (Panatag) Shoal, the recently concluded Balikatan exercises (US-RP joint military exercises), which was participated in by 4,500 US troops, and military contingents from seven other countries, sent a serious message to China that US imperialist power, in collusion with the Philippine reactionary government, is capable of engaging against those that threaten US hegemony in Southeast Asia,” Madlos said.

Madlos said the US “hands-off” policy expressed by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is part of her country’s “containment and engagement” approach to dealing with China.

“Historically, US military forces have never been known to defend the sovereign right of the Filipino people, but only to protect US imperialist interests in Asia and the Pacific. In fact, US imperialism owes the Filipino people blood debts for over a century of oppression and exploitation, and its continued intervention has dragged the country into bloody wars,” he said.

“Thus, while we denounce Chinese incursion into our territory, the Filipino people must equally if not more strongly condemn US imperialist intervention as shown in its direct troop presence in Mindanao and in other parts of our country, which imperils the Philippines by bringing it on the verge of a war against China,” he pointed out.

“We must not be dragged into war on account of the West Philippine Sea dispute and become a helpless war theater for two of the biggest and most aggressive competing world powers, only to be used as a platform for their hegemonic conquest,” he said.

“If we recall, during World War II, the then emergent imperialist Japan attacked the Philippines because the US’s largest armament in Asia is stationed in the country, and, in turn, the Philippines also became a launch pad of Japan in occupying Vietnam, Laos, Indonesia, and Thailand. We cannot allow the horrors of this history to repeat itself,” he added. 

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Jaime Laude | The Philippine Star | May 8, 2012 | Article Link

Monday, May 07, 2012

AFP to get warships, helicopters

TALISAY CITY – The Armed Forces of the Philippines is getting two more ships from the United States and Europe, and also acquiring 10 refurbished UH-IH Huey helicopters this year, in a bid of the government to modernize its poorly equipped military.

President Benigno Aquino III announced Saturday that the Philippines is due to receive another ship from the United States- a Hamilton-class Coast Guard cutter, following the acquisition last year of a similar patrol ship, which is now the BRP Gregorio del Pilar.

We have another one from Europe, Aquino said, adding that Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao will now have one ship each.

BRP Gregorio del Pilar, formerly a Hamilton 378-foot High Endurance Cutter of the United States Coast Guard, beefed up the poorly-equipped Philippine Navy vessels, majority of which had been built during World War 2.

Built primarily as a patrol ship of the US Coast Guard in the 1970s for open ocean and long range operations, BRP Gregorio del Pilar is now the pride of the Philippine Navy.

The government spent P400 million to refurbish the former US Coast Guard ship.

Aquino said the government will soon have 10 more refurbished Huey helicopters, in addition to 24 Philippine Air Force helicopters, that used to be at least 100 , whom General Rodolfo Biazon was still the AFP vice chief of staff.

The PAF recently received four of the eight brand new Sokol combat utility helicopters from Swidnik—which is touted as the "biggest helicopter manufacturer in Poland.”

Aquino said the refurbishing of Huey choppers is expected to be completed within eight months. “They will be utilized during evacuations, if there are floods and landslides”, he added.

Foreign Affairs spokesman Raul Hernandez had earlier said that the United States will double its military aid to the Philippines, which is engaged in a prolonged maritime standoff with China over a shoal off Zambales.

Hernandez said the “foreign-military financing” aid could be used to buy new equipment or maintain existing military resources.

The Philippines has been asking the United States to supply its armed forces with patrol boats and aircraft as well as radar systems amid an escalating territorial dispute with China.

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 Gilbert Bayoran | The Visayan Daily Star | May 7, 2012 | Article Link

Friday, April 27, 2012

Philippines to ask US for excess military hardware

MANILA, Philippines—The Philippines will ask the United States for excess military hardware in the “2 plus 2″ meeting in Washington DC next week, an defense official said Friday.

“We will ask from the US some excess defense articles and the systems that were removed from the Hamilton class that arrived earlier,” Defense Undersecretary Honorio Escueta told reporters in an ambush interview after the closing ceremonies of the Balikatan exercises.

Escueta was referring to the BRP Gregorio del Pilar, the Navy’s first Hamilton class vessel acquired last year through the Excess Defense Articles program.

Among what the equipment taken off from BRP del Pilar when it was turned over to the Philippine Navy were sensors, communications and electronic equipment and close-in weapon systems.

Manila would also ask for long range patrol aircrafts and radar systems, Escueta said.

A second Hamilton ship from the US Coast Guard will arrive in the country within the year.

Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin and Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario will meet with their US counterparts, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and State Secretary Hilary Clinton, next week to discuss “defense, security, political and economic concerns.”

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Philippines seeks US defense boost amid China row

MANILA, Philippines—The Philippines said Thursday it would seek more US military help during top-level talks next week, as it ignored a warning from China not to “internationalize” a tense territorial dispute.

Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said the Philippines was looking to the United States to help it achieve a “credible” defense system, and wanted to extract maximum benefits from a mutual defense treaty between the allies.

Signed in 1951, the treaty calls on both sides to come to each other’s aid in times of external attacks, and the Philippines has highlighted the pact as it stands up to Beijing over rival claims to the West Philippines Sea (South China Sea).

“We are going to the United States in order to be able to maximize the benefits derived out of this mutual defense treaty,” Del Rosario told reporters.

“The idea of achieving a minimum credible defense posture is something that we should try to do.”

Del Rosario and Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin are expected to meet with their US counterparts Hillary Clinton and Leon Panetta in Washington on April 30.

The meeting comes as the Philippines is locked in an increasingly tense dispute with China over Scarborough Shoal, a group of islets in the South China Sea where vessels from both sides have been in a stand-off since April 8.

China on Wednesday warned the Philippines not to “internationalize” the issue and force other countries to take sides.

But Del Rosario said Thursday the dispute also impacted other countries that wanted unhampered access to vital sea lanes.

“I think all nations who have an interest in keeping freedom of navigation… should be watching carefully as to what is happening there,” he said.

“We would want all nations, including the United States, to make a judgment on what is happening there and what the implications are to their own country,” he said.

Del Rosario did not say what specific help the Philippines wanted in the US talks, but defense officials earlier said Manila would ask to acquire a coast guard vessel and F-16 fighter jets.

China claims all of the West Philippine Sea as a historic part of its territory, even waters close to the coasts of the Philippines and other Southeast Asian countries.

Experts say the overlapping claims are a potential flashpoint that could destabilize regional security.

The Philippines has accused China of increasingly being aggressive in staking its claims.

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| The Philippine Star | April 26, 2012 | Article Link

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Only a modernized military can stop China bullying: Philippine defense chief

MANILA, Philippines - Only a modernized military can stop China from bullying the Philippines over the Panatag (Scarborough) Shoal and other disputed areas in the West Philippine Sea, Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin said on Tuesday.

Gazmin said the government through the Department of Foreign Affairs (AFP) has been exhausting all means for a peaceful resolution and enforcement of maritime laws but China has remained uncooperative.

“Well, the third option is a credible deterrence: upgrade the capability of our Armed Forces. But again, this is not directed towards to China or any of the countries in the region; this is for our protection to make sure that our laws are enforced and we are able to protect our territorial waters,” Gazmin said.

The commander of the Northern Luzon Command (NOLCOM), Lt. Gen. Anthony Alcantara, visited Monday the officers and crew of the Philippine’s biggest warship, BRP Gregorio del Pilar, currently on dock and waiting for mission order from higher-ups at the Poro Point in La Union.

“It was just a normal visit to our troops in that area especially our Navy men assigned at the BRP del Pilar. I just relayed to them orders from higher-ups and I’m not at liberty to divulge it to the media because it’s all operational,” Alcantara said.

Gazmin lamented that China seems to prefer bullying its neighbors such as the Philippines rather than resolve the issue lawfully and legally under given laws such as the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

The Panatag Shoal is about 165 nautical miles of Zambales province and situated well within the 200-nautical-mile (UNCLOS provision) exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of the Philippines.

“We cannot resolve this on the basis of the UNCLOS if one party (China) did not want to cooperate and face the international court of justice. As far as we are concerned, we are always ready and pushing for this but they (China) don’t like it.  Their (China) only basis of claiming the area is ‘history’,” Gazmin said.

The volatile situation at the Panatag Shoal is far from over after the two maritime surveillance vessels (84 and 71) of China returned to the area last Sunday and was joined by another fishing vessel Monday.

Two ships of the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) and MY Sarangani, a private ship manned by a French team conducting archeological research, were also in the area.
A Chinese aircraft buzzed the Philippine vessels.

“An aircraft buzzed over our vessels. We are certain that this was a Chinese aircraft. The incident was yesterday afternoon (Monday). We will have to get into specifics,” Gazmin said.

Last Friday, the two Chinese maritime surveillance ships helped eight fishing vessels leave the area with their illegal harvest of giant clams, corals and different endangered marine species after the BRP del Pilar pulled out from the area.

The Philippine warship had cornered the 8 Chinese fishing vessels in Tuesday last week but it was blocked by the two maritime surveillance vessels from arresting the Chinese poachers, triggering the four-day standoff.

Standing orders: assert sovereignty at all times

Meanwhile, Gazmin said President Benigno Aquino III has instructed the DFA and the DND to assert the Philippine rights over the Panatag Shoal.

“We’ve to fight for it and we will not leave the area. Of course, we cannot afford to go to war at this time and therefore we’ve to continue our talks with Chinese authorities,” he said.

He also rejected unsolicited advice to seek assistance from the United States.

“This is a thing that we don’t have to ask for because the area is ours. But I am sure that if the standoff will affect their (US) own interest they will help us. But again we should stand on our own and right now we are in the process of trying to diplomatically settle the issue,” Gazmin said.

The longer the standoff at Panatag Shoal, the greater the impact will be on the economic activity in the area, particularly for local fishermen, Gazmin said.
“The most affected here are our fishermen because of this standoff,” he said.

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| April 17, 2012 | Article Link

US bases removal made Philippines prone to intruders

MANILA, Philippines - The removal of the United States military from the Philippines made the country vulnerable to intrusions, the country's defense chief said Tuesday.

"When the US bases [were still operating in Subic, Zambales and Clark Field, Pampanga], all of our maritime areas were free from intrusions as US forces helped us patrol those areas," National Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin.

Gazmin said that the country's intrusion problem grew when the US removed its bases in 1991. The US military left the country after the Senate refused to extend the lease of the American bases in the country.

The defense chief said that aside from this, the Philippine military's lack of equipment and capability made the country more vulnerable to intrusions.

"Our lack of equipment and capability made it easy for (some of) our neighbors to place markers on our territories, claiming it for their own," he said.

Gazmin also complained against the slow paced modernization of the military. He said the degradation in the Philippines' surveillance capability was further highlighted when the Armed Forces of the Philippines was only given P32-billion out of the P330-billion intended for its modernization.

The defense chief, meanwhile, said that the government is hoping to lessen the incidents of intrusions when the country starts commissioning its brand-new search radar systems, naval craft, and reconnaissance aircraft within the next few months.

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The Philippine Star | April 17, 2012 | Article Link

Wednesday, April 04, 2012

AFP still banking on US to secure Phl from threats

MANILA, Philippines - The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), despite its modernization program, will have to rely on its allies, particularly the United States, to secure and protect the country from external threats.

Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin made this admission during the launching of the Defense Press Forum at Camp Aguinaldo yesterday.

“We are now seeking from the US a minimum credible defense to prevent any powerful states from bullying us,” Gazmin said, referring to naval and air assets.

The government earlier said it is interested in acquiring a squadron of F-16 fighters from the US.

Gazmin said the planned acquisition is under review since the fighter jets are being phased out from the US Air Force inventory.

The US fighter jets might have limited flying hours left, he pointed out.

“Before we can have these fighter jets, we must also send our pilots for training. So it’s better to acquire first the so-called lead fighter jets,” Gazmin said.

The defense department also plans to acquire fighter jets from South Korea.

Gazmin assured the public that the military upgrade program is not directed at any country. “We are doing this in order to safeguard our own territory,” he said.

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Jaime Laude | The Philippine Star | April 4, 2012 | Article Link 

Tuesday, April 03, 2012

Italy's Alenia seeks to supply DND up to P6.87-B worth of aircraft

Italy's Alenia Aermachi S.p.A. is offering the Department of National Defense four to six units of its €20-million apiece M-346 surface attack plane, the firm’s local partner, Aerotech Industries told GMA News Online.

Aerotech Industries chief operating officer Tess Parian said the P1.14 billion price tag on each M-346 “could still change depending on the requirements or specifications the Philippine Air Force may provide later.”

The four-to-six-unit package would cost about P4.58 billion to P6.87 billion at the current exchange rat of P57.28:€1.

Parian said their likely competitor for the supply contract is the Korea Aerospace Industries—maker of the T-50—which Alenia Aermacchi was up against in supply contract biddings in other countries.

Last year, Alenia Aermacchi delivered 18 new SF260FH basic trainers to the PAF.

The trainer planes are now based at the Fenando Airbase in Lipa, Batangas, home to the PAF Air Education and Traning Command.

Parian said Singapore and the United Arab Emirates chose the M-346 for their respective air forces. Singapore got 12 units of the MB-346 and the United Arab Emirates has a tender for 48 units.

“The twin-turbofan M-346 is the most advanced lead-in fighter trainer flying today,” Alenia Aermacchi said on its website.

“With its fully digital flight controls and avionics, together with carefree handling and high AOA maneuvering, the M-346 is fully representative of new generation fighters,” Alena Aermacchi also said.

“... [T]he M-346 is today the only aircraft designed to meet the training needs of pilots of 4th and 5th generation combat aircraft,” it added.

Alenia Aermacchi is part of the Finmeccanica Group and has production facilities in Italy’s Venegono Superiore province. Its production area is 274,000 sqm, accomodating its 1,800 personnel. 

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Earl Rosero | GMA News Online | April 3, 2012 | Article Link

Defense not keen on purchase of US fighter jets

MANILA, Philippines - Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin expressed reservations over the country’s plans to purchase old F-16 fighter jets from the United States, as earlier announced by Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario.

"The F-16 (acquisition) is still being studied because the F-16s are old in the inventory. If they give that to us, we have to upgrade them and after upgrading, we'll look at the flying hours left," Gazmin told reporters.

He said the Philippines will only feel short-changed if after the upgrade, “the flying hours left is one or two years.”

He noted a pilot will have to be trained for two years to fly a jet, he said. 

He said the country does not have jet pilots. The Air Force used to have F-5 fighter jets but these were decommissioned due to high maintenance costs.

The Cabinet secretaries are due to meet with US defense Secretary Leon Paneta and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton Washington later this month.

They will seek “minimum defense posture” which, Gazmin said, are equipment needed so that the Philippines will not be "pushed around by those who want to bully us." 

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ABS-CBNnews.com | April 3, 2012 | Article Link

Monday, April 02, 2012

Six Navy ships undergo sea trials

SIX Navy ships that went through systems repair in a naval facility in Cavite test fired their guns over the weekend in Bataan to evaluate their readiness for deployment.

The test firing activity, which involved the shooting of an improvised floating target, was conducted 15 nautical miles off Luzon Point in Mariveles, Bataan.

It was conducted by the BRP Iloilo (PS32); BRP Tagbanua (AT296); BRP General Mariano Alvarez (PS38); RP Liberato Picar (PG377); BRP Hilario Ruiz (PG378) and  BRP Filipino Flojo (PG386).

They used anti-aircraft guns, 25mm naval guns and several types of machine guns.

Cmdr. Hilarion Cesista, training and evaluations officer of the Fleet Operations Readiness Training Evaluations Group (Forteg) of the Philippine Fleet, said the live firing activity was held to evaluate the range, precision and operational reliance of the vessels.

He said the test firing will determine whether the vessels are ready for full deployment.

During the test, all of the six vessels yielded 98-percent readiness.

Cesista said necessary measures will be taken to attain 100-percent readiness before the vessels will be deployed.

“Beyond test firing their weapons, the evaluation team ensured that all their logistical and operational supplies and equipment are available onboard and functional,” he said.

Rear Adm. Jose Luis Alano, Philippine Fleet commander, said it is their policy to certify that all the vessels undergoing repairs should be subjected to strict readiness evaluation procedures to ensure that they are reliable and equipped before they are deployed to perform their missions.

He said the strict evaluation procedures are meant to ensure the capability and operational readiness of vessels in order to respond to the demands of their multifaceted roles.

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Rene Acosta / Reporter  | BusinessMirror.Com.Ph | April 2, 2012 | Article Link

Friday, March 30, 2012

Manila offers U.S. wider military access, seeks weapons

MANILA, Philippines - The Philippines is offering the United States greater access to its airfields and may open new areas for soldiers to use, as the Pacific country seeks stronger military ties with its closest ally, moves likely to further raise tensions with China.

In exchange for opening its bases, the Philippines will ask Washington for more military equipment and training, including a another Hamilton-class warship and possibly a squadron of old F-16 jet fighters, Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario told Reuters on Thursday.

"As part of building up our minimum credible defence posture, we would like the Americans to come more often," del Rosario said in an interview at his office near Manila Bay.

Manila favours more frequent joint military drills, he said. One such exercise, which will be staged on western island Palawan for the first time, is scheduled for April 16.

"Let's have these joint training exercises more frequently and on a bigger scale. As many times as we can, in different places if we can, that's the objective of the exercise," del Rosario said, the first official confirmation of talks between the countries on increasing the U.S. military presence in the Philippines.

Disputes in the South China Sea are Southeast Asia's biggest security concern after a series of naval clashes over the vast region believed to be rich in energy reserves.
Chinese navy ships threatened to ram a Philippine research vessel last March, prompting Manila to scramble planes and ships to the area. After that, Philippine President Benigno Aquino started building closer ties with Washington, which has signalled a military "pivot" back to Asia.

Del Rosario said the possible purchase of F-16s and the request for a third cutter for the coast guard would be among issues up for discussion at a meeting between the two sides on April 30 in Washington.

The U.S. is also looking into gaining access, under a "joint use" arrangement, to around half a dozen civilian airfields in the Philippines, where U.S. transports, fighters and spy planes can land for repairs, refuelling and temporary deployment.

The talks, between among foreign and defence leaders, will precede a meeting between U.S. President Barack Obama and Philippine President Benigno Aquino later this year.

Intelligence partners

 
In the last 10 years, the Philippines has received about 22 billion pesos ($512.22 million) in U.S. military aid, Del Rosario said.

Washington is Manila's closest and only strategic security partner, since the two countries signed a mutual defence treaty six years after the Philippines won its independence from the United States.

Del Rosario said he welcomed closer intelligence cooperation in the South China Sea, after the U.S. last year proposed deploying P3C Orion reconnaissance planes to patrol disputed areas of the South China Sea.

"I think any method of cooperation that will provide us additional intelligence in terms of maritime domain awareness is good for us. The more information, the better," he said.
Australia said on Wednesday it could allow U.S. spy flights to operate from a remote Indian Ocean island.

Manila hopes China will not feel threatened by its increased defence cooperation with Washington.

"We expressed our satisfaction when China was in the process of building up its military, increasing its military budget," Del Rosario said.

"We expect that China, in the same way, would be happy to be able to see the Philippines trying to, in some measure, build up its own capabilities to be able to protect its own sovereignty."

The United States deploys about 600 commandos in the southern Philippine. Del Rosario said it was possible there would be an increase in the number of U.S. troops, aircraft and ships visiting the Philippines, but the two sides were not discussing setting up permanent U.S. bases in the country.

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Manuel Mogato & Rosemarie Francisco | Reuters | ABS-CBNNews.Com | March 30,2012 | Link

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Navy eyes warship building deal with Vietnam

MANILA — The Philippine Navy (PN) plans to send a contingent of Filipino sailors to the Vietnam People's Navy (VPN)'s Naval Shipyard X46 for training on the art of modern warship construction. 
 
Naval Shipyard X46, also known as Hai Long Shipbuilding, is equipped with state-of-the-art shipbuilding equipment and is capable of constructing modern, high-speed warships weighing up to 500 tons.

This proposal came up during PN flag-officer-in-charge Vice Admiral Alexander Pama's visit to Vietnam early this month.

During his visit, the PN chief discussed the proposal with VPN head Admiral Nguyen Van Hien , who was described as very receptive to the proposal.

If the deal push through, PN personnel would gain more knowledge in refurbishing and repairing their naval vessels thus translating to saving as the PN would no longer rely on foreign and commercial dockyards for their maintenance.

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PNA | ZamboTimes.Com | March 28, 2012 | Article Link

Monday, March 26, 2012

Czech Republic may give Phl defense equipment

MANILA, Philippines - The Czech Republic yesterday expressed interest in providing the Philippines with defense equipment to modernize its military and improve the national defense capability.

Visiting First Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic Karel Schwarzenberg told a press conference that the two countries have discussed what equipment the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) would need and the defense supplies his country can offer, like planes, small arms and Czech pistols.

“We are in talks on the need of the Philippines. We offer products. We are very much interested in this area because we have several products,” Schwarzenberg said.
“There are special guns for the army which are very good quality.”

Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario said the Czech Republic is ready to provide defense suppliers for the Philippine military modernization.

“I think the minister said it can go as huge as airplanes and as small as smallest firearms but I don’t have details on that,” Del Rosario also told the news conference.

The Philippines is also exploring other means of military assistance and cooperation from the United States.

Washington has assured the Philippines help in obtaining F-16 jet fighters to improve the country’s defense capability.

Del Rosario earlier said that the Philippines’ plan to obtain a squadron of F-16 was discussed on Feb. 10 in a meeting with Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs Andrew J. Shapiro in Manila.

Shapiro visited the country to consult with senior civilian and military officials on further enhancing defense and security cooperation for the mutual benefit of the US and the Philippines.

Shapiro said the Philippines indicated that the country wants to take a good look at that option. The US said they would look for those units and help the Philippines assess the cost so that the country can plan accordingly.

The US has expressed willingness to help the Philippines obtain a squadron of F-16s.

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Pia Lee-Brago | The Philippine Star | March 25, 2012 | Article Link

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