‘Balikatan’ 2026 to include ship-sinking drill

‘Balikatan’ 2026 to include ship-sinking drill

/ 05:20 AM April 16, 2026

San Narciso, Quezon — From training for combat to building communities, the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) and United States Indo-Pacific Command worked shoulder-to-shoulder in a series of humanitarian initiatives in Barangay Villa Reyes, San Narciso, Quezon, during PH-US Balikatan 41-2026.

PHOTO FROM AFP

MANILA, Philippines — Filipino, American, and Japanese troops will stage a high-profile ship-sinking drill off Ilocos Norte during this year’s “Balikatan” (shoulder-to-shoulder) war games from April 20 to May 8 as the exercises expand into a broader multidomain operation combining live-fire combat drills with cyber and other nonkinetic activities.

The “sinking exercise” (Sinkex), one of the centerpiece live-fire events of the annual drills, will see allied forces carry out coordinated strikes from air, land and sea to sink the decommissioned BRP Lake Caliraya (PS-70), according to Balikatan spokesperson Col. Dennis Hernandez.

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“This is a joint maritime strike,” Hernandez told reporters at Camp Aguinaldo. “It is a combination of air, land and maritime assets sinking the target vessel.”

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The exercise underscores the Philippines’ push to strengthen interoperability with allies as Balikatan 2026 develops into what military officials described as an “expanded multilateral engagement” involving around 17,000 troops.

READ: 17,000 soldiers from 7 countries to take part in 2026 ‘Balikatan’

Beyond the live-fire component, officials said this year’s Balikatan reflects a shift toward integrating both kinetic and nonkinetic operations across multiple domains.

AFP spokesperson Col. Francel Margareth Padilla said in a briefing on “Bagong Pilipinas Ngayon” that the exercises now cover cyber, air, land and maritime components, combining combat drills with command-and-control, cyber operations and other coordination activities.

“This year, it expands from kinetic to nonkinetic,” Padilla said, describing Balikatan as “very dynamic and ever evolving.” —GABRYELLE DUMALAG

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