MANILA, Philippines – US Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in the Philippines Tuesday for a two-day trip that could fast-track a deal on expanding the US military presence as a territorial dispute simmers with China.
Kerry will also visit areas devastated by Super Typhoon “Yolanda” (Haiyan) last month, highlighting a massive US humanitarian response to the disaster which contrasted with a modest contribution from regional power China.
“Kerry’s visit can be expected to act as a catalyst for change,” John Blaxland, a security and defense analyst at Australia National University’s College of Asia and the Pacific, told AFP.
Washington and Manila are in the final stages of hammering out a deal allowing more US troops, aircraft and ships to temporarily pass through the Philippines, where the last US bases closed in 1992.
“He will be eager to leverage the visit to speed up and finalize arrangements and assure the Philippines and other regional powers that the US is not just a fair-weather friend,” Blaxland said.
The United States, the former colonial power in the Philippines, has been the greatest contributor of aid following the typhoon which left nearly 8,000 dead or missing, and four million people homeless.
Washington deployed an aircraft carrier group and committed 1,000 Marines and $20 million in a mobilization that served as a preview of the deal’s intensified defense engagement.
Beijing meanwhile drew scorn with an initial offer of just $100,000 to the Philippines, a Washington ally with which it is locked in a dispute over sovereignty of islands in the strategically vital West Philippine Sea (South China Sea).
Ian Storey, a senior fellow at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore, said Washington’s humanitarian response could help it secure the military pact with Manila.
“America’s immediate, massive and generous support in the aftermath of Super Typhoon Haiyan could well hasten negotiations on US military rotational deployments through the Philippines,” he said.
China’s growing assertiveness in the region as well as the increasing frequency of deadly natural disasters in the Philippines “underscore the growing importance of Manila’s alliance with Washington,” Storey said.
Kerry, who is touring the Philippines for the first time since taking office, will hold talks in Manila on Tuesday before traveling to the typhoon-ravaged Tacloban City on Wednesday.
He will meet with his Philippine counterpart Albert del Rosario, as well as President Benigno Aquino, who has been rallying pro-US sentiment to blunt China’s muscle-flexing in the region.
Tensions between the Philippines and China have risen in recent years as Beijing becomes more forthright in asserting its claim over most of the potentially resource-rich West Philippine Sea.
Earlier this year, Manila took Beijing to a United Nations tribunal over the contested Scarborough Shoal, which lies about 220 kilometers (135 miles) from the Philippines’ main island of Luzon and has been occupied by Chinese vessels since last year.
In a bid to showcase its increasing military alliance with the United States, Manila held war games near the territory earlier this year, further stoking tensions with Beijing.
China’s recent declaration of an Air Defense Identification Zone in the East China Sea – which has infuriated Japan and South Korea – has also raised concerns in the Philippines.
Storey said that while Beijing had not officially declared a similar air cover for the West Philippine Sea “it might do so in the near future.”
“During Kerry’s visit to the Philippines, both sides will likely reiterate the importance of freedom of navigation at sea and in the air,” he said.
The United States already has a long-time ally in the Philippines – until 1992 it had a permanent military presence at two bases in the island nation.
The bases were closed amid nationalist opposition, but the current administration led by Aquino has repeatedly said it wants to build a stronger alliance with the US.
Kerry will complete a three-day tour of Vietnam Tuesday, a trip aimed at shoring up ties with Southeast Asia during which he said the US will help regional nations patrol their territorial waters.
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