• Last Update 2024-08-27 22:11:00

Philippines, U.S. to determine fate of joint exercises next month

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(REUTERS) Philippine and U.S. military officials will meet late next month and decide the fate of decades-old joint exercises, defense sources said on Wednesday, amid doubts over the future of the security alliance and a stream of mixed messages from Manila.

The meeting, an annual get-together to plan events for the year ahead, could bring some clarity to a Philippine position muddied by President Rodrigo Duterte's pronouncements about ending an alliance that he says has little value, contrary to the opinions of some military commanders.

"The meeting was supposedly on October 24, but it was moved to November 24 because they (Philippine military) wanted it after the U.S. elections," said a Philippine army general, who declined to be named as he was not authorized to speak to the media.

"As of now, we really don't know what military exercises will be stopped, because the president has not made any specific instruction."

Duterte on Wednesday reiterated his intent to revise or cancel crucial security pacts and scrap war games that military officials maintain are pending a review.

The regular meeting between the head of the U.S. Pacific Command and the chief of staff of the Philippine military alternates each year between Honolulu and Manila and covers activities such as intelligence gathering, humanitarian assistance and disaster response, and conventional exercises.

The army general said the Philippine defense minister would try to convince Duterte in a cabinet meeting next week to retain some useful exercises, but the Philippine side sought assurances from its U.S. counterparts that it would not be treated like a vassal state.

"What we wanted is equal partnership with the United States," the source added. "But, if there is no change, I am afraid the Philippines will distance further from the United States."

A defense ministry official told Reuters the meeting was postponed because the president has not put down in writing what exercises with the U.S. will be scrapped.

"There was nothing to discuss because there was no specific instruction from the president," the official said, adding there are indications the Philippines would scale down the exercises.

The defense department says the two sides now hold 28 exercises each year, three of them large-scale and the rest minor activities.

Washington has been Manila's closest security partner since the end of Second World War, when the Philippines won independence from the United States. A mutual defense treaty was signed in 1951

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