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US military bases are a danger to the Philippines

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IF the Ukraine war has taught us anything, it is that any future military conflict, especially in the South China Sea, the West Philippine Sea or the Straits of Taiwan, will be a war primarily fought with short- and long-range missiles, even hypersonic missiles, together with all internet systems being disrupted by cyber warfare.

The growing tension in the Asia-Pacific region with the Philippines at the center makes it time for Filipinos to start worrying about a possible war over Taiwan that would rain down Chinese missile strikes on any of the US bases, now or in the future, on the Batanes Islands, Cagayan, Basa Air Base or nearby Clark, Subic Bay, and parts of Mindanao and Palawan.

Last Jan. 31, 2023, The Manila Times reported: 'A four-star US Air Force general has warned of a conflict with China as early as 2025 — most likely over Taiwan — and urged his commanders to push their units to achieve maximum operational battle readiness this year. In an internal memorandum that first emerged on social media on Friday, and was later confirmed as genuine by the Pentagon, the head of the Air Mobility Command, Gen. Mike Minihan, said the main goal should be to deter 'and, if required, defeat' China.'

So, if there will be a major conflict here, it will be over Taiwan and most certainly not over the Philippine atolls and sandbanks taken and occupied by China from the Philippines and the few tons of fish stolen daily from Philippine waters.

Taiwan is a small, democratic independent state with a Taiwanese population of 24 million as of 2020, and 150,000 to 200,000 Filipinos living there. It is just 200 miles north of the Philippines. It is claimed by China as part of its sovereign territory. China has declared in recent years that it wants Taiwan back under Beijing's communist control even with the use of force.

Shortly after US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited the island state in August 2020 in a show of US solidarity, China unleashed a mighty military show of force in protest with flybys and threats of invasion. Much of that may only be bluster but, in fact, Xi Jinping, the militant-minded leader in Beijing, is determined to get it back. Much like Putin, President Xi Jinping has grandiose imperialistic ambitions, fueled by a desire to go down in history as the leader that won back what China calls its rebel province.

According to some analysts, the missile war will likely be won by those with the most effective and accurate hypersonic missiles launched from the air or those forces with multiple, widely dispersed missile launch sites on land and ships that are too many to be attacked and overwhelmed simultaneously.

The recent agreements between the United States and the Philippine government of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. seem to be paving the way for this kind of strategy in the Philippines. There are already many US marine missile bases dispersed, or will be, throughout the strategically located Japanese Senkaku Islands 170 kilometers from Taiwan and 330 kilometers from China. The marines from Okinawa are being re-trained, re-armed and re-deployed in small fighting forces without massive tanks and heavy armor, much to the disgust of traditionalist retired military officers.

Instead, they will be armed with a multiple missile capacity like the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System, super effective in Ukraine and super accurate. The US will likely deploy them here anyway together with patriot anti-air missiles. The Philippines is fast becoming one huge US military base scattered into a dozen of its parts.

It seems that the plan of the military alliance between the United States, Australia and the United Kingdom, known as Aukus, is to surround China with a steel chain of island fortresses bristling with multiple missile sites, too many to be suppressed by counterattack, but that can subdue the Chinese navy and strike its land-based launch sites if ever it comes to all out conflict, and an attempt by China to invade Taiwan.

The Aukus missile bases in the Philippines and the Japanese Senkaku Islands could devastate Chinese ships trying to make troop landings on Taiwan. The Aukus nations are developing hypersonic missiles to counter the technological sophistication of China's missile strike force. Hypersonic missiles are deadly and hard to detect because of their speed (Mach 5) and are very maneuverable.

This huge growing US presence in the Philippines, located inside Philippine military installations, is covered by the fig-leaf of the 2014 Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement that shields the US from criticism that it is violating Philippine sovereignty by already having regular use of Basa Air Base in Floridablanca town in Pampanga; Antonio Bautista Air Base in Puerto Princesa City, Palawan; Benito Ebuen Air Base on Mactan Island in Cebu; Lumbia Airfield in Cagayan de Oro City in northern Mindanao; an army jungle training base in Fort Laur, Nueva Ecija; and other unknown secret bases. Subic Bay and San Miguel Base in Zambales are next for US occupation.

When the US occupies the Philippine Air Force base in Lal-lo, Cagayan in the North, it will be within easy striking distance to Taiwan in the event of an invasion of Taiwan by China. The US Air Force has been flying surveillance planes in and out of Clark for several years already under the Visiting Forces Agreement. However, it is not just occasional visiting; the planes are on regular military operations from a civilian airport. All is done with a nod and a wink from the Philippine higher command; permission is always granted on a permanent basis it seems.

Besides, the US military has unlimited access to other areas for its training and testing of weapons. It tested its M142 High Mobility Artillery rocket launchers in Crow Valley in Tarlac and has the use of the Col. Ernesto Rabina Air Base in Tarlac and practically any other harbor or airfield it wants to use for so-called visiting. For years, the US used the Batanes Island airfield for re-fueling its planes. It used helicopters to light up the runway until landing lights were installed.

Subic Bay has been used for docking US Navy ships and loading supplies and now with a US company, Cerberus Capital Management, owning the former Hanjin shipyard in Subic Bay, we can expect more US ships to be based there like the USS New Orleans. For sure, Chinese missiles installed on the seized Philippine atolls are now aimed at Subic Bay and San Miguel Base, Zambales. The bay has recently been named as a Philippine Navy base, conveniently situated at part of the former Hanjin shipyard. That is another fig-leaf to justify US warships docking at Subic Bay.

The US military presence in the West Philippine Sea has not deterred China from grabbing more atolls and islands from the Philippines and arming them with missiles. The Mutual Defense Treaty between the US and the Philippines is of no help. There has to be an act of war by China against the Philippines to trigger a US military response. Any such response will need the approval of the US Congress. The presence of so many US military bases inside Philippine bases is making the Philippines an open and vulnerable target for retaliatory strikes by China.

The deployment of so many US servicemen in military bases all over the Philippines will speed up the expansion of the sex industry and, once again, we will see more human trafficking and sexual abuse and exploitation of women and children by US servicemen as if we don't have enough by Filipinos at present as in the past.

Members of the United States Marine Corps demonstrate their operational readiness as they coordinate with the Philippine Marines at Col. Ernesto Ravina Air Base, in Capas, Tarlac on Thursday, Oct. 13, 2022. The USMC launched eight missiles from the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) and pounded practice targets with their 155mm Howitzers. The indirect fire support demonstration is part of the Combined Arms Live Fire Exercise (CALFEX) where the armed forces from different countries participate to test their interoperability in times of crisis. PHOTO BY J. GERARD SEGUIA