Manila is weighing a new approach in the South China Sea, where increasing encounters with Beijing have damaged its vessels and injured its crew, said Philippine Secretary of Defense Gilberto Teodoro Jr, who signaled that he wants maritime operations to be “less telegraphic.”
“We are re-strategizing the way we do things, naturally with the end in view of both preventing injuries and number two, upholding the dignity of our country,” Teodoro said in an interview in his office in Manila earlier yesterday.
Teodoro declined to elaborate on the adjustment to the country’s strategy, as he said the Philippines has a “range of options” to counter China, which lays sweeping claims in the key waterway.
Photo: AP / Philippine Coast Guard
“If you are stuck to one mode, it is easy to anticipate,” he said.
The defense chief’s remarks come as three Chinese coast guard ships yesterday fired water cannons at two Philippine vessels near Scarborough Shoal (Huangyan Island, 黃岩島) in yet another example of China’s game plan to counter the Philippines’ growing assertiveness in the disputed waters.
Under President Ferdinand Marcos Jr since 2022, the Philippines has followed a strategy of transparency, wherein it has called attention to China’s actions in the South China Sea on social media and through press releases. It remains to be seen how this would change once Teodoro’s new plan materializes, if at all.
“The main point that we have to stress is that we will not give up our presence in the Second Thomas Shoal and we will not enter into any modus vivendi that will compromise our position regarding our rights in the area,” he said.
Nestled in the shoal is the Sierra Madre — a crumbling warship that Manila deliberately grounded on the shoal in 1999 to serve as a military outpost.
Along with Taiwan, the standoff between the Philippines and China over a series of contested reefs and islands has become a critical flashpoint in the region. The Philippine military and coast guard have ramped up operations to supply troops and shore up the crumbling Sierra Madre.
Beijing has strongly opposed the delivery of construction materials to the warship, blocking Philippine resupply vessels and resorting to water cannons to prevent the Southeast Asian nation from repairing the ship.
The Philippine Daily Inquirer yesterday reported that the Philippine navy spotted three research vessels from China in the Second Thomas Shoal, days after the military said it detected the “unauthorized presence” of a research vessel with a Chinese flag near a province in the main island of Luzon.
China has been “more assertive” and “more visible not only in the West Philippine Sea, but in the eastern seaboard,” Teodoro said, referring to the Chinese research vessel spotted there recently.
The behavior might be related to the Philippines’ ongoing military drills with the US known as “Balikatan,” he added.
The US has pledged to stand by the Philippines and is conducting annual joint exercises with Philippine troops through Friday next week.
China views Philippine actions in the South China Sea, as well as deepening ties with the US as “provocations,” Teodoro said.
“The word provocation has been uttered by China several times against Japan, against the Group of Seven,” he said. “I really don’t know what the definition of provocation is in the dictionary of Chinese.”
SILENCING CRITICS: In addition to blocking Taiwan, China aimed to prevent rights activists from speaking out against authoritarian states, a Cabinet department said The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) yesterday condemned transnational repression by Beijing after RightsCon, a major digital human rights conference scheduled to be held in Zambia this week, was abruptly canceled due to Chinese pressure over Taiwanese participation. This year’s RightsCon, the world’s largest conference discussing issues “at the intersection of human rights and technology,” was scheduled to take place from tomorrow to Friday in Lusaka, and expected to draw 2,600 in-person attendees from 150 countries, along with 1,100 online participants. However, organizers were forced to cancel the event due to behind-the-scenes pressure from China, the ministry said, expressing its “strongest condemnation”
DELAYED BUT DETERMINED: The president’s visit highlights Taiwan’s right to international engagement amid regional pressure from China President Willaim Lai (賴清德) yesterday arrived in Eswatini, more than a week after his planned visit to Taiwan’s sole African ally was suspended because of revoked overflight permits. “The visit, originally scheduled for April 22, was postponed due to unforeseen external factors,” Lai wrote on social media. “After several days of careful arrangements by our diplomatic and national security teams, we successfully arrived today.” Lai said he looked forward to further deepening Taiwan-Eswatini relations through closer cooperation in the economy, agriculture, culture and education, as well as advancing the nation’s international partnerships. The president was initially scheduled to arrive in time to celebrate
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corp (IRGC) yesterday said the US faced a choice between an “impossible” military operation or a “bad deal” with Tehran, after US President Donald Trump disparaged Iran’s latest peace proposal. Negotiations between the two countries have been deadlocked since a ceasefire came into effect on April 8, with only one round of direct peace talks held so far. Iran’s Tasnim and Fars news agencies reported that Tehran had submitted a 14-point proposal to mediator Pakistan, but Trump was quick to cast doubt on it. “I will soon be reviewing the plan that Iran has just sent to us, but
A group affiliated with indicted Chinese immigrant Xu Chunying (徐春鶯) is to be dissolved for monitoring Chinese immigrants in Taiwan, a source said yesterday. Xu, the secretary-general of the Cross-Strait Marriage and Family Service Alliance, was indicted on March 24 on charges of violating the Anti-Infiltration Act (反滲透法). The alliance “illegally monitored" Chinese immigrants living in Taiwan on behalf of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the Ministry of the Interior is expected to dissolve the organization in the coming days under provisions of the Civil Associations Act (人民團體法), the source said. Xu, who married a Taiwanese in 1993 and became a Republic