South East Asia Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Janiz

Senior Member
Because you can do it on international waters without drawing lines on the maps. That's not a problem. Just like PRC does it in the Gulf of Aden. But no one writes about building up artificial islands there to get it done properly.
 

SamuraiBlue

Captain
Philippines seeking Japanese defense equipment in face of China dispute

MANILA —The Philippines said Thursday it wants to acquire defense equipment from Japan, as the two allies strengthen defense ties in the face of China’s increasing assertiveness in the South China Sea.

Manila was particularly keen on the P-3C Orion surveillance plane flown by Japanese pilots during recent joint exercises over disputed waters also claimed by Beijing, a defense ministry spokesman said.

“Yes, we are interested in getting a P-3,” Peter Paul Galvez told reporters.

“Naturally, we are looking if it will become an excess defense article, then we can get it at a very low price,” he added without giving further details..... to read more
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I guess the joint war games with the Philippines was an excuse for a test drive.
JMSDF has a surplus of P3Cs that can be transferred with the P-1s coming online.
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Philippines have few budget, have recently a little increased her forces but low modernization few of small fighters, 2 FF Hamilton no really armed etc... mainly helos/aicrafts/ships for transport, depends ASEAN/US countries eventually...
 
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Equation

Lieutenant General
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Beijing, China - It was a rather unusual trajectory. Rhio Zablan went from working in the Philippine president's press office to ... "the other side".

At least that's how many Filipinos would see it in these times of frayed relations between the Philippines and China.

Zablan now works for the Chinese government: propagating Chinese views and culture, in Filipino, for the state-run China Radio International (CRI).

We met him at a gym in Beijing on his day off from work. He was jovial, and relaxed.

"There are misconceptions about Chinese media," he said casually. "We want to disprove that people think Chinese media is just a propaganda machine - no, it's not."

Zablan is aware that he runs the risk of sounding exactly like the "propaganda machine" he is meant to be disproving, but it is easy to sense that he believes what he says. He's a positive person who wants to see the best in things.

And China has been good to him.

Zablan first came to Beijing to attend a conference. On that brief trip, he met the woman who would become his wife.

He returned to Manila knowing he had to find a way to be with her. And as she could barely speak English, Zablan explains that he believed there would be little opportunity for her in the Philippines. So he gave up his job, and moved to Beijing.

She worked at CRI - and colleagues there eventually invited him to work in their Filipino service. That service was nearly half a century old, and run by Chinese nationals who had studied the Philippines in a Chinese university and spoke more formal Tagalog than anything heard on the streets of Manila today. (Or even in the halls of Philippine congress.)

"I love it," Zablan says. "In the Philippine media, I was primarily doing more political things…now I'm happier because I'm doing the cultural things… the things that I love... that I want to do in my life."

According to Zablan, politics makes things difficult. It can blind people from seeing the humanity in each other. Which is why, he says, at CRI they focus more on the "things that unite". Like culture, he reiterates, and things of "beauty".

It's also why Zablan says he now teaches Filipino martial arts in Beijing in his spare time.

"Everything that we do in the Philippines is embedded in 'Arnis'. For example, when I move this way and I move that way…," he demonstrates parrying movements - "my partner also moves that way and this way... what is that in Filipino culture? That is "pakikipamuhayan" - what we call: peaceful living with each other."

It is not about attacking, or fighting - Zablan stresses, it's about learning how to move with someone else. Coexisting.

Some people in Zablan's home country might feel he is helping "the enemy": the anger at China over what is seen as its aggressive stance in the South China Sea dispute is quite tangible in the Philippines where there has been a public campaign to boycott Chinese products.

"It's not easy of course with what's going on right now," Zablan says, acknowledging the tension.

"But this is my personal agenda. This is my personal goal." He says this with what cynics might call the innocence of children.

"I want to do this… I want to introduce Philippine culture to the Chinese people, and Chinese culture to the Filipino people so that we will create stronger bonds of friendship. Bonds that transcend politics... bonds that transcend misunderstanding... and bonds that create friendship and brotherhood amongst men and women."

He smiles assuredly.

Again, it may sound overly simplistic to some. But as far as Zablan is concerned - life is simple. Or at least, it should be.

People complicate it too much with their politics and their bias - but what matters in life, Zablan stresses, is simple.

"Are you happy?," he begins to enumerate.

Family. Love. Friendship. People.

When the politics is stripped away - that is what you see - the face of your neighbour, Zablan expounds. The face of your neighbour, who can become your friend, from your friend, your brother.

Wouldn't the world be a better place, Zablan says, simplified?
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